2004 Tour of Britain

The 2004 Tour of Britain was the first edition of the latest version of the Tour of Britain. It took place over five days in early September 2004, organised by SweetSpot in collaboration with British Cycling, and was the first Tour of Britain to be held since 1999.[1] Sponsored by the organisers of London's 2012 Olympics bid, it attracted teams such as T-Mobile Team and U.S. Postal Service. It was designated a 2.3 category race on the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) calendar.

The 2004 Tour of Britain passes Sabden, Lancashire

The tour climaxed with a 45 miles (72 km) criterium in London, where an estimated 100,000 spectators saw a long break by Bradley Wiggins last until the penultimate lap, before Enrico Degano of Team Barloworld took the sprint on the line. The Colombian Mauricio Ardila, of Chocolade Jacques, won the race overall.[2]

Stages

Stage Date Start Finish Distance Winner Team Time
1 1 September 2004 Manchester Manchester 207 km  Stefano Zanini (ITA) Quick-Step–Davitamon 5h 01'23"
2 2 September 2004 Leeds Sheffield 172 km  Mauricio Ardila (COL) Chocolade Jacques-Topsport Vlaanderen 4h 26'26"
3 3 September 2004 Bakewell Nottingham 192 km  Tom Boonen (BEL) Quick-Step–Davitamon 4h 30'55"
4 4 September 2004 Newport Newport 160 km  Mauricio Ardila (COL) Chocolade Jacques-Topsport Vlaanderen 3h 32'37"
5 5 September 2004 London London 72 km  Enrico Degano (ITA) Team Barloworld 1h 27'30"

Final general classification

Name Team Time
1  Mauricio Ardila (COL) Chocolade Jacques-Topsport Vlaanderen 18h 58'36"
2  Julian Dean (NZL) Crédit Agricole + 00'12"
3  Nick Nuyens (BEL) Quick-Step–Davitamon + 00'17"
gollark: Don't think so.
gollark: It was on reddit on r/worldbuilding, there's more lore.
gollark: This document is HIGHLY memetic.
gollark: https://isotropic.org/papers/chicken.pdf
gollark: https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/629419596428083210/777242606102380574/unknown.png?width=427&height=422

References

  1. Fotheringham, William (13 December 2003). "Plans for Tour of Britain to return". The Guardian. UK. Retrieved 18 September 2011.
  2. "Tour of Britain 2004". Tour of Britain. Archived from the original on 24 March 2012. Retrieved 18 September 2011.
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