Jump to content

Luc Roosen: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
mismatching number suffix combination Ordinal number (linguistics), Names of numbers in English#Ordinal numbers and MOS:NUM, replaced: 103th → 103rd using AWB
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Luc Roosen''' (born September 17, 1964 in [[Bree, Belgium|Bree]]) is a retired [[Road bicycle racing|road racing]] [[cyclist]] from [[Belgium]], who was a professional rider from [[1986]] to [[1997]]. He competed in six [[Tour de France]]s: 1986 (103th), 1987 (104th), 1989 (27th), 1992 (retired) and 1993 (69th), and finished in second place in the [[1990 Amstel Gold Race]]. Roosen obtained a total number of sixteen victories during his professional career.
'''Luc Roosen''' (born September 17, 1964 in [[Bree, Belgium|Bree]]) is a retired [[Road bicycle racing|road racing]] [[cyclist]] from [[Belgium]], who was a professional rider from [[1986]] to [[1997]]. He competed in six [[Tour de France]]s: 1986 (103rd), 1987 (104th), 1989 (27th), 1992 (retired) and 1993 (69th), and finished in second place in the [[1990 Amstel Gold Race]]. Roosen obtained a total number of sixteen victories during his professional career.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 15:10, 24 January 2010

Luc Roosen (born September 17, 1964 in Bree) is a retired road racing cyclist from Belgium, who was a professional rider from 1986 to 1997. He competed in six Tour de Frances: 1986 (103rd), 1987 (104th), 1989 (27th), 1992 (retired) and 1993 (69th), and finished in second place in the 1990 Amstel Gold Race. Roosen obtained a total number of sixteen victories during his professional career.

References