Patrick Jonker
Encyclopedia
Patrick Jonker is a retired Australia
Australia
Australia , officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the Southern Hemisphere comprising the mainland of the Australian continent, the island of Tasmania, and numerous smaller islands in the Indian and Pacific Oceans. It is the world's sixth-largest country by total area...

n road bicycle racer from Dutch and German ancestry. He was a professional rider from 1993 to 2004. Jonker represented Australia twice at the Summer Olympics, in 1992 and 1996.

Teams

  • 1992: Varta-Elk-Nö (Austria)
  • 1993–1994: Novemail-Histor (France)
  • 1995–1996: ONCE (Spain)
  • 1997–2000: Rabobank (Netherlands)
  • 2000: US Postal Service (United States)
  • 2001–2002: BigMat-Auber'93 (France)
  • 2003: Van Hemert Groep Cycling (Nederland

Tour de France

  • 1994
    1994 Tour de France
    The 1994 Tour de France was the 81st Tour de France and included two stages in England , Stage 4, Dover to Brighton and Stage 5, around Portsmouth. It took place July 2 to July 24, 1994...

     – DNF 17th stage
  • 1996
    1996 Tour de France
    The 1996 Tour de France was the 83rd Tour de France, starting on June 29 and ending on July 21, featuring 19 regular stages, 2 individual time trials, a prologue and a rest day ....

     – 12th
  • 1997
    1997 Tour de France
    The 1997 Tour de France was the 84th Tour de France, it took place July 5–27, 1997. Jan Ullrich's victory margin, of 9' 09" was the largest margin of victory since Laurent Fignon won the 1984 Tour de France by 10' 32"...

     – 62nd
  • 1998
    1998 Tour de France
    The 1998 Tour de France, also called the Tour du Dopage , was marred by doping scandals throughout known as the Festina affair, starting with the arrest of Willy Voet, a soigneur in the French Festina team. Voet was traveling into France when he was arrested and found with large quantities of...

     – 34th
  • 1999
    1999 Tour de France
    The 1999 Tour de France was the 86th Tour de France, taking place from July 3 to July 25, 1999. It was won by Lance Armstrong, his first of 7 consecutive wins, the most in Tour history. There were no French stage winners for the first time since the 1926 Tour de France.The 1999 edition of Tour de...

    – 97th
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