The Tour of Qatar was an annual professional cycling stage race held in Qatar. First organized in 2002, the event was part of the UCI Asia Tour until 2016. The 2017 edition was to have seen the event upgraded to the UCI World Tour for the first time,[1][2] but it was cancelled due to lack of sponsorship support.[3]

Quick Facts Race details, Date ...
Tour of Qatar
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Race details
DateJanuary–February
RegionQatar
DisciplineRoad
TypeStage race
OrganiserAmaury Sport Organisation
Web sitewww.letour.fr/us/homepage_courseTQA.html Edit this at Wikidata
History
First edition2002 (2002)
Editions15 (as of 2016)
First winner Thorsten Wilhelms (GER)
Most wins Tom Boonen (BEL) (4 wins)
Most recent Mark Cavendish (GBR)
Close

The event consisted of a men's competition over five stages, and, since 2009, a women's competition over four stages – held a week before the men's race. Because Qatar is entirely flat, the tour was almost always won by a sprinter or classics specialist. Belgian Tom Boonen and Dutchwoman Kirsten Wild hold the record with four overall wins, in the men's and ladies' competition respectively.

Men's past winners

General classification

Tom Boonen (pictured at the 2012 Tour of Qatar) holds a record 4 overall wins and 22 stage wins.

Points classification

Stage wins

Ladies' past winners

Quick Facts Race details, Date ...
Ladies Tour of Qatar
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Race details
DateFebruary
RegionQatar
DisciplineRoad
TypeStage race
OrganiserAmaury Sport Organisation
Web sitewww.letour.fr/us/homepage_courseTQA.html Edit this at Wikidata
History
First edition2009 (2009)
Editions8 (as of 2016)
First winner Kirsten Wild (NED)
Most wins Kirsten Wild (NED) (4 wins)
Most recent Trixi Worrack (GER)
Close
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Eddy Merckx presenting Ellen van Dijk with the gold leader's jersey after the first stage of the 2015 Ladies Tour of Qatar.

General classification

Points classification

2017 Cancellation

The 2017 Tour of Qatar was scheduled to take place between 6 and 10 February 2017. However, in December 2016, the event was cancelled due to lack of sponsorship support.[5][6] It would have been the 16th edition of the race and third event of the 2017 UCI World Tour.[7] It was included in the UCI World Tour calendar for the first time.[1][2]

Notes

  1. Haussler announced he would give up his German citizenship and would ride for Australia in the future.[4]

References

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