2004 Tour de Pologne
0 sources
2004 Tour de Pologne
Summary
2004 Tour de Pologne is a Tour de Pologne[1]. It draws 1 Wikipedia views per month (tour_de_pologne category, ranking #8 of 20).[2]
Key Facts
- 2004 Tour de Pologne won the Ondřej Sosenka[3].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne won the Hugo Sabido[4].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne won the Franco Pellizotti[5].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne is in the country of Poland[6].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne's instance of is recorded as Tour de Pologne[7].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne followed 2003 Tour de Pologne[8].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne was followed by 2005 Tour de Pologne[9].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne is part of hyphen-minus[10].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne's Commons category is recorded as Tour de Pologne 2004[11].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne's edition number is recorded as 61[12].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne began on September 6, 2004[13].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne ended on September 12, 2004[14].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne's sport is recorded as road bicycle racing[15].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne involved {'amount': '+148'} participants[16].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne's start point is recorded as Gdańsk[17].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne's destination point is recorded as Karpacz[18].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne's participating team is recorded as Acqua & Sapone 2004[19].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne's participating team is recorded as Mróz-Active Jet[20].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne's participating team is recorded as Alessio-Bianchi 2004[21].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne's participating team is recorded as Amore & Vita[22].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne's participating team is recorded as Chocolade Jacques-Wincor Nixdorf 2004[23].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne's participating team is recorded as De Nardi 2004[24].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne's participating team is recorded as Bank BGŻ[25].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne's participating team is recorded as Aurum Hotels[26].
- 2004 Tour de Pologne's participating team is recorded as Formaggi Pinzolo Fiavè[27].
Body
When and Where
2004 Tour de Pologne began on September 6, 2004[13]. It ended on September 12, 2004[14]. It is in the country of Poland[6].
Context
2004 Tour de Pologne is part of hyphen-minus[10]. Its instance of is recorded as Tour de Pologne[7]. It followed 2003 Tour de Pologne[8]. It was followed by 2005 Tour de Pologne[9].
Participants
2004 Tour de Pologne involved {'amount': '+148'} participants[16].
Why It Matters
2004 Tour de Pologne draws 1 Wikipedia views per month (tour_de_pologne category, ranking #8 of 20).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]
FAQs
What awards did 2004 Tour de Pologne receive?
Honors received include Ondřej Sosenka[3], Hugo Sabido[4], and Franco Pellizotti[5].