- Crocodile Trophy
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Crocodile Trophy 2011 Crocodile Trophy Race details Date October Region North Queensland, Australia Discipline Mountain bike racing Type Stage race Organiser Gerhard Schönbacher Race director Gerhard Schönbacher History First edition 1995 Editions 17 (as of 2011) First winner Harald Maier (AUT) Most wins 4 wins
Jaap Viergever (NED)Most recent Jeroen Boelen (NED) The Crocodile Trophy is an annual mountain bike ten day stage race held in North Queensland, Australia. The race typically covers around the 1,200 kilometres (746 mi) over 10 stages and is known to be one of the most demanding mountain bike race in the world. The race is marked for the heat and the rough terrain of the Australian Outback. It claims to be 'the hardest, longest and most adventurous MTB race in the world'.
Contents
History
The race was orginally intended to take place in Vietnam. The event would last 18 days, starting in Saigon and finishing in Hanoi. But after spending two weeks in Vietnam race organisers Gerhard Schönbacher realized it was not possible to organise the event in Vietnam. Later on he found an alternative in Darwin and decided that the first route of the Crocodile Trophy would run from Darwin to Cairns.[1] The race's route would change every year.
Classifications
The Crocodile Trophy's leaders jersey is awarded after each stage to the rider with the lowest overall time. The rider who has the lowest overall time will wear the jersey at the next stage. The cyclist who is awarded the jersey after the final stage is the overall winner of the race.
The first five riders to cross the finish line at each stage will score points that count toward the Points classification (20, 15, 10, 5 and 2 points in chronological order). The first three riders to cross the line are also awarded bonification seconds (15, 10, and 52 seconds in chronological order) which will count toward the overall classifcation. The rider who holds the most points will wear a special jersey.
A team classification is assessed by adding the time of each team's best three riders each day. The competition does not have its own jersey. [2]
Winners
Year[3] Winner Male Winner Female 1995 Harald Maier (AUT) Meg Carrigan (AUS) 1996 Harald Maier (AUT) Brigitte Kurka (AUT) 1997 Jaap Viergever (NED) Regina Stanger (AUT) 1998 Harald Maier (AUT) no entries 1999 Jaap Viergever (NED) no entries 2000 Simon Apperloo (NED) Carrie Edwards (USA) 2001 Jaap Viergever (NED) Mieke Deroo (BEL) 2002 Jaap Viergever (NED) Mieke Deroo (BEL) 2003 Roland Stauder (ITA) Rosi King (AUS) 2004 Adam Hansen (AUS) Anita Waiss (AUT) 2005 Adam Hansen (AUS) Kim Proctor (AUS) 2006 Christoph Stevens (BEL) Dominique Angerer (AUT) 2007 Mauro Bettin (ITA) Michela Benzoni (ITA) 2008 Ondrej Fojtik (CZE) Karen Steurs (BEL) 2009 Urs Huber (SUI) [4] Monique Zeldenrust (NED) 2010 Urs Huber (SUI) Abby McLennan (AUS) 2011 Jeroen Boelen (NED) Jessica Douglas (AUS) Winners by Nationality
# of Victories Country 6 Netherlands 3 Austria 2 Switzerland Australia Italy 1 Czech Republic Belgium References
External links
Categories:- Mountain biking events
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