Mike Engleman
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Mike Engleman
Michael Engleman (born May 20, 1958, in Sonoma, California) is a former American cyclist. Palmares ;1987 :1st stage 8 Coors Classic ;1988 :1st stage 14 Coors Classic ;1989 :2nd National Road Race Championships ;1990 :1st Cascade Classic ::1st stages 1 and 2 ;1991 :1st Bob Cook Memorial-Mount Evans :1st Thrift Drug Classic :1st stages 1 and 6 Cascade Classic :1st Herald Sun Tour ::1st stages 8 and 13 :1st Vuelta de Bisbee ::1st stage 4 :2nd Cascade Classic :3rd Tour du Limousin ;1992 :1st Bob Cook Memorial-Mount Evans :3rd Cascade Classic ::1st Prologue :1st Chur - Arosa :1st Tour of the Adirondacks :1st Nevada City Classic :2nd Vuelta de Bisbee :3rd Coors Classic ;1993 :1st Bob Cook Memorial-Mount Evans :1st stage 1 Cascade Classic :1st Killington Stage Race :1st Prologue and stage 1 :1st stage 1 Tour of Willamette :2nd National Criterium Championships :2nd West Virginia Classic ;1994 :1st Bob Cook Memorial-Mount Evans :1st Cascade Classic :1st Killington Stage Race ::1st Prol ...
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Sonoma, California
Sonoma is a city in Sonoma County, California, United States, located in the North Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area. Sonoma is one of the principal cities of California's Wine Country and the center of the Sonoma Valley AVA. Sonoma's population was 10,739 as of the 2020 census, while the Sonoma urban area had a population of 32,679. Sonoma is a popular tourist destination, owing to its Californian wineries, noted events like the Sonoma International Film Festival, and its historic center. Sonoma's origins date to 1823, when José Altimira established Mission San Francisco Solano, under the direction of Governor Luis Antonio Argüello. Following the Mexican secularization of the missions, famed Californio statesman Mariano G. Vallejo founded Sonoma on the former mission's lands in 1835. Sonoma served as the base of General Vallejo's operations until the Bear Flag Revolt in 1846, when American filibusters overthrew the local Mexican government and declared the Cali ...
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Coors Light (cycling Team)
Coors Light Cycling Team was an elite road bicycle racing cycling team in the United States. The team was very prominent in races held in the United States, but they did not achieve many other major results. 1994 team roster As at 1 January 1994: Major results Results: ;1989 : Philly Cycling Classic, Greg Oravetz : National Road Race Championships, Greg Oravetz ;1990 : Stages 10 & 13 Tour DuPont, Michel Zanoli : Reading Classic, David Farmer : Overall Killington Stage Race, Greg Oravetz ::Stage 2, Michel Zanoli ::Stage 3, Greg Oravetz ;1991 : Overall Cascade Cycling Classic, Greg Oravetz : Stage 1 Tour DuPont, Davis Phinney : Thrift Drug Classic, Michael Engleman : Nevada City Classic, Chris Huber : National Criterium Championships, Greg Oravetz : Overall Killington Stage Race, Roy Knickmann ::Stage 3, Roy Knickmann ::Stage 5, Scott Moninger : Overall Herald Sun Tour, Michael Engleman ::Stages 4 & 5, Michael Engleman ::Stages 8 & 13, Greg Oravet ...
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Navigators (cycling Team)
Navigators Insurance Cycling Team (''UCI Code:'' NIC) was an elite road bicycle racing cycling team in the United States. Navigators focused on USA Cycling and UCI America Tour events. The team has competed in every Tour de Georgia. The team was founded in 1992 by Raymond Cipollini and James Eichvalds. The team turned Pro in 1994 and hired Edward Beamon to be its director. Navigators finished third team on the 2005–06 UCI America Tour. 2007 team roster As at 1 January 2007: Major wins Results: ;1995 : Reading Classic, Matt Koschara ;1997 : Stage 2 Vuelta al Tachira en Bicicleta, Skip Spangenburg : Nevada City Classic, Scott Moninger : Stage 6 Clasica Regatas Lima, Skip Spangenburg ;1998 : Stage 5 Redlands Classic, Trent Klasna : Overall Sea Otter Classic, Trent Klasna : Nevada City Classic, Michael Engleman : Stage 3 Tour de Beauce, Skip Spangenburg : Prologue & Stage 4 Killington Stage Race, Scott Moninger : Prologue & Stage 1 Clasica Regatas ...
