The Tour of Faroe Islands (Faroese: Kring Føroyar) is a road cycling race held in the Faroe Islands. The race consists of a men's, women's[2] and juniors' competition over a prologue and four or five stages, which are for elite cyclists and shorter distances for non-elite cyclists. From 2011 to 2013, the race was changed to four stages in three days. The first edition of the Kring Føroyar tour was held in 1996 but it was not an official race; the 1997 Tour was the first official edition of the race.[3] The race is normally held in July shortly before Ólavsøka. In 2012 the race was held from 20 July to 22 July.[4] The last day of the race is held in Tórshavn, and the roads are closed for traffic on that day.[5] In 2015 the race will be held from 22–26 July.[6] For sponsor reasons the name of the tour was Statoil Kring Føroyar,[7] and later when the Faroese company changed its name from Statoil to Effo, the tour was called Effo Kring Føroyar. In 2014 the race got a new main sponsor and the name was changed to Volvo Kring Føroyar.[8][9] As of 2015, the length of the race is 430 kilometres (270 mi) for elite cyclists and 230 kilometres (140 mi) for youth and senior cyclists.[6][10]
Race details | |
---|---|
Date | May / July |
Region | Faroe Islands |
English name | Tour of Faroe Islands |
Local name(s) | Kring Føroyar |
Discipline | Road |
Competition | Elite[1] and amateur |
Type | Stage race |
Organiser | Tórshavnar Súkklufelag |
History | |
First edition | 1997 |
Editions | 23 (as of 2022) |
First winner | Bogi Kristiansen (FRO) |
Most wins | Torkil Veyhe (FRO)(6) |
Most recent | Jákup Petur Eliassen (FRO) |
The 2015 Tour of Faroe Islands started on 22 July in Tórshavn[11] and ends also in Tórshavn five days later on 26 July.[12] The route was as follows: Day 1: Tórshavn-Runavík (from Streymoy to Eysturoy), day 2: Klaksvík-Sornfelli (from Borðoy to a mountain on Streymoy), day 3: Sandur-around the island Sandoy-Sandur, day 4: Suðuroy, starting end ending at the Effo-station in Tvøroyri, the final day: starting and ending at Wenzel in Tórshavn.[13] The road racers at the 2015 tour come from the Faroe Islands, Iceland and Denmark.[14] The winner of stage 1, 2 and 3 of the 2015 tour was Torkil Veyhe, the winner of stage 4 was Dávur Magnussen, who also won the mountain jersey for stage 4 which was in Suðuroy.[15] Torkil Veyhe won the 2015 Tour of Faroe Islands, it took him 12 hours 51 minutes to race the 460 km route, Guðmundur Joensen was runner-up and Bjarke Vodder Nielsen took bronze. Dávur Magnussen won the mountain-jersey.[16]
Past winners
editYear | Winner | Second | Third |
---|---|---|---|
1997 | Bogi Kristiansen | Rógvi Johansen | Gunnar Dahl-Olsen |
1998[17] | Bogi Kristiansen[18] | Gunnar Dahl-Olsen | Sverri M. Edvinsson |
1999 | Rógvi Johansen | Bogi Kristiansen | Keld Petersen |
2000[19][20] | Rógvi Johansen | Jørgen Andersen | Gunnar Dahl-Olsen |
2001[21] | Bogi Kristiansen | Anders Michaelsen | Gunnar Dahl-Olsen |
2002[22] | Karsten Ellerup | Anders Rasmussen | Leon Vibholm |
2003[23] | Thomas Japp Hansen[24] | Ivan Kristensen | Gunnar Dahl-Olsen |
2004 | Niels Jakob Thomsen | Gunnar Dahl-Olsen | Niels Bay Petersen |
2005[25][26] | Hafsteinn Ægir Geirsson | Gunnar Dahl-Olsen | Bogi Kristiansen |
2006 | Hafsteinn Ægir Geirsson | Gunnar Dahl-Olsen | Kári Brynjólfsson |
2007[27] | Hafsteinn Ægir Geirsson | Torkil Veyhe | Davíð Þór Sigurðsson |
2008[28][29][30] | Hafsteinn Ægir Geirsson[31][32] | Torkil Veyhe | Guðmundur Joensen |
2009[33] | Torkil Veyhe[34] | Guðmundur Joensen | Árni Már Jónsson |
2010[35] | Torkil Veyhe | Kristian Gosvig | Guðmundur Joensen |
2011 | Kristian Gosvig[36] | Guðmundur Joensen | Gunnar Dahl-Olsen |
2012 | Torkil Veyhe[37][38] | Guðmundur Joensen | Gunnar Dahl-Olsen |
2013 | Cancelled[39][40] | ||
2014[41][42] | Torkil Veyhe[43][44] | Helgi Winther Olsen | Bjarke Vodder Nielsen |
2015 | Torkil Veyhe[16] | Guðmundur Joensen | Bjarke Vodder Nielsen |
2016 | Cancelled[39][45] | ||
2017 | Torkil Veyhe[46] | Jan Hjaltalin Olsen | Andrew Macleod |
2018 | Helgi Winther Olsen | Dávur Magnussen | Gunnar Dahl-Olsen |
2019 | Cancelled[47] | ||
2020 | Helgi Winther Olsen | Jákup Petur Eliassen | Hilmar Hansen |
2021 | Helgi Winther Olsen | Jákup Petur Eliassen | Hilmar Hansen |
2022 | Jákup Petur Eliassen | Hilmar Hansen | Gunnar Dahl-Olsen |
References
edit- ^ "Information in english - Effo Kring Føroyar 2014". Tórshavnar Súkklufelag. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
- ^ Nielsen, Jóanis (26 July 2014). "VOLVO Kring Føroyar: Helgi W. Olsen vann í dag" (in Faroese). jn.fo. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
- ^ Tróndarson, Sveinur (1 August 2013). "Kring Føroyar: Tað er ein lítil vón enn" (in Faroese). Portal.fo. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
- ^ "Effo kring Føroyar 2012(Tour de Faroes) - Tórshavnar Súkklufelag". www.tsf.fo.
