International Junior Tour of Lower Saxony 2017

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The International Junior Tour of Lower Saxony 2017 took place from July 28th to 30th, 2017 with a length of 285.30 km in Wallenhorst and Bramsche .

course

Stage 1 was 66.30 km long, with the winner reaching a speed of 42.52 km / h. The Norwegian Jonas Iversby Hvideberg won the stage in 1:34:02 hours ahead of his fellow compatriots Søren Wœrenskjold and Olav Hjemsaeter . The remaining top 10 was filled by the Dane Mattias Skjelmose Jensen , the Briton Louis Rose-Davies , the two Dutchmen Thymen Arensman and Tim Naberman and the three Norwegians Daniel Arnes , Idar Andersen and Martin Urianstad . Stage 2a was a time trial with a length of 10.50 km, with the winner having a speed of 47.73 km / h. The top 3 consisted of the two Norwegians Andreas Leknessund and Søren Wœrenskjold and the German Juri Hollmann . Søren Wœrenskjold made it into the top 3 for the second time in a row and Olav Hjemsaeter, Thymen Arensman and Idar Andersen made it into the top 10 for the second time in a row. Stage 2b had a length of 94.20 km, with the winner a speed of Put 43.71 km / h on the day. The Belgian Arne Marit won the stage in 2:09:18 hours ahead of Johan Langballe from Denmark and Ken Conter from Luxembourg at the same time . Søren Wœrenskjold and Olav Hjemsaeter finished in the top 10 for the third time and Arne Marit for the second time in a row. Louis Rose-Davies and Martin Urianstad made it into the top 10 for the second time. Stage 3 had a length of 114.30 km , with the winner having a speed of 41.82 km / h. The top 3 consisted of the Belgian Jens Vanoverberghe , the Dane Ludvig Anton Wacker and the German Niklas Märkl . Søren Wœrenskjold finished fourth, Arne Marit third and Niklas Märkl and Brit Stephen Dent made it into the top 10 for the second time.

After stage 1, the top 10 was the overall - was the same as that of the day's standings, except for Louis Rose-Davies and Thymen Arensman, who swapped positions. After stage 2a Søren Wœrenskjold, Olav Hjemsaeter and Idar Andersen each lost two positions, but all remained in the top 10. Mattias Skjelmose Jensen, Louis Rose-Davies, Jonas Iversby Hvideberg, Tim Naberman and Martin Urianstad lost significantly more places and were between 13th and 98th place, while Daniel Arnes did not start the stage. Thymen Arensman was the only rider from the top 10 who could improve, with Andreas Leknessund and Arne Marit also moving into the top 10 from a top 30 position. The Germans Kilian Rietzler , Dominik Röber and Juri Hollmann and the Dane Jacob Hindsgaul Madsen improved from ranks 57, 87, 108 and 112 to the top 10 after stage 1. After stage 2b, Andreas Leknessund and Juri Hollmann each lost seven positions, but stayed both in the top 10. Arne Marit, Dominik Röber, Kilian Rietzler and Jacob Hindsgaul Madsen lost between three and seven places, which meant that they were twelfth to 15th in the overall ranking. Within the top 10, Søren Wœrenskjold, Olav Hjemsaeter, Thymen Arensman and Idar Andersen moved up two, three, one and four positions to places one to three and six. Mattias Skjelmose Jensen, Louis Rose-Davies and Tim Naberman returned to the top 10, previously placed between positions 13 and 43. Idar Andersen did not compete in stage 3, Andreas Leknessund, improved by two, and Juri Hollmann, Tim Naberman and the Dutchman Alexander Konijn rose by one position to eighth to tenth. Søren Wœrenskjold, Olav Hjemsaeter, Thymen Arensman, Jonas Iversby Hvideberg, Mattias Skjelmose Jensen and Louis Rose-Davies kept their position in the overall ranking.

Jonas Iversby Hvideberg led the points classification from stages 1 to 2a and Søren Wœrenskjold from stages 2b to 3. After stages 1 to 3, Søren Wœrenskjold was the leader of the junior competition. Olav Hjemsaeter led the mountain classification from stages 1 to 3.

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