- Charly Grosskost
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Charly Grosskost Personal information Full name Charly Grosskost Born March 5, 1944
Eckbolsheim, German-occupiedDied June 19, 2004 (aged 60)
Strasbourg, FranceTeam information Current team Retired Discipline Road Role Rider Professional team(s) 1966-1967
1968-1972
1973
1974Peugeot-BP-Michelin [1]
Bic
GAN-Mercier
Jobo-LejeuneMajor wins Tour de France: 2 stages
Giro d'Italia: 1 stageInfobox last updated on
May 22, 2008Charly Grosskost (5 March 1944, Eckbolsheim, Bas-Rhin - 19 June 2004, Strasbourg) was a French racing cyclist who in 1968 won the prologue time-trial of both the Giro d'Italia and the Tour de France. He won stages of the Tour de France and of the Giro d'Italia and on the track was French pursuit champion nine times.
Grosskost came to notice when he was 19, when he won a stage of the Route de France - amateur counterpart of the Tour de France - and then won Strasbourg-Campagne by nearly 10 minutes after riding ahead of the race for more than 50 km. In 1965, he won the Route de France and five of its seven stages and became favourite for the still bigger race, the Tour de l'Avenir. There, however, he dropped out in the Pyrenees. A drug test that followed his retirement - it has entered cycling legend that other riders pushed him off his bike for his own safety as he began foaming at the mouth and riding erratically - led to his being suspended for a year. To his death, Grosskost insisted that he had been drugged by a team helper.
Grosskost turned professional for Peugeot on May 1, 1966, alongside Eddy Merckx of Belgium, whom he beat to win his Giro prologue. He then moved to the Bic team alongside Jacques Anquetil.
In 1968 he won the prologue of the Giro d'Italia and became the third Frenchman to wear the leader's pink jersey after Louison Bobet and Raphaël Géminiani. That same year, Grosskost won the prologue time-trial of the Tour de France at Vittel and then the first conventional stage. He wore the leader's yellow jersey for three days and finished the Tour in 17th place.
In retirement he became a cycle dealer.
Grosskost died in 2004, after he was hit by a car while cycling with friends.[2]
Major victories
- 1966
- France national pursuit champion (track)
- 1967
- France national omnium champion (track)[3]
- 1968
- France national pursuit champion (track)
- France national omnium champion (track)[3]
- Prologue Paris–Nice
- Giro d'Italia: Prologue [4]
- Tour de France
- overall classification: 17th[5]
- winner of prologue and stage 1
- wore yellow jersey for 2 days[6]
See also
References
- Charly Grosskost profile at Cycling Archives
- Palmares
Categories:- 1944 births
- 2004 deaths
- People from Eckbolsheim
- French cyclists
- French Tour de France stage winners
- Track cyclists
- Tour de France prologue winners
- Doping cases in cycling
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