Tour de Bretagne

(Redirected from Tour de Bretagne Cycliste)

Tour de Bretagne Cycliste, also known as the Tour de Bretagne trophée des granitiers and formerly known as Ruban Granitier Breton, is an annual early season professional cycling stage race held in late April and early May in Brittany, France. The race often acts as a showcase for upcoming riders of the under-23 category who race together with Elite riders. The race was renamed Tour de Bretagne in 2005 when it also became a professional race.

Tour de Bretagne Cycliste
Race details
DateApril/May
RegionFrance
English nameTour of Brittany
Local name(s)Tour de Bretagne trophée des granitiers
Ruban Granitier Breton
DisciplineRoad
CompetitionUCI Europe Tour 2.2
TypeStage race
Web sitewww.tourdebretagne.bzh Edit this at Wikidata
History
First edition1967 (1967)
Editions57 (as of 2024)
First winner Marcel Duchemin (FRA)
Most wins Marcel Duchemin (FRA) (3 wins)
Most recent Jakob Söderqvist (SWE)

The 2007 edition was dominated by Lars Boom and Edvald Boasson Hagen who both wore the leader's jersey and won stages of the race.[1]

The 2008 edition was dominated by the Rabobank team with defending champion Lars Boom and Coen Vermeltfoort winning two stages each. The Bretagne Armor Lux won the general classification with Benoît Poilvet.[2]

The 2010 edition started in Jersey – the first time stages of the race had been held outside Brittany.[3]

Past winners

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YearCountryRiderTeam
1967  FranceMarcel DucheminOCC Laval
1968  FranceGuy IgnolinPelforth–Sauvage
1969  FranceJean Paul MahoPelforth–Sauvage
1970  FranceMarcel DucheminFrimatic–de Gribaldy
1971  FranceMarcel DucheminStella Philips
1972  FranceAndré CorbeauCSM–Puteaux
1973  Soviet UnionBoris ShukovUSSR national team
1974  PolandStanisław SzozdaPoland national team
1975  Soviet UnionAleksandr GusyatnikovUSSR national team
1976  Soviet UnionBoris IssaevUSSR national team
1977  BelgiumDaniel WillemsBelgium national team
1978  PolandKrzysztof SujkaPoland national team
1979  PolandJan JankiewiczPoland national team
1980  ItalyGiorgio CasatiItaly national team
1981  BelgiumMarc SomersBelgium national team
1982  BelgiumWim Van EyndeBelgium national team
1983  Soviet UnionYouri KashirinUSSR national team
1984  East GermanyDan RadkteEast Germany national team
1985  FrancePhilippe LouviotFrance national team
1986  FranceGilles SandersBleuets France Nord
1987  Soviet UnionIgor SumnikovUSSR national team
1988  FranceArmand de Las CuevasFrance national team C
1989  NetherlandsHarm JansenNetherlands national team
1990  PortugalJosé MarquesPortugal national team
1991  FranceRichard VivienNormandie (selection)
1992  RussiaEvgeni BerzinRussia national team
1993  FranceDominique BozziUS Créteil
1994  UkraineAnatoly TchoubarUkraine national team
1995  FranceSébastian GueneeFrance national team
1996  FranceStéphane CueffMutuelle de Seine et Marne
1997  FrancePhilippe BressetJean Floch–Mantes
1998  FranceVincent TemplierJean Floch–Mantes
1999  FranceDavid DumontCC Nogent-sur-Oise
2000  FranceMartial LocatelliJean Floc'h
2001  FranceGuillaume JudasJean Floc'h
2002  FranceCristophe CousinieFrance Police
2003  KazakhstanDimitry MuravyevQuick-Step
2004  FranceLaurent MangelSCO Dijon
2005  FranceStéphane PetilleauBretagne-Jean Floc'h
2006  BelgiumDries DevenynsBeveren 2000–Quick-Step
2007  NetherlandsLars BoomRabobank Continental Team
2008  FranceBenoît PoilvetBretagne–Armor Lux
2009  FranceJulien FouchardCôtes-d'Armor–Maître Jacques
2010  FranceFranck BouyerBbox Bouygues Telecom
2011  HungaryPéter KusztorAtlas Personal
2012  South AfricaReinardt Janse van RensburgMTN–Qhubeka
2013  AustriaRiccardo ZoidlGourmetfein–Simplon
2014  NetherlandsBert-Jan LindemanRabobank Development Team
2015  BelgiumSébastien DelfosseWallonie-Bruxelles
2016  United StatesAdrien CostaUnited States national team
2017  FranceFlavien DassonvilleHP BTP–Auber93
2018  FranceFabien SchmidtCôtes d'Armor–Marie Morin
2019  FranceLorrenzo ManzinVital Concept–B&B Hotels
2020No race
2021  FranceJean-Louis Le NyWB-Fybolia Locminé
2022  FranceJohan Le BonDinan Sport Cycling
2023   SwitzerlandSimon PellaudTudor Pro Cycling Team
2024  SwedenJakob SöderqvistLidl–Trek Future Racing

References

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  1. ^ "Boasson Hagen and Boom share the honours". Cyclingnews.com. Retrieved 2007-12-17.
  2. ^ "Wilmann's attack pays off". Cyclingnews.com. Retrieved 2008-05-02.
  3. ^ "Jersey hosted a 'fantastic' show » Cycling » Sport » This Is Jersey". www.thisisjersey.com. Archived from the original on 2010-04-30.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
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