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2017 Tour of Oman

2017 Tour of Oman
UCI Asia Tour
Race details
Dates 14–19 February 2017
Stages 6
Distance 878 km (545.6 mi)
Winning time 20h 56' 20"
Results
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Ben Hermans (Belgium) (BMC Racing Team)
  Second  Rui Costa (Portugal) (UAE Abu Dhabi)
  Third  Fabio Aru (Italy) (Astana)

Points  Alexander Kristoff (Norway) (Team Katusha–Alpecin)
Youth  Merhawi Kudus (Eritrea) (Team Dimension Data)
Combativity  Aimé De Gendt (Belgium) (Sport Vlaanderen–Baloise)
  Team Team Dimension Data
← 2016
2018 →
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Ben Hermans (Belgium) (BMC Racing Team)
  Second  Rui Costa (Portugal) (UAE Abu Dhabi)
  Third  Fabio Aru (Italy) (Astana)

Points  Alexander Kristoff (Norway) (Team Katusha–Alpecin)
Youth  Merhawi Kudus (Eritrea) (Team Dimension Data)
Combativity  Aimé De Gendt (Belgium) (Sport Vlaanderen–Baloise)
  Team Team Dimension Data

The 2017 Tour of Oman was a road cycling stage race that took place between 14 and 19 February 2017 in Oman. It was the eighth edition of the Tour of Oman and was rated as a 2.HC race as part of the 2017 UCI Asia Tour. The previous year's winner, Vincenzo Nibali, did not defend his title.

The race was won by Belgium's Ben Hermans, as part of the BMC Racing Team; Hermans took the race lead after winning the second stage of the race, and further extended his lead with a victory in the queen stage of the race, finishing at Jabal Al Akhdhar. Hermans won the race by 22 seconds ahead of Portuguese rider Rui Costa (UAE Abu Dhabi), who finished second on two stages during the race. The podium was completed by Astana's Fabio Aru from Italy, who was a further 13 seconds in arrears of Costa.

Hermans duked it out for the points classification victory with Norwegian sprinter Alexander Kristoff (Team Katusha–Alpecin), with the honours ultimately going to Kristoff, who won three of the remaining four stages of the race. The young rider classification was won by Eritrea's Merhawi Kudus, who finished in fourth place overall for Team Dimension Data, while Belgian Aimé De Gendt (Sport Vlaanderen–Baloise) won the combativity classification for points won at intermediate sprints and noted climbs. With Kudus, Lachlan Morton and Nathan Haas all finishing within the top ten overall, Team Dimension Data won the teams classification.


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