The triumph of Bartholomew Procia from the Run & Race group – Wibatech ended with the 64th global Cycling Race for the MON Cup. The signal for the start was given to the cyclists of Gen. Dyw. in the St. The race along the 1920 Warszawski conflict way took place on rounds close Wołomin, with a start and finish in Ossów.
At the start race – honorary patronage was taken by Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of National Defence – 159 players from 22 countries stood. At the finish line that was set before sThe Museum of the conflict of Warsaw in 1920, which was estimated to open., Bartłomiej Proć overtook Dutchman Lars Rouffer from Diftar and Radosław Frątczak from the Voster ATS team. On the eighth position was finished by St. Mar. specialist Alan Banaszek, typical Central Military Sports Team. The cyclists crossed a 165 km long route.
During the race in a peculiar way, the memory of Józef Lange was commemorated, who in 1924 together with his colleagues won the first always medal for Poland at the Olympic Games, and 4 years earlier in the 11th Infantry Regiment took part in the Polish-bolshevik War. In tribute to the silver Olympic medaliate and to the soldier of the Polish Army, a peculiar special bonus of his name was played in the Holy Saint. It was won by Dutchman Roy Hoogendoorn of the Metec-Solarwatt group.
The MON Cup race has been organized since 1958. From 1960 to the end of the 1990s, it was played in Warsaw under the name “Mont Cryterium” – from 1972 to 1990 it was besides the Friendly Army Championship. The oldest in Poland with one-day classical racing since 2003 has been organized outside Warsaw, and for 2 years it has been held in areas related to The most crucial triumph conflict of the 1920 War. The event permanently entered the global Cycling Union (UCI) calendar. The winners of the race included: Ryszard Szurkowski (in 1977 and 1980), Stanisław Szozda (in 1972 as a soldier performing essential military service in the Warsaw Legion) and professional soldiers: Tadeusz Mytnik (1976), Lechosław Michalak (1978, 1979, 1984) and Zbigniew Szczepkowski (1982, 1983).