Félicien Vervaecke
Félicien Vervaecke (1939) | |
Personal information | |
---|---|
Full name | Félicien Vervaecke |
Born | (1907-03-11)11 March 1907 Belgium |
Died | 31 October 1986(1986-10-31) (aged 79) |
Team information | |
Discipline | Road |
Role | Rider |
Rider type | Climber |
Professional team | |
1930–1939 | Alcyon/Labor |
Major wins | |
Tour de France mountains classification (2x) Six stages in the Tour de France | |
Félicien Vervaecke (Dadizele [nl]; 11 March 1907 – 31 October 1986, in Brussels) was a Belgian professional cyclist from 1930 to 1939. In the Tour de France he showed good results, finishing three times on the podium (second once, third twice). In 1935 and 1937 he won the mountain classification, and overall he won six stages. In the 1936 Tour de France, Vervaecke was on his way to the second place, but bad luck prevented it. First his bicycle broke, and he had to convince a spectator to lend his. Then he suffered a flat tire, and Tour officials forced him to wait for the reserve car. Antonin Magne passed him. When Vervaecke got his tire, he raced back to Magne, and finished 18 seconds behind him. But he still finished third, as he received 10 minutes penalty because his wife had given him drinks during the race, which was not allowed.[1] In the 1937 Tour de France, Vervaecke won the mountain classification despite not finishing the race, something no longer allowed.
He was the first Belgian cyclist to win a stage in the Giro d'Italia.
After his cycling career, Vervaecke started a bicycle shop in Brussels. He was the first manager of Eddy Merckx.
His older brother Julien Vervaecke was also successful, finishing third in the 1927 Tour de France.
Major results
- 1929
- Paris-Lens
- Tourcoing-Dunkerque-Tourcoing
- 1932
- Tour de France:
- Did not finish
- Tour de Corrèze
- 1934
- Tour de France:
- Final classification: 4th place
- Giro d'Italia: Stage 8
- 1935
- Tour de France
- Final classification: 3rd place
- Winner Mountains classification
- Paris–Nice: Stage 5B
- 1936
- Tour de France
- Final classification: 3rd place
- Winner of stage 19B
- Paris–Nice: Stage 1
- 1937
- Tour de France
- did not finish
- Winner Mountains classification
- Winner stage 10
- Paris–Nice: Stage 5A
- 1938
- Tour de France
- Final classification: 2nd place
- Winner of stage 4C
- Winner of stage 8
- Winner of stage 10B
- Winner of stage 20B
- 1939
- Tour de France
- did not finish
Teams
- 1930: Alcyon
- 1931: Alcyon and Labor
- 1932-1933: Labor
- 1934: Labor and Gamma
- 1935-1936: Labor and Alcyon
- 1937-1939: Labor
References
- ^ 'De angst voor de Pyreneeën' - www.tourdefrance.nl Tour Legendes. Archived October 18, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
External links
- Official Tour de France palmares[permanent dead link]
- Félicien Vervaecke at Cycling Archives
- "Palmares of Félicien Vervaecke" (in French). Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2007-06-26.
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- v
- t
- e
- 1933: Vicente Trueba
- 1934: René Vietto
- 1935: Félicien Vervaecke
- 1936: Julián Berrendero
- 1937: Félicien Vervaecke
- 1938: Gino Bartali
- 1939: Sylvère Maes
- 1947: Pierre Brambilla
- 1948: Gino Bartali
- 1949: Fausto Coppi
- 1950: Louison Bobet
- 1951: Raphaël Géminiani
- 1952: Fausto Coppi
- 1953: Jesús Loroño
- 1954: Federico Bahamontes
- 1955–1956: Charly Gaul
- 1957: Gastone Nencini
- 1958–1959: Federico Bahamontes
- 1960–1961: Imerio Massignan
- 1962–1964: Federico Bahamontes
- 1965–1967: Julio Jiménez
- 1968: Aurelio González Puente
- 1969–1970: Eddy Merckx
- 1971–1972: Lucien Van Impe
- 1973: Pedro Torres
- 1974: Domingo Perurena
- 1975: Lucien Van Impe
- 1976: Giancarlo Bellini
- 1977: Lucien Van Impe
- 1978: Mariano Martínez
- 1979: Giovanni Battaglin
- 1980: Raymond Martin
- 1981: Lucien Van Impe
- 1982: Bernard Vallet
- 1983: Lucien Van Impe
- 1984: Robert Millar
- 1985: Luis Herrera
- 1986: Bernard Hinault
- 1987: Luis Herrera
- 1988: Steven Rooks
- 1989: Gert-Jan Theunisse
- 1990: Thierry Claveyrolat
- 1991–1992: Claudio Chiappucci
- 1993: Tony Rominger
- 1994–1997: Richard Virenque
- 1998: Christophe Rinero
- 1999: Richard Virenque
- 2000: Santiago Botero
- 2001–2002: Laurent Jalabert
- 2003–2004: Richard Virenque
- 2005–2006: Michael Rasmussen
- 2007: Mauricio Soler
- 2008: Carlos Sastre
- 2009: Egoi Martínez
- 2010: Anthony Charteau
- 2011: Samuel Sánchez
- 2012: Thomas Voeckler
- 2013: Nairo Quintana
- 2014: Rafał Majka
- 2015: Chris Froome
- 2016: Rafał Majka
- 2017: Warren Barguil
- 2018: Julian Alaphilippe
- 2019: Romain Bardet
- 2020–2021: Tadej Pogačar
- 2022: Jonas Vingegaard
- 2023: Giulio Ciccone