2017 Paris–Nice
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2017 Paris–Nice
Summary
2017 Paris–Nice is a Paris–Nice[1]. It ranks in the top 5% of paris_nice entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (8 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- 2017 Paris–Nice won the Sergio Henao[3].
- 2017 Paris–Nice won the Alberto Contador[4].
- 2017 Paris–Nice won the Dan Martin[5].
- 2017 Paris–Nice won the Julian Alaphilippe[6].
- 2017 Paris–Nice won the Julian Alaphilippe[7].
- 2017 Paris–Nice won the Lilian Calmejane[8].
- 2017 Paris–Nice is in the country of France[9].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's image is recorded as Sergio Henao, Paris-Nice 2017.jpg[10].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's instance of is recorded as Paris–Nice[11].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's follows is recorded as 2016 Paris–Nice[12].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's followed by is recorded as 2018 Paris–Nice[13].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's subclass of is recorded as 2.UWT[14].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's part of is recorded as 2017 UCI World Tour[15].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's Commons category is recorded as Paris-Nice 2017[16].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's edition number is recorded as 75[17].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's has part is recorded as 2017 Paris-Nice, Stage 1[18].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's has part is recorded as 2017 Paris-Nice, Stage 2[19].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's has part is recorded as 2017 Paris-Nice, Stage 3[20].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's has part is recorded as 2017 Paris-Nice, Stage 4[21].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's has part is recorded as 2017 Paris-Nice, Stage 5[22].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's has part is recorded as 2017 Paris-Nice, Stage 6[23].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's has part is recorded as 2017 Paris-Nice, Stage 7[24].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's has part is recorded as 2017 Paris-Nice, Stage 8[25].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's start time is recorded as +2017-03-05T00:00:00Z[26].
- 2017 Paris–Nice's end time is recorded as +2017-03-12T00:00:00Z[27].
Body
Recognition
Wins include Sergio Henao[3], a sport cyclist[28], b. 1987[29], of Colombia[30]; Alberto Contador[4], a sport cyclist[31], b. 1982[32], of Spain[33], awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Order of Sports Merit[34]; Dan Martin[5], a sport cyclist[35], b. 1986[36], of Ireland[37]; Julian Alaphilippe[6], a sport cyclist[38], b. 1992[39], of France[40], awarded the Vélo d'Or[41]; Lilian Calmejane[8], a sport cyclist[42], b. 1992[43], of France[44]; and 2017 Quick-Step Floors[45], a cycling team season[46], in Belgium[47].
Why It Matters
2017 Paris–Nice ranks in the top 5% of paris_nice entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (8 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[48]
FAQs
What awards did 2017 Paris–Nice receive?
Honors received include Sergio Henao[3], Alberto Contador[4], Dan Martin[5], and Julian Alaphilippe[6].