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Tim Wellens

Tim Wellens
Tongeren - Ronde van Limburg, 15 juni 2014 (B096).JPG
Wellens at the 2014 Ronde van Limburg
Personal information
Full name Tim Wellens
Born (1991-05-10) 10 May 1991 (age 26)
Sint-Truiden, Belgium
Height 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Team information
Current team Lotto–Soudal
Discipline Road
mountain biking (former)
Role Rider
Rider type Puncheur
Amateur team(s)
2009 Avia Cycling Team
2010–2012 Davo Lotto Davitamon
Professional team(s)
2012– Lotto–Belisol
Major wins

Grand Tours

Giro d'Italia
1 individual stage (2016)

Stage races

Eneco Tour (2014, 2015)
Tour de Pologne (2016)

One-Day Races and Classics

GP de Montréal (2015)

Grand Tours

Stage races

One-Day Races and Classics

Tim Wellens (born 10 May 1991) is a Belgian professional road bicycle racer, and former mountain bicycle racer, who rides for UCI ProTeam Lotto–Soudal.

Born in Sint-Truiden, Wellens has competed as a professional since the middle of the 2012 season, joining the Lotto–Belisol team after three seasons with the squad's development team. Wellens made his début with the team at the GP José Dubois, where he finished eighth; he later made his first appearances on the UCI World Tour, by competing in the Canadian pair of races in Quebec, and Montreal attempting to bridge to each race's breakaway during the respective events. Wellens performed strongly in the season-ending Tour of Beijing, finishing each of the race's stages inside the top 25 placings – taking a best of fifth on the final stage – en route to a final overall placing of tenth, and second to Saxo Bank–Tinkoff Bank rider Rafał Majka in the young rider classification.

In August 2014, Wellens won Stage 6 in the Eneco Tour with a solo breakaway. The time he gained on this stage meant he ultimately won the race overall.

He was named in the start list for the 2015 Tour de France.

At the 2015 Eneco Tour, on Stage 6 Wellens attacked on the Côte Saint-Roch, then won nine seconds in the sprints in the golden kilometre. The main group was not able to chase Wellens down and his lead extended during the downhill run into Houffalize; he won the stage by 49 seconds ahead of Van Avermaet, with Geschke third. Wellens moved into the overall lead, 1' 03" ahead of Van Avermaet, with Kelderman dropping to third. Wellens defended his lead on the final stage to win his second successive Eneco Tour.


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Wikipedia

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