- ^ Torsportal.fo, EFFO kring Føroyar – vegir stongdir sunnudagin (in Faroese)
- ^ a b "Volvo Kring Føroyar 2015 – 22. – 26. Juli" (in Faroese). Tsf.fo. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
- ^ "Landsverk". Archived from the original on 2015-07-13. Retrieved 2015-07-12.
- ^ "Volvo Kring Føroyar 2014" (in Faroese). Sudurras.fo. 17 July 2014. Archived from the original on 13 July 2015. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
- ^ "www.in.fo". in.fo. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
- ^ "Volvo Kring Føroyar 22. - 26. júlí" (in Icelandic). Hjolamot.is. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
- ^ Koba, Finnur (21 July 2015). "Nú byrjar okkara Tour De France (Now starts our Tour de France)" (in Faroese). Kringvarp Føroya. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
- ^ Jacobsen, Sonni (20 July 2015). "Volvo Kring Føroyar 2015 – starttíðir" (in Faroese). vp.fo. Retrieved 21 July 2015.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Rana, Hallur av (20 July 2015). "Starttíðirnar til Volvo Kring Føroyar 2015" (in Faroese). in.fo. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
- ^ Rana, Hallur av (20 July 2015). "Torkil Veyhe vinnur aftur í ár" (in Faroese). in.fo. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
- ^ Nielsen, Jóanis Albert (26 July 2015). "Volvo Kring Føroyar - Fjallatroyggja og ein sigur til Dávur" (in Faroese). Portal.fo. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
- ^ a b in.fo - Torkil Veyhe vann Volvo Kring Føroyar
- ^ "www.in.fo". in.fo. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
- ^ "www.in.fo". in.fo.
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- ^ "www.in.fo". in.fo.
- ^ cqranking.com
- ^ "www.in.fo". in.fo.
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- ^ "www.in.fo". in.fo.
- ^ "JÓGVAN ARGE - Tað snýr seg um álit". jogvanarge.com.
- ^ "www.in.fo". in.fo.
- ^ "Frábær sigur hjá Haffa" (in Icelandic). Brokey.is. 24 July 2008. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
- ^ "www.in.fo". in.fo. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
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- ^ "Øðrvísi súkklukapping í ár - Suðuroyarportalurin". sudurras.fo. Archived from the original on 2015-07-14. Retrieved 2015-07-12.
- ^ "Færøsk mester og Steensen forlænger". Cykelmagasinet 2015.
- ^ "www.in.fo". in.fo.
- ^ a b Nielsen, Jóanis (1 August 2015). "Súkkling Kring Føroyar 2013 er avlýst" (in Faroese). jn.fo. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
- ^ "www.in.fo". in.fo.
- ^ "Sandportal » Blog Archive » Nýggjur høvuðsstuðul og tí nýtt navn á Kring Føroyar súkklukappingini". sandportal.fo.
- ^ Nielsen, Jóanis (27 July 2014). "VOLVO Kring Føroyar 2014 - myndir (photos from the 2014 tour)" (in Faroese). Jn.fo. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
- ^ Samuelsen, Ingi (28 July 2014). "Torkil Veyhe bestur kring Føroyar" (in Faroese). Portal.fo. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
- ^ "www.in.fo". in.fo. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
- ^ "www.in.fo". in.fo.
- ^ "Torkil vann Volvo kring Føroyar" (in Faroese). Dimma.fo. 24 July 2017. Retrieved 24 July 2017.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "www.in.fo". in.fo.