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  2. Thomas Voeckler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Voeckler

    Thomas Voeckler (French pronunciation: [tɔmɑ vœklɛʁ]; born 22 June 1979) is a French former road racing cyclist, who competed professionally between 2001 and 2017, for the Direct Énergie team and its previous iterations.

  3. Team TotalEnergies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Team_TotalEnergies

    Team TotalEnergies ( UCI team code: TEN) is a professional road bicycle racing team that competes as a UCI ProTeam in UCI Continental Circuits races, and UCI World Tour races when invited as a wild card entry. In previous years, the team was known as Brioches La Boulangère, Bonjour, Bouygues Télécom, and Bbox Bouygues Telecom and Europcar.

  4. List of wins by Bonjour and its successors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wins_by_Bonjour...

    Paris–Camembert, Franck Bouyer. Overall Four Days of Dunkirk, Sylvain Chavanel. Stage 3, Didier Rous. Overall Tour of Belgium, Sylvain Chavanel. A Travers le Morbihan, Thomas Voeckler. Stage 4 Route du Sud, Thomas Voeckler. France Road Race Championships, Thomas Voeckler. Tour du Doubs, Mathieu Sprick.

  5. 2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_Tour_de_France,_Stage...

    Thomas Voeckler was over seven minutes back. On the final climb to the finish the leading group was still nine strong, with 1 km to go it was down to Armstrong, Basso, Klöden, and Ullrich. In the final sprint Armstrong beat Basso, claiming his 20th stage victory and the yellow jersey. Voeckler came in 9'27" down.

  6. Breakaway specialist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breakaway_specialist

    Thomas Voeckler rose to prominence for his breakaway exploits in the Tour de France In bicycle racing , a breakaway specialist is a rider who is specialized in attacking the race from the start in order to show off their sponsor and to try their luck in winning the stage without having to fight with the whole peloton at the finish line.

  7. 2011 Tour de France, Stage 12 to Stage 21 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_Tour_de_France,_Stage...

    Thomas Voeckler retained the overall race lead, although his advantage was reduced to 15 seconds. More than half the field finished outside the cut-off time for elimination, but were reprieved and instead penalised by the loss of 20 points, which meant that José Joaquín Rojas moved to 15 points behind Mark Cavendish in the competition for the ...

  8. 2010 Tour de France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_Tour_de_France

    2011 →. The 2010 Tour de France was the 97th edition of the Tour de France cycle race, one of cycling's Grand Tours. It started on 3 July with an 8.9 km prologue time trial in Rotterdam, the first start in the Netherlands since 1996. [1] The race visited three countries: the Netherlands, Belgium and France, and finished on 25 July on the ...

  9. 2007 GP Ouest-France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007_GP_Ouest-France

    2007 GP Ouest-France. The 2007 edition of the GP Ouest-France was held on September 2 in and around the French village of Plouay in Brittany. Several laps of a circuit were completed for a total of 226 kilometres of racing. Although no significant breakaway was able to last, a late break by Thomas Voeckler proved decisive.