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The 2024 Vuelta a España was a three-week cycling race that took place in Portugal and Spain between 17 August and 8 September. It was the 79th edition of the Vuelta a España and the third and final grand tour of the 2024 men's road cycling season. The race departed from Lisbon and finished in Madrid. [1]
The 2024 Vuelta a España was a three-week cycling race that took place in Portugal and Spain between 17 August and 8 September. It was the 79th edition of the Vuelta a España and the third and final grand tour of the 2024 men's road cycling season. The race departed from Lisbon and finished in Madrid. [1]
The 2024 Vuelta a España was a three-week cycling race that took place in Portugal and Spain between 17 August and 8 September. It was the 79th edition of the Vuelta a España and the third and final grand tour of the 2024 men's road cycling season. The race departed from Lisbon and finished in Madrid. [1]
Volta a Espanya de 2024; Usage on cs.wikipedia.org Vuelta a España 2024; Usage on da.wikipedia.org Vuelta a España 2024; Usage on de.wikipedia.org Vuelta a España 2024; Usage on es.wikipedia.org Usuario:NACLE; Vuelta a España 2024; Usage on eu.wikipedia.org 2024ko Espainiako Itzulia; Usage on fi.wikipedia.org Espanjan ympäriajo 2024
This page was last edited on 1 February 2024, at 20:44 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Ciudad de Bragado PPA One Tonner: 1.NE 5 November 2023 Félix Stehli (SUI) EF Education–EasyPost: Tapalque: 1.NE 5 November 2023 Elbio Alborzen (ARG) SAT Team Volta do Curimatau: 1.NE 5 November 2023 Kléber Ramos (BRA) Unifunvic Pindamondangadaba Zarate 2 1.NE 5 November 2023 Miguel Angel Montes (ARG) Mercedes: 1.NE 5 November 2023
1 1 Italy 16 12 Kazakhstan 2 2 Luxembourg 2 0 Mexico 1 1 Netherlands 12 10 New Zealand 3 2 Norway 2 2 Poland 2 2 Portugal 3 1 Slovenia 1 1 3 (Primož Roglič x3) South Africa 1 1 Spain 32 27 4 (Urko Berrade, Pablo Castrillo x2, Marc Soler) Switzerland 2 2 1 (Stefan Küng) United States 4 4 1 (Brandon McNulty) 1 1 Total
In 1955, when El Correo resurrected the Vuelta, yellow became the colour of the leader's jersey, the same color as in the Tour de France (known as the "Maillot amarillo"). Except for the 1977 Vuelta, when the jersey was orange, a yellow jersey was worn until 1998, when the color was deepened to a gold hue ("Jersey de Oro").