2004 Route du Sud
0 sources
2004 Route du Sud
Summary
2004 Route du Sud is a Route d'Occitanie[1].
Key Facts
- 2004 Route du Sud won the Bradley McGee[2].
- 2004 Route du Sud won the Sandy Casar[3].
- 2004 Route du Sud won the Torsten Hiekmann[4].
- 2004 Route du Sud is in the country of France[5].
- 2004 Route du Sud's instance of is recorded as Route d'Occitanie[6].
- 2004 Route du Sud's follows is recorded as 2003 Route du Sud[7].
- 2004 Route du Sud's followed by is recorded as 2005 Route du Sud[8].
- 2004 Route du Sud's edition number is recorded as 28[9].
- 2004 Route du Sud's start time is recorded as +2004-06-19T00:00:00Z[10].
- 2004 Route du Sud's end time is recorded as +2004-06-22T00:00:00Z[11].
- 2004 Route du Sud's sport is recorded as road bicycle racing[12].
- 2004 Route du Sud's start point is recorded as Castres[13].
- 2004 Route du Sud's destination point is recorded as Loudenvielle[14].
- 2004 Route du Sud's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11fqkx5gng[15].
- 2004 Route du Sud's event distance is recorded as {'unit': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q828224', 'amount': '+542'}[16].
- 2004 Route du Sud's FirstCycling race ID is recorded as 212&y=2004[17].
Body
Recognition
Wins include Bradley McGee[2], a sport cyclist[18], b. 1976[19], of Australia[20], awarded the Australian Sports Medal[21]; Sandy Casar[3], a sport cyclist[22], b. 1979[23], of France[24], awarded the Knight of the National Order of Merit[25]; and Torsten Hiekmann[4], a sport cyclist[26], b. 1980[27], of Germany[28].
FAQs
What awards did 2004 Route du Sud receive?
Honors received include Bradley McGee[2], Sandy Casar[3], and Torsten Hiekmann[4].