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Coors Classic
The Coors International Bicycle Classic (1980–1988) was a stage race sponsored by the Coors Brewing Company. Coors was the race's second sponsor; the first, Celestial Seasonings, named the race after its premium tea Red Zinger, which began in 1975. Over the years, the event became America's national tour, listed as the fourth largest race in the world after the Tour de France, Giro d'Italia, and Vuelta a España. The race grew from 3 days of racing in its first years as the Red Zinger Bicycle Classic to 2 weeks in the later Coors Classic years. Race stages were held in Colorado in the early years expanding first from Boulder and Denver back to the Keystone ski resort, later adding Estes Park, Vail, Aspen and Grand Junction, before further expansion that included Wyoming, Nevada, California and Hawaii. All but the last year the race concluded with a short circuit in North Boulder Park. On August 4, 2010 Colorado governor Bill Ritter and cycling legend Lance Armstrong announc ...
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United States National Road Race Championships
The United States National Professional Road Race Championships began in 1985. They are run by the governing body, USA Cycling. Until 2006 the race was open to all nationalities, the first American to finish being named the winner and given a distinctive jersey. Since the championship in Greenville, South Carolina, in 2006, all riders have had to be American. Before 1985, only the amateur champions were named. From 1921 to 1964, the Amateur Bicycle League of America (ABLA) National Championships were held as an omnium of track-style events for Men, Women, and Juniors, rather than as a road race. In 1964 the American Cycling Newsletter (later Bicycling) reported the results of a Flemington, NJ race as the national road racing championships, but these results do not appear in the USA Cycling list of winners. Men Amateur Professional U23 Junior Women Elite See also *United States National Criterium Championships *United States National Time Trial Championships The ...
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Cascade Classic
The Cascade Cycling Classic was the longest running elite road bicycle racing stage race in the United States (1980–2019), with 2018 being the only year the race was not held. The race took place in the Central Oregon region and was based in Bend, Oregon. It was a regular fixture for most of North America's top cyclists and teams. Owned and managed by the Cascade Cycling Classic Youth Foundation, former pro cyclist and two time National Road Champion Bart Bowen was both the Foundation's executive director and the Classic's race director. Bowen won the CCC in 1993. Past winners Elite Men *2019 : , *2018 : Race canceled *2017 : , *2016 : , *2015 : , *2014 : , *2013 : , *2012 : , Competitive Cyclist Racing Team *2011 : , Realcyclist.com Cycling Team *2010 : , UnitedHealthcare-Maxxis *2009 : , Rock Racing *2008 : , *2007 : , Navigators Insurance Cycling Team *2006 : , Toyota-United Pro Cycling Team *2005 : , HealthNet-Maxxis *2004 : , *2003 : , Saturn Cycling Team ...
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Herald Sun Tour
The Herald Sun Tour is an Australian professional bicycle race held in Melbourne and provincial Victoria, sanctioned by the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI). The first tour was held in October 1952 as a six-day event. It is now held annually over five days in February. It is named after the ''Herald Sun'', Melbourne's only daily tabloid newspaper. It was originally known as the Sun Tour after ''The Sun News-Pictorial'', and changed its name when ''The Sun News-Pictorial'' merged with '' The Herald'' in 1990. History In 1952 the first general classification winner was Keith Rowley, a Maffra sheep farmer, in a time of 42 h 57 min 55 s. The first King of the Mountain and Sprint champion was Jack (John) McDonough from Coburg. Australian cyclists dominated the first 30 editions of the race, before its status rose and began attracting overseas stars. By the year 2000, the race had shifted to October and Australia's cyclists racing in Europe began to compete in the race. The res ...
