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2009 Tour de Pologne

2009 Tour de Pologne
2009 UCI World Ranking, race 19 of 24
Race details
Dates 2 – 8 August
Stages 7
Distance 1,158.1 km (719.6 mi)
Winning time 28:46:13
Results
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Alessandro Ballan (ITA) (Lampre–NGC)
  Second  Daniel Moreno (ESP) (Caisse d'Epargne)
  Third  Edvald Boasson Hagen (NOR) (Team Columbia–HTC)

Points  Jurgen Roelandts (BEL) (Silence–Lotto)
Mountains  Marek Rutkiewicz (POL) (Team Poland Bank BGŻ)
Sprints  David Loosli (SUI) (Lampre–NGC)
← 2008
2010 →
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Alessandro Ballan (ITA) (Lampre–NGC)
  Second  Daniel Moreno (ESP) (Caisse d'Epargne)
  Third  Edvald Boasson Hagen (NOR) (Team Columbia–HTC)

Points  Jurgen Roelandts (BEL) (Silence–Lotto)
Mountains  Marek Rutkiewicz (POL) (Team Poland Bank BGŻ)
Sprints  David Loosli (SUI) (Lampre–NGC)

The 2009 Tour de Pologne was the 66th running of the Tour de Pologne, in the 81st year since the first edition. The event was part of both the 2009 UCI ProTour and the inaugural World Calendar, and ran from 2–8 August, starting in Warsaw and finishing in Kraków. After four stages that were dominated by sprint finishes, World champion Alessandro Ballan's participation in successful breaks in stages five and six, and bonus time for being first and second respectively in those stages, brought him overall victory.


There is a circuit of at least two laps on every stage.

2 August 2009 – Warsaw, 108 km

3 August 2009 – Serock to Białystok, 219.1 km

This stage was very flat, with only a fourth-category climb near the end. There was a three-lap, 6.5 km circuit at the finish.

4 August 2009 – Bielsk Podlaski to Lublin, 225.1 km

This course is mostly flat, though it becomes bumpy at the end. The 4.6 km finishing circuit includes multiple passes over a third-category climb.

5 August 2009 – Nałęczów to Rzeszów, 239.7 km

In a chaotic bunch sprint, Edvald Boasson Hagen led out teammate André Greipel. While Greipel and Quick-Step sprinter Allan Davis grappled for his wheel, Boasson Hagen led on to take the win. Greipel was later relegated, and lost both the yellow and blue jersey to Jurgen Roelandts.

This course has a sloping profile, with two categorized climbs in the second half of the stage as well as an uncategorized hill coming after about 40 km. There is a three-lap finishing circuit again on this stage; it is 5.9 km long and flat.


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