Raid Gauloises
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The Raid Gauloises or The Raid is considered by many to be the first modern adventure race and was first held in 1989. Its creator, Gerald Fusil, took the existing concept of long distance endurance races, and focused on the team aspects, requiring each competitor to be part of a five person co-ed team. The Raid had no set course, with competitors being required to rely on their wits and judgment to reach the specified checkpoints. The Raid was named after its original sponsor, the Gauloises Cigarette Company.
In 1998, Fusil left the Raid to begin a new adventure race series, the Elf Authentic Adventure. 2003 was the last year for the Raid Gauloises. In 2004 the Raid Gauloises was retooled into the Raid World Championship.
The 2006 Raid World Cup will be broadcast in the United States on November 11, 2006 on NBC. Times and international broadcasting information is available on the Raid website
[edit] Raid World Cup
The current format (since 2004) is that of a series of events called The Raid World Cup culminating in a world championship event called The Raid World Championship. This final championship event is supposed to be similar to the original events and were held in the following locations:
- 2004 - Argentina
- 2005 - France / Italy / Switzerland (Annecy / Mont Blanc / Gstaad)
- 2006 - Canada
- 2007 - Not held
[edit] Original Raid Gauloises events
- 1989 – New Zealand
- 1990 – Costa Rica
- 1991 – New Caledonia
- 1992 – Oman
- 1993 – Madagascar
- 1994 – Malaysia
- 1995 – Argentina
- 1996 – not held
- 1997 – South Africa
- 1998 – Ecuador
- 1999 – not held
- 2000 – Tibet/ Nepal
- 2001 – not held
- 2002 – Bac Ha, Vietnam
- 2003 – Kyrgyzstan
[edit] External links
- The Raid World Championship This multisport, triathlon, adventure racing or other endurance related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.