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・ 1935 All-Big Six Conference football team
・ 1935 All-Big Ten Conference football team
・ 1935 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship
・ 1935 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship
・ 1935 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final
・ 1935 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship
・ 1935 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final
・ 1935 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship
・ 1935 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final
・ 1935 All-Pacific Coast football team
・ 1935 All-SEC football team
・ 1935 All-Southwest Conference football team
・ 1934 Tennessee Volunteers football team
・ 1934 Thrace pogroms
・ 1934 Toronto Argonauts season
1934 Tour de France
・ 1934 Tour de France, Stage 1 to Stage 12
・ 1934 Tulane Green Wave football team
・ 1934 Turkish Resettlement Law
・ 1934 U.S. National Championships (tennis)
・ 1934 U.S. National Championships – Men's Singles
・ 1934 U.S. National Championships – Women's Singles
・ 1934 U.S. Open (golf)
・ 1934 UCI Road World Championships
・ 1934 UCI Track Cycling World Championships
・ 1934 Uruguayan Primera División
・ 1934 USC Trojans football team
・ 1934 Vanderbilt Commodores football team
・ 1934 VFA season
・ 1934 VFL Grand Final


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1934 Tour de France : ウィキペディア英語版
1934 Tour de France

The 1934 Tour de France was the 28th Tour de France, taking place July 3 to July 29, 1934. It consisted of 23 stages over 4,363 km, ridden at an average speed of 30.360 km/h. The race was won by Antonin Magne, who had previously won the 1931 Tour de France. The French team was dominant, holding the yellow jersey for the entire race and winning most of the stages. Every member of the French team won at least one stage.
French cyclist René Vietto rose to prominence by winning the mountains classification, but even more by giving up his own chances for the Tour victory by giving first his front wheel and later his bicycle to his team captain Magne.
The 1934 Tour de France saw the introduction of the split stage and the individual time trial. Stage 21 was split into two parts, and the second part was an individual time trial, the first one in the history of the Tour de France.
==Changes from the 1933 Tour de France==
The major introduction in 1934 was the introduction of the individual time trial (ITT). There had been time-trial like stages before in the Tour de France, but they had been run as a team time trial. Since the format of the Tour de France changed in 1930 from trade teams to national teams, the Tour organisation had to pay for the housing, travel and feeding for the cyclists. The organisation received the money from the sales of l'Auto, the newspaper that organized the Tour. l'Auto was a morning newspaper, while one of its competitors, Paris-Soir, was an evening paper. Paris-Soir was also following the race, and was able to publish the results the same day, while l'Auto had to wait for the next day, publishing old news. To counter this, the stages in the Tour de France had started later, so they would end after Paris-Soir had to print their newspapers.
The Paris-Soir sports editor had countered this by starting his own race, the Grand Prix des Nations, run as an ITT. The first edition in 1932 was not received well by the cyclists, but from 1933 on it was a success. The tour director Henri Desgrange saw the success of the French cyclists in the Grand Prix des Nations, and adapted the individual time trial format in the Tour.
Not all cyclists were happy with the ITT. René Vietto, a climber, said it was a dull test of horsepower, while a bike race should also test the head. Other cyclists said the ITT would negate the effect of good teamwork.
The bonification system from the 1933 Tour de France was slightly reduced: now the winner of a stage received 90 seconds bonification, and the second cyclist 45 seconds. In addition to this, the winner of the stage received a bonification equal to the difference between him and the second-placed cyclists, with a maximum of two minutes. This same bonification system was applied on mountain summits that counted for the mountains classification.〔
In 1933, there had been 40 touriste-routiers, cyclist not competing in a national team, but in 1934 this was reduced to 20.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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