Race details | |
---|---|
Date | May |
Region | The Czech Republic (Czechoslovakia before 1993) Germany (East Germany before 1990) Poland |
English name | Peace Race |
Local name(s) | Friedensfahrt (German) Závod Míru (Czech) Wyścig Pokoju (Polish) Course de la Paix (French) |
Discipline | Road |
Competition | UCI Europe Tour |
Type | Stage-race |
History | |
First edition | 1948 |
Editions | 59 (as of 2006) |
First winner | August Prosinek (YUG) |
Most wins | Steffen Wesemann (GER) (5 wins) |
Most recent | Giampaolo Cheula (ITA) |
The Peace Race (German: Friedensfahrt, Czech: Závod Míru, Russian: Велогонка Мира (Velogonka Mira), Polish: Wyścig Pokoju, French: Course de la Paix, Italian: Corsa della Pace) is a cycling event held in May. It traditionally took place in Germany, Poland and Czechoslovakia (since 1993 the Czech Republic), though it also included other countries, especially in recent years.
Contents |
The first Peace Race was held in 1948, when there were two editions connecting cities of Warsaw and Prague. The one to Prague was won by August Prosinek, the other one to Warsaw by Alexander Zoric, both from Yugoslavia. During the Cold War the Peace Race was known as the 'Tour de France of the East'.
Because cyclists from the Eastern Bloc were not allowed to become professional it was an amateur race. It attracted the best cyclists from communist countries, plus guest teams from non-communist countries. Communist-bloc riders tended to dominate the event, but there were exceptions: Briton Ian Steel won the 1952 race, and the British League of Racing Cyclists team also won the team competition - the first time that both classifications had gone to the same nation.
One of the later winners was Sergei Sukhoruchenkov, who also won the gold medal on the Olympic Road Race in 1980.
The most successful riders in the Peace Race were Ryszard Szurkowski from Poland and Uwe Ampler from East Germany who each won the race 4 times and Steffen Wesemann from Germany who won the race 5 times. Gustav-Adolf Schur, who won the race twice, was voted the most popular East German sportsman ever in 1989.
After the end of the Cold War the race rapidly lost importance. For 2005 the race was cancelled, but its tradition resumed again in 2006.
The 2006, 58th edition took place on May 13–20. It started in Austria's Linz and via Czech Republic headed to Germany where it ended in Hannover. No capital city of these countries were crossed during the race.
After 2006, the race has been cancelled from the cycling calendar.
Year | Route | Length | Stages | Overall Winner | Winning Team |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1948 | Warsaw - Prague | 1104 km | 7 | August Prosinek | Poland I [1/9] |
1948 | Prague - Warsaw | 842 km | 5 | Alexander Zoric | Poland I [2/9] |
1949 | Prague - Warsaw | 1259 km | 8 | Jan Veselý | France II |
1950 | Warsaw - Prague | 1539 km | 9 | Willi Emborg | Czechoslovakia [1/5] |
1951 | Prague - Warsaw | 1544 km | 9 | Kay Allan Olsen | Czechoslovakia [2/5] |
1952 | Warsaw - Berlin - Prague | 2135 km | 12 | Ian Steel | United Kingdom |
1953 | Bratislava - Berlin - Warsaw | 2231 km | 12 | Christian Pedersen | East Germany [1/10] |
1954 | Warsaw - Berlin - Prague | 2051 km | 13 | Eluf Dalgaard | Czechoslovakia [3/5] |
1955 | Prague - Berlin - Warsaw | 2214 km | 13 | Gustav-Adolf Schur [1/2] | Czechoslovakia [4/5] |
1956 | Warsaw - Berlin - Prague | 2212 km | 12 | Stanislaw Krolak | Soviet Union [1/20] |
1957 | Prague - Berlin - Warsaw | 2220 km | 12 | Nencho Khristov | East Germany [2/10] |
1958 | Warsaw - Berlin - Prague | 2210 km | 12 | Piet Damen | Soviet Union [2/20] |
1959 | Berlin - Prague - Warsaw | 2057 km | 13 | Gustav-Adolf Schur [2/2] | Soviet Union [3/20] |
1960 | Prague - Warsaw - Berlin | 2290 km | 13 | Erich Hagen | East Germany [3/10] |
1961 | Warsaw - Berlin - Prague | 2435 km | 13 | Yuriy Melikhov | Soviet Union [4/20] |
1962 | Berlin - Prague - Warsaw | 2407 km | 14 | Gainan Saydkhushin | Soviet Union [5/20] |
1963 | Prague - Warsaw - Berlin | 2568 km | 15 | Klaus Ampler | East Germany [4/10] |
