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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Tour_DivideTour Divide - Wikipedia

    The Tour Divide is an annual mountain biking ride traversing the length of the Rocky Mountains, from Canada to the Mexican border. Following the 2,745-mile (4,418 km) Great Divide Mountain Bike Route , it is an ultra-distance cycling ride that is an extreme test of endurance, self-reliance and mental toughness.

  2. Jun 30, 2010 · Matthew Lee (Cannondale Factory Racing) won the seventh edition of the Tour Divide, a 2,745-mile trans-continental mountain bike race from Banff, Alberta, Canada, to the US - Mexican border.

  3. Aug 5, 2010 · On DC 101, while promoting a screening of Ride the Divide, Matthew Lee speaks about the first time he raced the Tour Divide (formerly called the Great Divide Race) ...more.

    • Aug 5, 2010
    • 5.3K
    • Outside the Valley
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  5. tourdivide.org › racer-2008-updates › matthew_leeMatthew Lee | Tour Divide

    Update: Thursday 3rd of July @ 7am Matthew Lee is the 2008 Tour Divide winner, but we are still waiting on his finishing time. The rest are moving well through wind, mud, lightning and hail with Mary Collier and Stephen Gleasner still to come over Indiana Pass, the last big climb in Colorado.

  6. May 24, 2021 · With a lot of uncertainty surrounding cross-border events this year, Matthew Lee (Founder of Tour Divide), Pete Basinger (veteran), Jay Petervary (veteran), and Scott Morris (Trackleaders) have worked together to provide some updates to this year’s Tour Divide.

  7. Jun 9, 2023 · Every year, race organizer Matthew Lee and Scott Morris post the official Tour Divide GPX on the Topofusion web site about two weeks before the Grand Depart. Note that the Tour Divide route is slightly different than Adventure Cycling Association’s Great Divide Mountain Bike Route, although the two are largely the same.

  8. Aug 7, 2012 · For those unfamiliar, the Tour Divide is a 2,700 mile, self-supported mountain bike race from Banff, British Columbia in Canada to Antelope Wells, New Mexico on the U.S.-Mexico border. That style of self-supported mountain bike racing and riding is called bike packing.

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