1995 Paris–Roubaix (original) (raw)
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Cycling race
1995 Paris–Roubaix
1995 UCI Road World Cup, race 3 | |
---|---|
Official event poster | |
Race details | |
Dates | April 9, 1995 |
Stages | 1 |
Distance | 266.5 km (165.6 mi) |
Winning time | 6h 27' 08" |
Results | |
Winner Franco Ballerini (ITA)(Mapei–GB–Latexco) Second Andrei Tchmil (MDA)(Lotto–Isoglass) Third Johan Museeuw (BEL)(Mapei–GB–Latexco) | |
← 1994 1996 → |
The 93rd running of the Paris–Roubaix single-day cycling classic, often known as the Hell of the North, was held on 9 April 1995. Italian Franco Ballerini won his first of two victories, finishing two minutes ahead of the pursuing group after a 30 km solo. Andrei Tchmil won the sprint for second place before Johan Museeuw.[1] The race started in Compiègne and finished on the velodrome of Roubaix, overing a distance of 266.5 kilometres (165.6 miles). The race served as the third leg of the 1995 UCI World Cup. 91 of 178 riders finished.
9-04-1995: Compiègne–Roubaix, 266 km.
Results (1–10)[1]
| | Cyclist | Team | Time | | | ---------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------- | | 1 | Franco Ballerini (ITA) | Mapei–GB–Latexco | 6h 27' 08" | | 2 | Andrei Tchmil (UKR) | Lotto–Isoglass | + 1' 56" | | 3 | Johan Museeuw (BEL) | Mapei–GB–Latexco | + 1' 56" | | 4 | Viatcheslav Ekimov (RUS) | Novell–Decca–Colnago | + 1' 56" | | 5 | Johan Capiot (BEL) | Refin | + 1' 56" | | 6 | Eric Vanderaerden (BEL) | Brescialat–Fago | + 2' 00" | | 7 | Fabio Baldato (ITA) | MG Maglificio–Technogym | + 2' 00" | | 8 | Frédéric Moncassin (FRA) | Novell–Decca–Colnago | + 2' 00" | | 9 | Rolf Aldag (GER) | Team Telekom | + 2' 00" | | 10 | Gianluca Bortolami (ITA) | Mapei–GB–Latexco | + 2' 00" |
- ^ a b "Paris-Roubaix, World Cup". Cyclingnews.com. Bath, UK: Future plc. 1995-04-09. Retrieved 2012-09-26.
- Results by Cyclingbase.com Archived 2007-09-30 at the Wayback Machine