The Cycling Quiz Game

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I don't think the Armée de Terre team was a thing yet in 2009, was Bretagne still continental at the time? If so, is it them?

I honestly have zero clue as to the 2015 (if it is 2015) champion. I vaguely recall his surname ended in -et, but other than Maxime Bouet, who definitely wasn't on a continental team at the time, I can't think of any other rider fitting that criterion.

I agree the final one is likely in Spain - hard to imagine a champion for a continental team not getting snapped up the next year, so the only way it would be Italy is someone with clinic issues dropping down to a team like Amore e Vita. So to follow Ilmaestro's lead: Paco Mancebo, Rock Racing, 2009?
 
Brétagne-Schuller is the correct answer for Champion in 2009, they had not yet gone ProConti.
The second rider is indeed 2015 and rode for Auber 93 who you previously mentioned.
The final one is indeed a Spaniard, but is not Paco nor Rock Racing.
 
Not to mention that they struggle with getting their race to be four days. How on Earth should they manage to get it to be exactly 4 hours?
I always find it amazing how the people responsible for organising the Hour Record always manage to modify the distance so that the attempt lasts exactly one hour, even though the athletes don't know how far they'll be racing before the race starts. How do they ever manage that?
 
Judged from this photo, I assume Steven Tronet, who I had forgotten all about, decided to only ride the first four hours before going home to watch the rest of the race on TV.

image.jpg
 
Track cycling is quite different from road cycling since they just go around in circles.
Motor racing just goes around in circles, but some races are based on who does a set number of laps fastest, and some races are based on who goes furthest in a set amount of time. The World Endurance Championship is full of "6 Hours of ____" type races, with the most famous of course being the 24 Hours of Le Mans, which I took as a precursor for how a "4 Hours of Dunkerque" could work.