*** Welcome to piglix ***

2015 Tour de Suisse

2015 Tour de Suisse
2015 UCI World Tour, race 17 of 28
Simon Špilak won the 2015 Tour de Suisse.
Simon Špilak won the 2015 Tour de Suisse.
Race details
Dates 13–21 June 2015
Stages 9
Distance 1,258 km (781.7 mi)
Winning time 30h 15' 09"
Results
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Simon Špilak (SLO) (Team Katusha)
  Second  Geraint Thomas (GBR) (Team Sky)
  Third  Tom Dumoulin (NED) (Team Giant–Alpecin)

Mountains  Stefan Denifl (AUT) (IAM Cycling)
Sprints  Peter Sagan (SVK) (Tinkoff–Saxo)
  Team Team Sky
← 2014
2016 →
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Simon Špilak (SLO) (Team Katusha)
  Second  Geraint Thomas (GBR) (Team Sky)
  Third  Tom Dumoulin (NED) (Team Giant–Alpecin)

Mountains  Stefan Denifl (AUT) (IAM Cycling)
Sprints  Peter Sagan (SVK) (Tinkoff–Saxo)
  Team Team Sky

The 2015 Tour de Suisse was the 79th edition of the Tour de Suisse stage race. It took place from 13 to 21 June and was the seventeenth race of the 2015 UCI World Tour. It started in Risch-Rotkreuz and finished in Bern. The race was composed of nine stages including two time trials, a short one on the first day and a long one on the last day. The event covered 1,258 km (782 mi) and visited Liechtenstein and Austria on its fifth stage. There was only one mountaintop finish, on the aforementioned stage five.

The winner of the general classification was Slovenian Simon Špilak of Team Katusha, who won the race by a margin of only five seconds from Great Britain's Geraint Thomas (Team Sky). The ultimate selection was made on the last day's individual time trial. Tom Dumoulin of the Team Giant–Alpecin squad rounded up the podium. The latter won the two individual time trials, on the first and last stage.

The mountains classification was awarded to Austria's Stefan Denifl (IAM Cycling), who featured in many breakaways to amass his points. The sprints classification was won by Slovakian Peter Sagan (Tinkoff–Saxo) who also was the victor of two stages. Team Sky finished at the head of the team classification with a margin of 11 minutes and 49 seconds.

Other riders who won a stage were Croatian Kristijan Đurasek of Lampre–Merida, Australian Michael Matthews (Orica–GreenEDGE), Norwegian Alexander Kristoff (Team Katusha) and Kazakh Alexey Lutsenko of Astana. Frenchman Thibaut Pinot grabbed the queen stage to the Rettenbach glacier and held the leader's jersey for four stages, but had to surrender it on the last day of competition to Špilak.


...
Wikipedia

...