Tour de Indonesia
Race details | |
---|---|
Date | October, November or December |
Region | Java and Bali |
English name | Tour d'Indonesia |
Local name(s) | Tour d'Indonesia |
Discipline | Road |
Competition | UCI Asia Tour 2.2 |
Type | Stage race |
Web site | tour |
History | |
First edition | 2003 |
Editions | 7 (as of 2010) |
Most recent | Herwin Jaya (INA) |
Tour d'Indonesia is an annual road bicycle racing held in Indonesia. First staged in 2003, Tour d'Indonesia together with Tour de Singkarak and Tour de East Java is one of Indonesian official tournament series of Union Cycliste International (UCI). It covers more than 1,300 kilometres — from Jakarta runs through inland Java all the way to Bali — and lasted for almost two weeks and held annualy around October to December. The total prize money since 2006 to 2010 is US$100,000. This international bicycle event has attracted bicycle teams from Indonesia as well as abroad; mostly from Asian region, such as Iran, Japan, Philippines and Malaysia.
The main sponsor from 2003 to 2006 is Dji Sam Soe, a cigarette brand of Sampoerna group. In 2007 Tour d'Indonesia was cancelled due to lack of funding and failure to attract sponsor. In 2008 the tour held again sponsored by Speedy broadband access of Telkom, until 2010 edition Speedy remained as official sponsor of this bicycle race.
Champions
Year | First place | Second place | Thidr place |
---|---|---|---|
2003 | ? | ? | ? |
2004 | Nathan Dahlberg[1] | Amin Saryana | Ngai Ching Wong |
2005 | Hossein Askari[2] | Paul Griffin | Vyacheslav Dyadichkin |
2006 | David McCann[2] | Vyacheslav Dyadichkin | Mostafa Seyed |
2007 | cancelled | ||
2008 | Ghader Mizbani Iranagh[2] | Amir Zargari | Hossein Jahanbanian |
2009 | Mahdi Sohrabi | Ghader Mizbani | Andrey Mizourov |
2010 | Herwin Jaya | Abdullah Fatahillah | Eddy Hollands |
Editions
- 2003: ?
- 2004: Jakarta–Denpasar (1,500 km, 9 stages)
- 2005: Bandung–Denpasar (1,433 km, 9 stages)
- 2006: Bandung–Denpasar (1,352 km, 9 stages)
- 2007: cancelled
- 2008, 23 November–5 December: Jakarta–Denpasar (1,726.3 km, 12 stages)
- 2009, 22 November–3 December: Jakarta–Denpasar (1,513.5 km, 10 stages, 1 criterium)
- 2010, 24 October–3 November: Jakarta–Denpasar (1,423 km, 10 stages)
Future:
- 2011, 2 October–10 October: Jakarta–Denpasar (1,328.4 km, 10 stages)[3]
References
- ^ "Classements du Tour d'Indonésie 2004".
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(help) - ^ Indonesia Cyclists Sidelined From National Tour