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2016 Eneco Tour

2016 Eneco Tour
2016 UCI World Tour, race 26 of 27
Race details
Dates 19–25 September
Stages 7
Distance 981.9 km (610.1 mi)
Winning time 22h 43' 26"
Results
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Niki Terpstra (NED) (Etixx–Quick-Step)
  Second  Oliver Naesen (BEL) (IAM Cycling)
  Third  Peter Sagan (SVK) (Tinkoff)

Points  Peter Sagan (SVK) (Tinkoff)
Combativity  Bert Van Lerberghe (BEL) (Topsport Vlaanderen–Baloise)
  Team Etixx–Quick-Step
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2017 →
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Niki Terpstra (NED) (Etixx–Quick-Step)
  Second  Oliver Naesen (BEL) (IAM Cycling)
  Third  Peter Sagan (SVK) (Tinkoff)

Points  Peter Sagan (SVK) (Tinkoff)
Combativity  Bert Van Lerberghe (BEL) (Topsport Vlaanderen–Baloise)
  Team Etixx–Quick-Step

The 2016 Eneco Tour is a road cycling stage race which took place between 19 and 25 September 2016 in the Netherlands and Belgium. It was the 12th edition of the Eneco Tour stage race and the twenty-sixth race of the 2016 UCI World Tour. It was won by Niki Terpstra.

The 18 UCI World Tour teams are automatically entitled and obliged to start the race. The race organisation also gave out wildcards to four UCI Professional Continental teams.

World Tour teams

Professional Continental teams

The course for the race was announced in March 2016.

There are four principal classifications in the race. The first of these is the general classification, calculated by adding up the time each rider took to ride each stage. Time bonuses are applied for winning stages (10, 6 and 4 seconds to the first three riders) and for the three "golden kilometre" sprints on each stage. At each of these sprints, the first three riders are given 3-, 2- and 1-second bonuses respectively. The rider with the lowest cumulative time is the winner of the general classification. The rider leading the classification wins a white jersey.

There is also a points classification. On each road stage the riders are awarded points for finishing in the top 10 places, with other points awarded for intermediate sprints. The rider with the most accumulated points is the leader of the classification and wins the red jersey. The combativity classification is based solely on points won at the intermediate sprints; the leading rider wins the green jersey. The final classification is a team classification: on each stage the times of the best three riders on each team are added up. The team with the lowest cumulative time over the seven stages wins the team classification.


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Wikipedia

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