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Tour Du Limousin
Tour du Limousin is a 4-day road bicycle race held annually in Limousin, France. It was first held in 1968 and since 2005 it has been organised as a 2.1 event on the UCI Europe Tour. In 2011 it was upgraded to an 2.HC The UCI 1.HC and UCI 2.HC are the second tier classification of road cycling races by the UCI, after the UCI World Tour (or its predecessor, the UCI ProTour). The races are part of the various UCI Continental Circuits. The 1.HC events are one-day ... event, and downgraded to 2.1 since 2013. Between 1968 and 1974 it was an amateur race. Winners External links * English section of the official site UCI Europe Tour races Recurring sporting events established in 1968 1968 establishments in France Cycle races in France {{France-cycling-race-stub ...
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United States National Criterium Championships
The United States National Criterium Championships are held annually and run by the national governing body, USA Cycling. The event has formerly been held at venues including Denver, Colorado, Downers Grove, Illinois, and Glencoe, Illinois. The 2015 edition of the race will be hosted by the city of Chattanooga, Tennessee. Formerly, the event allowed an international field, so the first rider from the United States who crossed the finish line was crowned the "United States National Criterium Champion" gaining the right to wear the national champion's jersey in subsequent criteriums for the following year. As domestic participation has grown in more recent years, the event has been limited to United States citizens so that the winner of the race will also be crowned the national champion. Results Men Women See also * United States National Road Race Championships * United States National Time Trial Championships The United States National Time Trial Championships are held ann ...
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Tour De Toona
The International Tour de Toona was a stage bicycle race held in Central Pennsylvania in July from 1987 until 2011. The event became the largest pro-am cycling event in North America and had stages spanning Blair, Cambria, Bedford, and Somerset Counties in Pennsylvania. The name was changed to The International for the 2002 edition of the race and then to the International Tour de Toona for the 2004 edition. In 2008, tour organizers scaled back the event to a one-day criterium race in downtown Altoona. On May 22, 2009, it was announced that the 2009 Tour de Toona would be canceled due to a lack of sponsorship. The 2010 event was again a single day criterium race in downtown Altoona In 2011 the event returned to being a 4-day 4 stage race for both men and women. In 2012, the event was cancelled due to financial mismanagement and the USAC announced the event would not be held again. Results Overall winners {, class="wikitable sortable" , - , - !Year !Female Winner !Country !T ...
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Fitchburg Longsjo Classic
Fitchburg Longsjo Classic, also known as the Longsjo Classic, was an annual bicycle race held in Fitchburg, Massachusetts, United States. The race began in 1960 as the Arthur M. Longsjo Jr Memorial Race, in honor of Art Longsjo. History The race was founded in Fitchburg, Massachusetts in 1960, as the Arthur M. Longsjo Jr. Memorial Bicycle Race., in memory of Fitchburg native and resident Art Longsjo. In 1956 Longsjo competed in the Winter Olympics as a speed skater and at the Summer Olympics as a cyclist, making him the first American to compete in Summer and Winter Olympic Games in one year. In 1958, Longsjo Perished in a car crash in Vermont, while driving home after winning the 180-mile long Quebec-Montreal Road Race. In 1960, local civic and business leaders in the city and Art Longsjo's widow Terry Longsjo organized the first race, with input from Longsjo's racing friend Guy Morin. In 1980, a new race organizing committee formed, which renamed the event the Fitchburg ...
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UCI Road World Championships – Men's Time Trial
The men's individual time trial event at the UCI Road World Championships is the men's world championship for the road bicycle racing discipline of time trial. Introduced in 1994 by the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI), the world's governing body of cycling, the event consists of a time trial covering a distance of approximately 45 kilometres (28 mi) over flat or rolling terrain. Riders start separated by two-minute intervals; the one that completes the course in the shortest time is the winner, and is entitled to wear the rainbow jersey in time trial events for the forthcoming season. Switzerland's Fabian Cancellara (2006, 2007, 2009 and 2010) and Germany's Tony Martin (2011, 2012, 2013 and 2016) have won the most competitions, with four each. Australia's Michael Rogers (2003, 2004 and 2005) is next by number of victories, with three wins; Martin and Rogers are the only people to have taken three wins in successive years. Bradley Wiggins is the oldest winner of the even ...
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