Deutschland Tour

The Deutschland Tour (English: Tour of Germany and sometimes Deutschland-Rundfahrt in German) is the most important multi-stage road bicycle race in Germany. Initially the race was held in May/June, but from 2005 until 2008 it was moved to August as part of the UCI ProTour. On October 16, 2008 the organizers announced that the 2009 edition would be cancelled, following the doping cases that were revealed in the sport of cycling. Marketing chiefs said they were unable to finance the nine-day race due to a lack of interested sponsors after the latest revelations of cyclists testing positive for the blood-booster CERA. A revival for 2017 was announced on 8 March 2016.[1] In 2018, the A.S.O. revived the Deutschland Tour and included a 4-stage-race into a cycling festival. From 23 August to 26 August 2018, the Deutschland Tour took place in the South-Western region of Germany.[2]

Deutschland Tour
Race details
DateAugust
RegionGermany
English nameTour of Germany
Local name(s)Deutschland Tour (in German)
DisciplineRoad
CompetitionUCI ProTour (2005–2008)
UCI Europe Tour (2018-)
TypeStage-race
OrganiserGesellschaft zur Förderung des Radsports mbH
Web sitewww.deutschland-tour.com
History
First edition1911 (1911)
Editions33
First winner Hans Ludwig (GER)
Most wins Jens Voigt (GER) (2 wins)
Most recent Jasper Stuyven (BEL)

The 2019 race was held from 29 August to 1 September.

History

Beginning in 1911 a "national" cycling race of over 1,500 kilometres (930 mi) was held in Germany (which was then composed of several territories and kingdoms). Until 1931 several real—more-or-less—Tours were held, but always under very different conditions and organisations. In 1931 the first Deutschlandtour was held, and it is generally agreed upon that the race was exciting and well organised between 1937 and 1939, the start of World War II.

Germany never had a significant road cycling history, unlike Belgium, France or Italy, which caused the race's popularity to depend on German successes. This resulted in several parallel tours of West-Germany.

But after Jan Ullrich's Tour de France victory, cycling became more popular. Partially as a result of Germany's new-found cycling enthusiasm, in 1999 the Deutschlandtour became invigorated. In 1998 the Bund Deutscher Radfahrer e.V. and the company Upsolut founded the Deutschland Tour gmbh.

In March 2016, the Amaury Sport Organisation announced it had signed a 10-year deal with the German Cycling Federation to bring the race back within the next two years.[3] In July the race was confirmed as the Deutschland Deine Tour debuting in 2018, reduced to four stages and relegated to a UCI 2.1 European Tour race.[4] The race will become part of the new UCI ProSeries in 2020.

Past winners

Jens Voigt (pictured at the 2006 Deutschland Tour) is the only rider with two Deutschland Tour wins.
Matej Mohorič is the most recent winner of the Deutschland Tour, having won the 2018 edition.
Year Country Rider Team
1911  Germany Hans Ludwig
1912–1921 No race
1922  Germany Adolf Huschke
1923–1926 No race
1927  Germany Rudolf Wolke
1928–1929 No race
1930  Germany Hermann Buse
1931  Germany Erich Metze
1932–1936 No race
1937  Germany Otto Weckerling
1938  Germany Hermann Schild
1939  Germany Georg Umbenhauer
1940–1946 No race
1947  Germany Erich Bautz
1948  Germany Phillip Hilpert
1949  Germany Harry Saager
1950  Belgium Roger Gyselinck
1951  Italy Guido de Santi
1952  Belgium Isidore Derijck
1953–1959 No race
1960  Netherlands Ab Geldermans
1961 No race
1962  Netherlands Peter Post
1963–1978 No race
1979  Germany Dietrich Thurau IJsboerke
1980  Germany Gregor Braun
1981  Italy Silvano Contini
1982  Netherlands Theo de Rooij Capri Sonne
1983–1998 No race
1999  Germany Jens Heppner Team Telekom
2000  Spain David Plaza S.L. Benfica
2001  Kazakhstan Alexander Vinokourov Team Telekom
2002  Spain Igor González de Galdeano ONCE
2003  Australia Michael Rogers Quick Step–Davitamon
2004  Germany Patrik Sinkewitz Quick Step–Davitamon
2005  United States Levi Leipheimer Gerolsteiner
2006  Germany Jens Voigt Team CSC
2007  Germany Jens Voigt Team CSC
2008  Germany Linus Gerdemann T-Mobile Team
2009–2017 No race
2018  Slovenia Matej Mohorič Bahrain–Merida
2019  Belgium Jasper Stuyven Trek–Segafredo

References

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