2001 Vuelta a Burgos

The 2001 Vuelta a Burgos was the 23rd edition of the Vuelta a Burgos road cycling stage race, which was held from 20 August to 24 August 2001.[2] The race started and finished in Burgos. The race was won by Juan Miguel Mercado of the iBanesto.com team.[3][4]

2001 Vuelta a Burgos
Race details
Dates20–24 August 2001
Stages5
Distance782[1] km (485.9 mi)
Winning time18h 50' 04"
Results
  Winner  Juan Miguel Mercado (ESP) (iBanesto.com)
  Second  José Luis Rubiera (ESP) (U.S. Postal Service)
  Third  Eladio Jiménez (ESP) (iBanesto.com)

General classification

Final general classification[2][3][5]
Rank Rider Team Time
1  Juan Miguel Mercado (ESP) iBanesto.com 18h 50' 04"
2  José Luis Rubiera (ESP) U.S. Postal Service + 17"
3  Eladio Jiménez (ESP) iBanesto.com + 18"
4  Óscar Sevilla (ESP) Kelme–Costa Blanca + 25"
5  Fernando Escartín (ESP) Team Coast–Buffalo + 50"
6  Levi Leipheimer (USA) U.S. Postal Service + 57"
7  Rafael Cárdenas (COL) Kelme–Costa Blanca + 1' 07"
8  Félix García Casas (ESP) Festina + 1' 17"
9  Carlos Sastre (ESP) ONCE–Eroski + 1' 22"
10  Gerhard Trampusch (AUT) Team Telekom + 1' 29"
gollark: Go has its own *assembly language* because of course.
gollark: When someone asked for monotonic time to be exposed properly, GUESS WHAT, they decided to "fix" the whole thing in the most Go way possible by "transparently" adding monotonic time to the existing time handling, in some bizarre convoluted way which was a breaking change for lots of code and which limited the range time structs could represent rather a lot.
gollark: Rust, which is COOL™, has monotonic time and system time and such as separate types. Go did *not* have monotonic time for ages, but *did* have an internal function for it which wasn't exposed because of course.
gollark: That article describes, among other things, somewhat poor filesystem interaction handling, and a really stupid way monotonic time was handled.
gollark: https://fasterthanli.me/articles/i-want-off-mr-golangs-wild-ride

References

  1. "Vuelta a Burgos (HC)". BikeRaceInfo. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
  2. "2001 Vuelta a Burgos (2.1), Spain". BikeRaceInfo. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
  3. "23ème Vuelta a Burgos 2001". Memoire du cyclisme. Archived from the original on 31 March 2004.
  4. "2001 Vuelta a Burgos". First Cycling. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
  5. "Stage 5 - August 24: Melgar de Fernamental - Burgos, 164 km". Cycling News. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
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