Maurits Lammertink of the Netherlands won the 4th stage of the Skoda Tour de Luxembourg cycling race from Mersch to Luxembourg on June 5, 2016 with a time of 16 hours, 28 minutes and 21 seconds. Philippe Gilbert of Belgium finished second, 9 seconds behind, and Alex Kirsch of Luxembourg finished third, 19 seconds behind. The 685.6 km stage had an average speed of 41.62 km/h. Maurits Lammertink also claimed the overall leader's yellow jersey for the Skoda Tour de Luxembourg.
Philippe Gilbert of BMC Racing won the 156.2 km fourth stage of the race from Mersch to Luxembourg in 4 hours, 17 minutes and 44 seconds. Maurits Lammertink of Roompot-Oranje Peloton finished second, also with a time of 4:17:44. Dylan Teuns of BMC Racing finished third with a time of 4:17:45.
Anthony Turgis of Cofidis won the 3rd stage of the Eschweiler-Differdange race in 3 hours, 57 minutes and 12 seconds. In second and third place were Christo Juul Jensen of Orica GreenEdge and Mathias Frank of IAM Cycling, who both finished with the same time as Turgis. The 171.1 km stage had an average speed of 43.28 km/h.
Maurits Lammertink of the Netherlands won the 4th stage of the Skoda Tour de Luxembourg cycling race from Mersch to Luxembourg on June 5, 2016 with a time of 16 hours, 28 minutes and 21 seconds. Philippe Gilbert of Belgium finished second, 9 seconds behind, and Alex Kirsch of Luxembourg finished third, 19 seconds behind. The 685.6 km stage had an average speed of 41.62 km/h. Maurits Lammertink also claimed the overall leader's yellow jersey for the Skoda Tour de Luxembourg.
Philippe Gilbert of BMC Racing won the 156.2 km fourth stage of the race from Mersch to Luxembourg in 4 hours, 17 minutes and 44 seconds. Maurits Lammertink of Roompot-Oranje Peloton finished second, also with a time of 4:17:44. Dylan Teuns of BMC Racing finished third with a time of 4:17:45.
Anthony Turgis of Cofidis won the 3rd stage of the Eschweiler-Differdange race in 3 hours, 57 minutes and 12 seconds. In second and third place were Christo Juul Jensen of Orica GreenEdge and Mathias Frank of IAM Cycling, who both finished with the same time as Turgis. The 171.1 km stage had an average speed of 43.28 km/h.
André Greipel of Germany won the first stage of the race from Luxembourg to Hesperange. The 170.6 km stage had an average speed of 40.44 km/h. Adam Blythe of Britain finished second and Amaury Capiot of Belgium was third. The stage was won in a time of 4 hours, 13 minutes and 7 seconds.
André Greipel of LTS Lotto Soudal won the 143.80 km stage from Eschweiler to Diekirch with an average speed of 36.06 km/h. Lars van der Haar of Team Giant and Enrico Gasparotto of Wanty-Group finished second and third respectively. A total of 114 riders finished the stage, while 4 riders did not finish and 1 rider did not start.
This document provides the results of the 3rd stage of the Eschweiler - Diekirch cycling race on June 6, 2015. It lists the top 110 finishers, including their placement, identification code, name, team, time, and time difference from the first place finisher, Linus Gerdemann of team Cult Energy. The stage was 561.57 km and had an average speed of 38.22 km/h.
Philippe Gilbert of BMC Racing won the 2nd stage of the ROSPORT-SCHIFFLANGE race, covering 162.80km in 3 hours, 55 minutes and 59 seconds. Maurits Lammertink of Roompot-Oranje Peloton finished second, also with a time of 3:55:59. Alex Kirsch of Stölting Service Group came third, matching the time of the top two riders. The stage had 112 starters and was completed by 110 riders, with two riders withdrawing from the race.
1. Jean-Pierre Drucker of BMC Racing won the prologue stage of the race in Luxembourg-Ville with a time of 0:04:20.36.
2. Maurits Lammertink of Roompot-Oranje Peloton finished second, 2.68 seconds behind Drucker.
3. Tom Bohli of BMC Racing finished third, 4.24 seconds off the leading time.
This document is the start list for stage 4 of a cycling race, an individual time trial from Dudelange to Dudelange over 25.4 km. It lists the 152 riders participating in the time trial, ordered by their start time, along with their name, nationality, team, and scheduled start time between 13:17 and 15:26.
This document outlines the curriculum for a Bachelor in International Sport Management degree program. The program is divided into 6 semesters over 3 years and includes courses in areas like sport sociology, business administration, economics, marketing, finance, law, governance, and research methods. Some key courses include Sport Sociology and Management, Applied Economics in Sports, Strategic Management in Sport Business, and an internship. The program aims to provide students with the skills and knowledge needed for careers in sport business and management.