- Magnus Bäckstedt
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Magnus Bäckstedt Personal information Full name Magnus Bäckstedt Nickname Magnus Maximus Born 30 January 1975
SwedenHeight 1.93 m (6 ft 4 in) Weight 94 kg (210 lb; 14.8 st) Team information Current team UK Youth Discipline Road Role Rider Rider type Classics specialist Professional team(s) 1996–1997
1998–2001
2002–2003
2004
2005–2007
2008Collstrop-Palmans
Crédit Agricole
Team Fakta
Alessio-Bianchi
Liquigas
Garmin-ChipotleMajor wins Paris–Roubaix (2004)
Tour de France, 1 stage (1998)Infobox last updated on
14 November 2007Magnus Bäckstedt (born Linköping, Östergötland, Sweden, 30 January 1975)[1] is a Swedish professional road bicycle racer.
He began as a skier, selected for the national team when he was 14.[2] His greatest achievement in cycling is winning Paris–Roubaix in 2004. Bäckstedt is 1m 93 (6 ft 4in) tall and weighs 94 kg (207 lb).[1] He was one of the biggest riders in professional cycling.
Bäckstedt began his professional career in 1996,[3] riding for Collstrop before moving to Palmans in 1997. In 1998, having switched to GAN, Bäckstedt came seventh in Paris–Roubaix and won the 19th stage of the 1998 Tour de France between La Chaux-de-Fonds and Autun.
In 2002 and 2003 he rode for Team Fakta where he was the strongest rider in 2003. When Fakta closed he went to Alessio-Bianchi, where he won the 2004 Paris–Roubaix. The two favourites, Peter van Petegem and Johan Museeuw dropped out after crashes, leaving Bäckstedt to sprint on the track at Roubaix against two others.[4] The manager of Crédit Agricole, Roger Legeay, had predicted that Bäckstedt would one day win the race. He said: "He's not a flahute.[5] He's not especially the fastest, but after 260km on the cobbles, it's often the rider who feels freshest who wins."[1]
In 2005 Bäckstedt moved to Liquigas-Bianchi, and came second on the 7th stage of the 2005 Tour de France. He rode for Garmin-Chipotle in 2008.[6] He was eliminated in that year's Tour de France for being too slow. He said:
- I had been going OK, and on that stage we decided to make it hard from the start because we were close enough to yellow to get the jersey. The first 60km were up and down, but I was going fine. Then there was this fourth-category climb and about halfway up I was suddenly short of breath. It was like I shut down from the waist down. I went straight out of the back. I calmed down and got back on top of it. There was 100km to go, but I went OK. I could see the numbers on the power meter and they were normal for the kind of effort you need to get to the finish on your own inside the time limit. I think I would have made it too, but there was a real steep hill just before the finish and my breathing and legs went again. I ended up four minutes outside the cut-off.[7]
Bäckstedt announced his retirement from professional cycling on 6 February 2009, citing a desire to focus on managing his developmental cycling team, Cyclesport.se-MagnusMaximusCoffee.com. Bäckstedt said he will also continue as a consultant with his former Garmin-Slipstream team. The Swede had struggled with a number of health issues during his career, including a serious knee injury, melanoma, and a separated shoulder and broken collarbone.[8]
On 13 November 2010, Bäckstedt announced at the UK Youth Centenary Gala that he would be coming out of retirement to lead the UK Youth Cycling Team along with Nigel Mansell and his sons.
Contents
Private life
Bäckstedt is married to a British former international, Megan Hughes. They live in Wales,[9] moving there from Zulte, near Waregem, in Belgium.[1] They have two daughters.[10] Bäckstedt said: "We used to come back here [to Wales] every time I had a break. I prefer it to Belgium. You can ride 30 miles between villages here, whereas in Belgium you were stopping for traffic lights."[9]
His sister Cecilia is also a racing cyclist.[11]
Bäckstedt runs a coffee business with franchises in the US and Sweden. Proceeds from the business support Swedish cycling.[10]
Palmarès
- 1996
- 1st Stage Boland Bank Tour
- 1st Stage Boland Bank Tour
- 2nd GP D'Isbergues
- 1997
- 1st GP D'Isbergues
- 1998
- 1st Stage 19 Tour de France
- 1st Tour of Sweden
- 1st Sprints competition Four days of Dunkirk
- 2nd Overall Postgiro
- 1st Stage 4B
- 1st Duo Normand (with Jérôme Neuville)
- 2000
- 2nd National Road Race championship
- 2002
- 1st Sweden National Road Race champion
- 1st GP Fayt le Franc
- 2003
- 1st Sweden National time trial champion
- 1st Intergiro competition winner Giro d'Italia
- 2nd Sweden National Championships
- 2nd Nokere-Koerse
- 2nd GP d'Ouverture la Marseillaise
- 2004
- 1st Paris–Roubaix
- 2nd Gent–Wevelgem
- 2nd CSC Classic
- 2005
- 2nd Stage 7 Tour de France
- 2007
- 1st Sweden National champion
- 2008
- 1st Stage 1 TTT Giro d'Italia
- 2nd Stage 3B, Three Days of de Panne
External links
Sporting positions Preceded by
Peter van PetegemWinner of Paris–Roubaix
2004Succeeded by
Tom BoonenReferences
- ^ a b c d L'Équipe, France, 12 April 2004.
- ^ Vélo, France, undatec cutting.
- ^ Lequipe.fr
- ^ Letour.fr
- ^ A cycling word for an old-style, tough Belgian rider who does best in the worst conditions.
- ^ "Backstedt Bound For Slipstream-Chipotle". londoncyclesport.com. 7 August 2007. http://londoncyclesport.com/news/article/mps/UAN/2968/v/1/sp/. Retrieved 2007-08-07.[dead link]
- ^ Cyclingweekly.co.uk
- ^ Velonews.com
- ^ a b Cycling Weekly, UK, 22 November 2003.
- ^ a b Pezcyclingnews.com
- ^ Siteducyclisme.net
Categories:- 1975 births
- Living people
- People from Linköping
- Cyclists at the 2004 Summer Olympics
- Olympic cyclists of Sweden
- Swedish cyclists
- Swedish Tour de France stage winners
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