Daniel Turek

Daniel Turek (born 19 January 1993 in Lanškroun) is a Czech cyclist, who currently rides for UCI Continental team Israel Cycling Academy.[3]

Daniel Turek
Personal information
Full nameDaniel Turek
Born (1993-01-19) 19 January 1993
Lanškroun, Czech Republic
Height1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Weight72 kg (159 lb)
Team information
Current teamIsrael Cycling Academy
DisciplineRoad
RoleRider
Amateur team
2012–2014TJ Favorit Brno
Professional teams
2015–2019Cycling Academy[1][2]
2020–Israel Cycling Academy

Major results

2010
1st Time trial, National Junior Road Championships
2012
3rd Time trial, National Under-23 Road Championships
2013
10th Overall Carpathian Couriers Race
2014
2nd Road race, National Under-23 Road Championships
6th Tour Bohemia
8th Overall Carpathian Couriers Race
10th Visegrad 4 Bicycle Race – GP Czech Republic
2015
1st Stage 4 Tour d'Azerbaïdjan
1st Stage 1 Tour de Berlin
2nd Road race, National Under-23 Road Championships
2016
3rd Overall Tour de Hongrie
5th Overall Sibiu Cycling Tour
1st Mountains classification
5th Overall Tour de Beauce
5th Poreč Trophy
7th GP Kranj
8th Overall Grand Prix Cycliste de Saguenay
2017
1st Mountains classification Okolo Slovenska
4th Gran Premio di Lugano
2018
8th Overall Tour of Taihu Lake
10th Overall Czech Cycling Tour
2019
1st Mountains classification Vuelta a Asturias
8th Overall Tour of Norway
9th Overall Tour of Taihu Lake
2020
2nd Overall Dookoła Mazowsza
gollark: While it's very simple it's also terrible as it makes the model utterly unable to understand character-level stuff like rhyming, and it makes it slightly worse at a lot of other generalization.
gollark: The tokens are 16-bit ints.
gollark: Basically, it goes through its dataset and picks the mappings of character sequences to tokens which compresses it as much as possible.
gollark: It has an elegant and yet terrible tokenization scheme called BPE.
gollark: 16 million tokens. Not words.

References

  1. Malach, Pat (1 November 2017). "Israel Cycling Academy complete 2018 roster with Omer Goldstein". Cyclingnews.com. Immediate Media Company. Retrieved 27 January 2018.
  2. "Israel Cycling Academy finalises 2019 roster, adds Sorensen as DS". Cyclingnews.com. Immediate Media Company. 4 December 2018. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  3. "Israel Cycling Academy". UCI.org. Union Cycliste Internationale. Archived from the original on 5 April 2020. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
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