CYCLIST

Niki Terpstra

1984 - Today

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Niki Terpstra (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈnɪki ˈtɛr(ə)pstraː]; born 18 May 1984) is a Dutch former racing cyclist, who rode professionally between 2003 and 2022 for six different teams. He is the brother of fellow racing cyclist Mike Terpstra. He is the third Dutch cyclist to have won both of the cobbled Monument spring classics, Paris–Roubaix and the Tour of Flanders, after Jan Raas and Hennie Kuiper. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Niki Terpstra is the 523rd most popular cyclist (down from 496th in 2019), the 1,126th most popular biography from Netherlands (down from 1,111th in 2019) and the 33rd most popular Dutch Cyclist.

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Among CYCLISTS

Among cyclists, Niki Terpstra ranks 523 out of 1,613Before him are Beat Zberg, Santiago Botero, Rein Taaramäe, Olga Zabelinskaya, Luca Paolini, and Mathew Hayman. After him are Andreas Kappes, Lars Michaelsen, Dan Martin, Alessandro Ballan, Chris Boardman, and Elia Viviani.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1984, Niki Terpstra ranks 352Before him are Lydia Hearst, Ryan Taylor, Amir Haddad, Naoko Yamada, Guillaume Hoarau, and Leighton Baines. After him are Alessio Figalli, Marc-André Fleury, Daigo Imai, Neil Harbisson, Sasha Cohen, and Ivar.

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In Netherlands

Among people born in Netherlands, Niki Terpstra ranks 1,127 out of 1,646Before him are Sven Kramer (1986), Erik van Rossum (1963), Jacco Eltingh (1970), Andries Noppert (1994), Wim Koevermans (1960), and Femke Bol (2000). After him are R3hab (1986), Jan Kromkamp (1980), Edward Gal (1970), Arnon Grunberg (1971), Wout Poels (1987), and Marco van Ginkel (1992).

Among CYCLISTS In Netherlands

Among cyclists born in Netherlands, Niki Terpstra ranks 33Before him are Robert Gesink (1986), Bauke Mollema (1986), Anna van der Breggen (1990), Leontien van Moorsel (1970), Ellen van Dijk (1987), and Servais Knaven (1971). After him are Wout Poels (1987), Demi Vollering (1996), Monique Knol (1964), Michael Boogerd (1972), Steven Kruijswijk (1987), and Bart Brentjens (1968).