Critérium International 2000
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Critérium International 2000
Summary
Critérium International 2000 is a Critérium International[1].
Key Facts
- Critérium International 2000 won the Abraham Olano[2].
- Critérium International 2000 won the Juan Carlos Domínguez[3].
- Critérium International 2000 won the Alexander Vinokourov[4].
- Critérium International 2000 is in the country of France[5].
- Critérium International 2000's instance of is recorded as Critérium International[6].
- Critérium International 2000's follows is recorded as Critérium International 1999[7].
- Critérium International 2000's followed by is recorded as Critérium International 2001[8].
- Critérium International 2000's edition number is recorded as 69[9].
- Critérium International 2000's point in time is recorded as +2000-00-00T00:00:00Z[10].
- Critérium International 2000's start point is recorded as Saint-Jean-de-Luz[11].
- Critérium International 2000's destination point is recorded as Pau[12].
- Critérium International 2000's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11h12sjm3s[13].
- Critérium International 2000's event distance is recorded as {'unit': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q828224', 'amount': '+285'}[14].
Body
Recognition
Wins include Abraham Olano[2], a sport cyclist[15], b. 1970[16], of Spain[17], awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Order of Sports Merit[18]; Juan Carlos Domínguez[3], a sport cyclist[19], b. 1971[20], of Spain[21]; and Alexander Vinokourov[4], a sport cyclist[22], b. 1973[23], of Kazakhstan[24], awarded the Order of Parasat[25].
FAQs
What awards did Critérium International 2000 receive?
Honors received include Abraham Olano[2], Juan Carlos Domínguez[3], and Alexander Vinokourov[4].