Race details | |
---|---|
Date | June |
Discipline | Time Trial |
Competition | National Championships |
Type | One day time trial race |
Organiser | Different clubs |
History | |
First edition | 13 October 1991 |
Editions | 31 (men), 23 (women) |
First winner | Marko Baloh (M) Kristan (W) |
Most wins | 5x – Gregor Gazvoda (M) 5x – Tjaša Rutar (W) |
Most recent | Matej Mohorič (M) Urška Žigart (W) |
The Slovenian National Time Trial Championships have been held since 1991.
Kristijan Koren (U23 category) set the best time in 2006 and 2007 Championships and beat all top riders (Elite), and repeated his successes at the National Time Trials and Road Race in 2009. The Slovenian Cycling Federation later issued a rule change so that U23 results counted only in their own category. After 2010, the potential U23 winner by time would become the absolute champion.
Riders that managed to win the Elite race more than once.
Titles | Men | Years |
---|---|---|
5 | Gregor Gazvoda | 2005, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2014 |
4 | Jan Tratnik | 2015, 2018, 2021, 2022 |
3 | Robert Pintarič | 1994, 1995, 1996 |
Tadej Pogačar | 2019, 2020, 2023 | |
2 | Saša Sviben | 1993, 1997 |
Mitja Mahorič | 2001, 2003 | |
Janez Brajkovič | 2009, 2011 | |
Titles | Women | Years |
5 | Tjaša Rutar | 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 |
4 | Urška Žigart | 2020, 2022, 2023, 2024 |
3 | Eugenia Bujak | 2018, 2019, 2021 |
2 | Minka Logonder | 1995, 1996 |
Urša Pintar | 2016, 2017 |
|
|
Gregor Gazvoda | Jan Tratnik |
---|---|
5 titles | 4 titles |
Tadej Pogačar | Primož Roglič |
---|---|
3 titles | 1 title |
Tjaša Rutar | Urška Žigart | Eugenia Bujak |
---|---|---|
5 titles | 4 titles | 3 titles |
The Slovenia national football team represents Slovenia in men's international football and is controlled by the Football Association of Slovenia, the governing body for football in Slovenia. The national squad is under the global jurisdiction of FIFA and is governed in Europe by UEFA. It competes in the three major professional tournaments available to European nations: the FIFA World Cup, UEFA Nations League and the UEFA European Championship. Slovenia played its first official match in 1992, one year after the country gained independence from Yugoslavia. The majority of Slovenia's home matches are played at Stožice Stadium in Ljubljana.
Nogometni klub Olimpija Ljubljana, commonly referred to as Olimpija Ljubljana or simply Olimpija, is a Slovenian professional football club based in Ljubljana that competes in the Slovenian PrvaLiga, the top division of the Slovenian football league system. They have won three Slovenian PrvaLiga titles and four Slovenian Cups.
Darko Milanič is a Slovenian professional football manager and former player.
Letalnica bratov Gorišek is one of the two largest ski flying hills in the world and the biggest of eight hills located at the Planica Nordic Centre in Planica, Slovenia.
Rokometni klub Maribor Branik, commonly referred to as RK Maribor Branik or simply Branik, is a handball club from Maribor, Slovenia. As of the 2024–25 season, the club competes in the Slovenian Second Handball League, the third tier of Slovenian handball. They play their home games at Tabor Hall, a 3,261 capacity multi-purpose sports venue in Maribor. Between 2004 and 2010, the team was known as RK Klima Petek Maribor due to sponsorship reasons. Their biggest success is reaching the final of the Slovenian Handball Cup twice and reaching the quarter-finals of the EHF Cup in the 2012–13 season.
Nogometni klub Maribor is a Slovenian professional association football club based in Maribor. It was founded in December 1960 by officials and players of NK Branik Maribor. With 16 Slovenian PrvaLiga titles and 9 Slovenian Cups, they are the most successful Slovenian team. Maribor is also the only Slovenian club that reached the group stages of the UEFA Champions League and the UEFA Europa League.
Parliamentary elections were held in Slovenia on 4 December 2011 to elect the 90 deputies of the National Assembly. This was the first early election in Slovenia's history. The election was surprisingly won by the center-left Positive Slovenia party, led by Zoran Janković. However, he failed to be elected as the new prime minister in the National Assembly, and the new government was instead formed by a right-leaning coalition of five parties, led by Janez Janša, the president of the second-placed Slovenian Democratic Party. The voter turnout was 65.60%.
Presidential elections were held in Slovenia on 11 November 2012, with a run-off held on 2 December. Slovenia's 1.7 million registered voters chose between the incumbent president Danilo Türk, the SDS/NSi party candidate Milan Zver and Borut Pahor of the Social Democrats who was also supported by the Civic List. The first round was won, contrary to the opinion poll predictions, by Pahor, with Türk placing second. In the run-off election, Pahor won with roughly two-thirds of the vote.
The 2012–2013 Slovenian protests were a series of anti-establishment and anti-government protests. Protesters expressed disapproval with the country's ruling political elite, including Maribor mayor Franc Kangler, prime minister Janez Janša, and parliamentary opposition leader Zoran Janković.
Slovenia competed at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, from 7 to 23 February 2014. Sixty-six competitors were chosen to participate, in eight sports. For the first time since the country's independence, the Slovenia men's national ice hockey team qualified for the Olympic tournament.
The Slovenian National Road Race Championships have been held since independence in 1991.
Hokejsko drsalno društvo Jesenice or simply HDD Jesenice, currently named SIJ Acroni Jesenice due to sponsorship reasons, is a Slovenian ice hockey team based in Jesenice. They are members of the Alps Hockey League and the Slovenian Ice Hockey League. HDD Jesenice was founded in 2014. The club replaced a temporary team called Team Jesenice, which was established in 2013. HDD Jesenice previously competed in the Inter-National League from 2014 to 2016, before the league merged into the Alps Hockey League. The club won their first Slovenian Championship in the 2014–15 season and as a result qualified for the 2015–16 IIHF Continental Cup. Their home arena is Podmežakla Hall.
The 2020–21 Slovenian PrvaLiga was the 30th edition of the Slovenian PrvaLiga since its establishment in 1991. The season began on 22 August 2020 and ended on 22 May 2021.
The 2004 Tour of Slovenia was the 11th edition of the Tour of Slovenia, categorized as UCI‑2.5 stage race held between 4 and 9 May 2004.
The 2005 Tour of Slovenia was the 12th edition of the Tour of Slovenia, categorized as 2.1 stage race held between 9 and 12 June 2005.
The 2006 Tour of Slovenia was the 13th edition of the Tour of Slovenia, categorized as 2.1 stage race held between 8 and 11 June 2006.
The 2009 Tour of Slovenia was the 16th edition of the Tour of Slovenia, categorized as 2.1 stage race held between 18 and 21 June 2009.
The 2012 Tour of Slovenia was the 19th edition of the Tour of Slovenia, categorized as 2.1 stage race held between 14 and 17 June 2012.
The 2011 Tour of Slovenia was the 18th edition of the Tour of Slovenia, categorized as 2.1 stage race held between 16 and 19 June 2011.
The 2010 Tour of Slovenia was the 17th edition of the Tour of Slovenia, categorized as 2.1 stage race held between 17 and 20 June 2010.