Jean Alavoine
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Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at [[:fr:Jean Alavoine]]; see its history for attribution.
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Jean Alavoine in the early 1910s | |
Personal information | |
---|---|
Full name | Jean Alavoine |
Nickname | Gars Jean (Jean the guy) |
Born | (1888-04-01)1 April 1888 Roubaix, France |
Died | 18 July 1943(1943-07-18) (aged 55) Argenteuil, France |
Team information | |
Discipline | Road |
Role | Rider |
Professional team | |
1909–1925 | – |
Major wins | |
17 stages in the Tour de France | |
Jean Alavoine (1 April 1888 – 18 July 1943) was a French professional cyclist, who won 17 stages in the Tour de France - only eight riders have won more stages[1] - and wore the yellow jersey for five days.
Jean Alavoine was born in Roubaix on 1 April 1888. In his professional career from 1908 to 1925, he won 29 courses, including 17 Tour de France stages. In the 1922 Tour de France, he won three stages in a row,[2] stages 5–6-7, and wore the yellow jersey. In stage 11, still leading the race, Alavoine had mechanical problems and his lead dropped to 6:53 minutes. In stage 12 Alavoine lost 37 minutes and the lead. In the end, he finished the tour in second place.[3] In 1943 he died during a veteran race in Argenteuil.
Major results
- 1909
- French national road race champion
- Tour de France:
- 3rd place general classification
- Winner stages 8 and 14
- 1912
- Tour de France:
- 5th place general classification
- Winner stages 11, 13 and 15
- 1913
- Tour de France: did not finish
- 1914
- Tour de France:
- 3rd place general classification
- Winner stage 7
- 1919
- Tour de France:
- 2nd place general classification
- Winner stages 4, 5, 7, 8 and 15
- Circuit des Champs de Bataille
- entered
- 1920
- French national road race champion
- Tour de France: did not finish
- Giro d'Italia:
- 3rd place overall classification
- Winner stages 4 and 6
- 1921
- Tour de France: did not finish
- 1922
- Tour de France:
- 2nd place general classification
- Winner stages 5, 6 and 7
- 1923
- Tour de France:
- did not finish
- Winner stages 6, 7 and 9
- 1924
- Tour de France:
- 14th place general classification
- 1925
- Tour de France:
- 13th place general classification
Notes
- ^ Most stage wins per rider in the Tour de France Archived 2007-04-09 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Not a record, as François Faber won five stages in a row in 1909.
- ^ Torelli's History of the Tour de France: the 1920s
External links
- Official Tour de France palmares
- Jean Alavoine at Cycling Archives
- "Palmares of Jean Alavoine" (in French). Archived from the original on 2007-08-17. Retrieved 2007-06-27.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
- v
- t
- e
- Gustave Garrigou (1907–1908)
- Jean Alavoine (1909)
- Émile Georget (1910)
- Octave Lapize (1911–1913)
- Charles Crupelandt (1914)
- Henri Pélissier (1919)
- Jean Alavoine (1920)
- Francis Pélissier (1921)
- Jean Brunier (1922)
- Francis Pélissier (1923–1924)
- Achille Souchard (1925–1926)
- Ferdinand Le Drogo (1927–1928)
- Marcel Bidot (1929)
- Roger Bisseron (1930)
- Armand Blanchonnet (1931)
- André Godinat (1932)
- Roger Lapébie (1933)
- Raymond Louviot (1934)
- Georges Speicher (1935)
- René Le Grevès (1936)
- Georges Speicher (1937)
- Paul Maye (1938)
- Georges Speicher (1939)
- René Vietto (1941)
- Émile Idée (1942)
- Paul Maye (1943)
- Urbain Caffi (1944)
- Eloi Tassin (1945)
- Louis Caput (1946)
- Émile Idée (1947)
- César Marcelak (1948)
- Jean Rey (1949)
- Louison Bobet (1950–1951)
- Adolphe Deledda (1952)
- Raphaël Géminiani (1953)
- Jacques Dupont (1954)
- André Darrigade (1955)
- Bernard Gauthier (1956)
- Valentin Huot (1957–1958)
- Henry Anglade (1959)
- Jean Stablinski (1960)
- Raymond Poulidor (1961)
- Jean Stablinski (1962–1964)
- Henry Anglade (1965)
- Jean-Claude Theillière (1966)
- Désiré Letort (1967)
- Lucien Aimar (1968)
- Raymond Delisle (1969)
- Paul Gutty (1970)
- Yves Hézard (1971)
- Roland Berland (1972)
- Bernard Thévenet (1973)
- Georges Talbourdet (1974)
- Régis Ovion (1975)
- Guy Sibille (1976)
- Marcel Tinazzi (1977)
- Bernard Hinault (1978)
- Roland Berland (1979)
- Pierre-Raymond Villemiane (1980)
- Serge Beucherie (1981)
- Régis Clère (1982)
- Marc Gomez (1983)
- Laurent Fignon (1984)
- Jean-Claude Leclercq (1985)
- Yvon Madiot (1986)
- Marc Madiot (1987)
- Éric Caritoux (1988–1989)
- Philippe Louviot (1990)
- Armand de Las Cuevas (1991)
- Luc Leblanc (1992)
- Jacky Durand (1993–1994)
- Eddy Seigneur (1995)
- Stéphane Heulot (1996)
- Stéphane Barthe (1997)
- Laurent Jalabert (1998)
- François Simon (1999)
- Christophe Capelle (2000)
- Didier Rous (2001)
- Nicolas Vogondy (2002)
- Didier Rous (2003)
- Thomas Voeckler (2004)
- Pierrick Fédrigo (2005)
- Florent Brard (2006)
- Christophe Moreau (2007)
- Nicolas Vogondy (2008)
- Dimitri Champion (2009)
- Thomas Voeckler (2010)
- Sylvain Chavanel (2011)
- Nacer Bouhanni (2012)
- Arthur Vichot (2013)
- Arnaud Démare (2014)
- Steven Tronet (2015)
- Arthur Vichot (2016)
- Arnaud Démare (2017)
- Anthony Roux (2018)
- Warren Barguil (2019)
- Arnaud Démare (2020)
- Rémi Cavagna (2021)
- Florian Sénéchal (2022)
- Valentin Madouas (2023)