2011 Baltic Chain Tour
The 2011 Baltic Chain Tour was the inaugural modern era edition of the Baltic Chain Tour road cycling race. It was held over a period of four days between 17 and 20 May 2013. The race was a part of the 2012 UCI Europe Tour with a race classification of 2.2. General classification was won by Estonian cyclist Erki Pütsep.[1]
2011 UCI Europe Tour | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Race details | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dates | 17—20 August 2012 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stages | 4 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distance | 637.6 km (396.2 mi) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Winning time | 14h 39' 16" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Results | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Schedule
Stage | Start | Finish | Distance | Date | Winner | Time |
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P | Vilnius | Vilnius | 3.0 km | 16 August | 0h 3' 37" | |
1 | Vilnius | Panevezys | 175.0 km | 17 August | 4h 06' 08" | |
2 | Panevezys | Šiauliai | 165.8 km | 18 August | 3h 48' 49" | |
3 | Rīga | Sigulda | 139.6 km | 19 August | 3h 06' 26" | |
4 | Viljandi | Viljandi | 153.0 km | 20 August | 3h 36' 03" |
Classification leadership table
Stage | Stage winner | General Classification |
Sprint |
King of the Mountains |
Young riders classification (U26) |
Team classification |
P | Gediminas Bagdonas | Gediminas Bagdonas | Ramunas Navardauskas | National Team Lithuania | ||
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1 | Gediminas Bagdonas | Gediminas Bagdonas | Andris Smirnovs | |||
2 | Indulis Bekmanis | Indulis Bekmanis | Armands Bēcis | Indulis Bekmanis | ||
3 | Raimundas Rumsas | |||||
4 | Volodymyr Gomenuk | Erki Pütsep | Gediminas Bagdonas | Volodymyr Gomenuk | Igor Boev | Alpha Baltic–Unitymarathons.com |
Final | Erki Pütsep | Gediminas Bagdonas | Volodymyr Gomenuk | Igor Boev | Alpha Baltic–Unitymarathons.com |
gollark: Again, you seem to just be assuming personhood here.
gollark: I disagree with saying "someone" for non-people entities.
gollark: There are various problems with this:- massive increase of complexity in guns- you would need to recharge it constantly, and it would need batteries and such, and would generally be a hassle- GPS spoofing (possibly just jamming, depending on design) would stop guns working- people could probably just remove the geofencing bit- how are you planning to keep the "do not shoot here" lists updated on all of them?
gollark: I sent this mere *hours* ago.
gollark: Does the particular context of it change the meaning much? Or imply that you should only do that sometimes?
References
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