Sunweb 2017
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Sunweb 2017
Summary
Sunweb 2017 is a cycling team season[1]. It ranks in the top 5% of cycling_team_season entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Sunweb 2017 is in the country of Germany[3].
- Sunweb 2017's instance of is recorded as cycling team season[4].
- Sunweb 2017 followed Giant-Alpecin 2016[5].
- Sunweb 2017 was followed by Sunweb 2018[6].
- Sunweb 2017's head coach is recorded as Rudie Kemna[7].
- Sunweb 2017's head coach is recorded as Marc Reef[8].
- Sunweb 2017's head coach is recorded as Luke Roberts[9].
- Sunweb 2017's head coach is recorded as Hans Timmermans[10].
- Sunweb 2017's head coach is recorded as Arthur van Dongen[11].
- Sunweb 2017's head coach is recorded as Aike Visbeek[12].
- Sunweb 2017's head coach is recorded as Hendrik Werner[13].
- Sunweb 2017's Commons category is recorded as Team Sunweb in 2017[14].
- Sunweb 2017's general manager is recorded as Iwan Spekenbrink[15].
- Sunweb 2017 comprises Nikias Arndt[16].
- Sunweb 2017 comprises Warren Barguil[17].
- Sunweb 2017 comprises Phil Bauhaus[18].
- Sunweb 2017 comprises Roy Curvers[19].
- Sunweb 2017 comprises Bert De Backer[20].
- Sunweb 2017 comprises Tom Dumoulin[21].
- Sunweb 2017 comprises Johannes Fröhlinger[22].
- Sunweb 2017 comprises Simon Geschke[23].
- Sunweb 2017 comprises Chad Haga[24].
- Sunweb 2017 comprises Chris Hamilton[25].
- Sunweb 2017 comprises Lennard Hofstede[26].
- Sunweb 2017 comprises Lennard Kämna[27].
Body
Identity
Sunweb 2017's official name is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Team Sunweb'}[28]. It followed Giant-Alpecin 2016[5]. It was followed by Sunweb 2018[6].
Why It Matters
Sunweb 2017 ranks in the top 5% of cycling_team_season entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[29] It is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[30]