1964 | Warsaw - Berlin - Prague | 2246 km | 14 | Jan Smolík | East Germany [5/10] |
1965 | Berlin - Prague - Warsaw | 2318 km | 15 | Gennady Lebedev | Soviet Union [6/20] |
1966 | Prague - Warsaw - Berlin | 2340 km | 15 | Bernard Guyot | Soviet Union [7/20] |
1967 | Warsaw - Berlin - Prague | 2307 km | 16 | Marcel Maes | Poland [3/9] |
1968 | Berlin - Prague - Warsaw | 2352 km | 14 | Axel Peschel | Poland [4/9] |
1969 | Warsaw - Berlin | 2036 km | 15 | Jean-Pierre Danguillaume | East Germany [6/10] |
1970 | Prague - Warsaw - Berlin | 1976 km | 15 | Ryszard Szurkowski [1/4] | Poland [5/9] |
1971 | Warsaw - Berlin - Prague | 1895 km | 14 | Ryszard Szurkowski [2/4] | Soviet Union [8/20] |
1972 | Berlin - Prague - Warsaw | 2025 km | 14 | Vlastimil Moravec | Soviet Union [9/20] |
1973 | Prague - Warsaw - Berlin | 2076 km | P, 16, E | Ryszard Szurkowski [3/4] | Poland [6/9] |
1974 | Warsaw - Berlin - Prague | 1806 km | 14 | Stanislaw Szozda | Poland [7/9] |
1975 | Berlin - Prague - Warsaw | 1915 km | P, 13 | Ryszard Szurkowski [4/4] | Soviet Union [10/20] |
1976 | Prague - Warsaw - Berlin | 1974 km | P, 14 | Hans-Joachim Hartnick | Soviet Union [11/20] |
1977 | Warsaw - Berlin - Prague | 1648 km | 13 | Aavo Pikkuus | Soviet Union [12/20] |
1978 | Berlin - Prague - Warsaw | 1796 km | P, 12 | Alexander Averin | Soviet Union [13/20] |
1979 | Prague - Warsaw - Berlin | 1942 km | P, 14 | Sergei Sukhoruchenkov [1/2] | Soviet Union [14/20] |
1980 | Warsaw - Berlin - Prague | 2095 km | P, 14 | Yuriy Barinov | Soviet Union [15/20] |
1981 | Berlin - Prague - Warsaw | 1887 km | P, 14 | Shakhid Zagretdinov | Soviet Union [16/20] |
1982 | Prague - Warsaw - Berlin | 1941 km | P, 12 | Olaf Ludwig [1/2] | East Germany [7/10] |
1983 | Warsaw - Berlin - Prague | 1899 km | P, 12 | Falk Boden | East Germany [8/10] |
1984 | Berlin - Prague - Warsaw | 1689 km | P, 11 | Sergei Sukhoruchenkov [2/2] | Soviet Union [17/20] |
1985 | Prague - Moscow - Warsaw - Berlin | 1712 km | P, 12 | Lech Piasecki | Soviet Union [18/20] |
1986 | Kiev - Warsaw - Berlin - Prague | 2138 km | P, 15 | Olaf Ludwig [2/2] | Soviet Union [19/20] |
1987 | Berlin - Prague - Warsaw | 1987 km | P, 14 | Uwe Ampler [1/4] | East Germany [9/10] |
1988 | Bratislava - Katowice - Berlin | 2008 km | P, 13 | Uwe Ampler [2/4] | Soviet Union [20/20] |
1989 | Warsaw - Berlin - Prague | 1927 km | 12 | Uwe Ampler [3/4] | East Germany [10/10] |
1990 | Berlin - Slušovice - Bielsko-Biała | 1595 km | P, 11 | Ján Svorada | Czechoslovakia [5/5] |
1991 | Prague - Warsaw | 1261 km | P, 9 | Viktor Rakshinsky | Poland [8/9] |
1992 | Berlin - Karpacz - Mladá Boleslav | 1348 km | P, 9 | Steffen Wesemann [1/5] | Germany |
1993 | Tábor - Nový Bor | 1342 km | P, 9 | Jaroslav Bílek | Czech Republic [1/2] |
1994 | Tábor - Trutnov | 1354 km | P, 9 | Jens Voigt | Czech Republic [2/2] |
1995 | České Budějovice - Oberwiesenthal - Brno | 1379 km | P, 10 | Pavel Padrnos | Poland [9/9] |
1996 | Brno - Żywiec - Leipzig | 1703 km | P, 10 | Steffen Wesemann [2/5] | Team NE Telekom |
1997 | Potsdam - Żywiec - Brno | 1629 km | P, 10 | Steffen Wesemann [3/5] | Team Deutsche Telekom [1/2] |
1998 | Poznań - Karlovy Vary - Erfurt | 1591 km | 10 | Uwe Ampler [4/4] | Team Mroz [1/3] |
1999 | Znojmo - Polkowice - Magdeburg | 1613 km | 10 | Steffen Wesemann [4/5] | Team Mroz [2/3] |
2000 | Hannover - Kudowa Zdrój - Prague | 1608 km | 10 | Piotr Wadecki | Team Nürnberger |
2001 | Łódź - Plzeň - Potsdam | 1611 km | 10 | Jakob Piil | no competition |
2002 | České Budějovice - Chemnitz - Warsaw | 1470 km | 10 | Ondřej Sosenka | Team Mroz [3/3] |
2003 | Olomouc - Wałbrzych - Erfurt | 1552 km | 9 | Steffen Wesemann [5/5] | Team CCC Polsat |
2004 | Brussels - Wrocław - Prague | 1580 km | 9 | Michele Scarponi | T-Mobile Team [2/2] |
2006 | Linz - Karlovy Vary - Hannover | 1283 km | 8 | Giampaolo Cheula | Team Unibet.com |
Cyclists with three wins at least listed
Overall:
Sprinter competition:
Mountain climbers competition:
Teams competition:
Individual overall competitions were won by cyclist from following countries: