Tour de Kumano
Appearance
Race details | |
---|---|
Date | May |
Region | Shingū, Kumano, and Taiji, Japan |
Local name(s) | ツール・ド・ |
Discipline | Road |
Competition | UCI Asia Tour 2.2 |
Type | Stage race |
Web site | www |
History | |
First edition | 2006 |
Editions | 17 (as of 2024) |
First winner | Tomoya Kano (JPN) |
Most wins | Fortunato Baliani (ITA) Atsushi Oka (JPN) (2 wins) |
Most recent | Atsushi Oka (JPN) |
The Tour de Kumano (ツール・ド・
Past winners
[edit]Year | Country | Rider | Team | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2006 | Japan | Tomoya Kano | ||
2007 | Japan | Kazuhiro Mori | Aisan Racing Team | |
2008 | Japan | Miyataka Shimizu | Meitan Hompo-GDR | |
2009 | Kazakhstan | Valentin Iglinsky | Kazakhstan national team | |
2010 | Kazakhstan | Andrey Mizurov | Tabriz Petrochemical Team | |
2011 | Italy | Fortunato Baliani | D'Angelo & Antenucci–Nippo | |
2012 | Italy | Fortunato Baliani | Team Nippo | |
2013 | Colombia | Julián Arredondo | Team Nippo–De Rosa | |
2014 | Spain | Francisco Mancebo | Skydive Dubai Pro Cycling | |
2015 | Spain | Benjamín Prades | Matrix Powertag | |
2016 | Spain | Óscar Pujol | Team Ukyo | |
2017 | Spain | José Vicente Toribio | Matrix Powertag | |
2018 | Netherlands | Marc de Maar | Team Ukyo | |
2019 | Venezuela | Orluis Aular | Matrix Powertag | |
2020– 2021 |
No race due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Japan[1] | |||
2022 | Australia | Nathan Earle | Team Ukyo | |
2023 | Japan | Atsushi Oka | JCL Team Ukyo | |
2024 | Japan | Atsushi Oka | JCL Team Ukyo |
References
[edit]- ^ 「TOUR de KUMANO 2021」
開催 中止 のお知 らせ. Tour de Kumano (in Japanese). 18 August 2021. Retrieved 9 October 2021.
External links
[edit]- Official website (in Japanese)
- Tour de Kumano palmares at Cycling Archives
- Statistics at the-sports.org
- Tour de Kumano at cqranking.com