Race details | |
---|---|
Region | Antwerp, Belgium |
Discipline | Track |
Type | Six-day racing |
History | |
First edition | 1934 |
Editions | 52 (as of 1994) |
Final edition | 1994 |
First winner | ![]() ![]() |
Most wins | ![]() |
Final winner | ![]() ![]() |
The Six Days of Antwerp was a six-day track cycling race held annually in Antwerp, Belgium.[1]
The Six Days has seen 55 editions, was organized from 1934 with interruptions during World War II and the years 1984 to 1986 and last held in 1994.
The Six Days of Antwerp was held at the Antwerp Sportpaleis in Merksem on a wooden indoor track, initially 132m long, after a reconstruction in 1968 it was given a length of 250m.
Record winner is Peter Post with 11 victories, five of them in consecutive years.[2]
Winners
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Kees Pellenaars changes a wheel during the 1947 Six Days of Antwerp

Jan Derksen (center) with Rik Van Steenbergen (right) in the 1958 Six Days of Antwerp
References
- ↑ "6 jours du Antwerpen". Memoire du Cyclisme. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
- ↑ "Antwerp Six Days". FirstCycling.com. 2022.
External links
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