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2016 Paris–Nice

2016 Paris–Nice
2016 UCI World Tour, race 2 of 28
Route of the 2016 Paris–Nice
Route of the 2016 Paris–Nice
Race details
Dates 6–13 March 2016
Stages 8
Distance 1,293.6 km (803.8 mi)
Winning time 27h 26' 40"
Results
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Geraint Thomas (GBR) (Team Sky)
  Second  Alberto Contador (ESP) (Tinkoff)
  Third  Richie Porte (AUS) (BMC Racing Team)

Points  Michael Matthews (AUS) (Orica–GreenEDGE)
Mountains  Antoine Duchesne (CAN) (Direct Énergie)
  Team Movistar Team
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Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Geraint Thomas (GBR) (Team Sky)
  Second  Alberto Contador (ESP) (Tinkoff)
  Third  Richie Porte (AUS) (BMC Racing Team)

Points  Michael Matthews (AUS) (Orica–GreenEDGE)
Mountains  Antoine Duchesne (CAN) (Direct Énergie)
  Team Movistar Team

The 2016 Paris–Nice was a road cycling stage race that took place in France between 6 and 13 March 2016. It was the 74th edition of the Paris–Nice and was the second event of the 2016 UCI World Tour.

The race took place over eight stages, travelling south from Conflans-Sainte-Honorine to finish on the Promenade des Anglais in Nice, although one stage was cancelled due to weather conditions. After a prologue individual time trial, the first few stages were suited to sprinters. The decisive stages came on the final two days, with routes taking the riders through the Alps. The favourites for victory were therefore the climbers, including the defending champion Richie Porte (BMC Racing Team), Alberto Contador (Tinkoff) and Geraint Thomas (Team Sky).

Michael Matthews (Orica–GreenEDGE) won the prologue and took the leader's yellow jersey. He kept the jersey through the next five days, winning one more of the stages in a sprint. He lost the jersey on the summit finish on Stage 6 to Thomas, who in turn came close to losing it on the final day. After he was dropped by Contador on the final climb of the race, the Col d'Èze, he had to chase back on. At the end of the race, Thomas beat Contador by four seconds, with Richie Porte third a further eight seconds back. Matthews won the points classification and Antoine Duchesne (Direct Énergie) the mountains classification; Movistar won the team classification.


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