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item typeAthleteitem typeCyclistborn in year1959
 
 
Stephen Roche

Stephen Roche

Stephen Roche (born 28 November 1959 in Dundrum near Dublin, Ireland) is a retired professional road racing cyclist. In a 13-year professional career, he peaked in 1987, becoming only the second cyclist to win the Triple Crown of victories in the Tour de France and the Giro d'Italia stage races, plus the World road race championship. Roche's rise coincided with that of fellow Irishman Sean Kelly although the two were never team-mates.

 
 
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Adri van der Poel

Adrie van der Poel is a retired Dutch cyclist. The Grand Prix Adri van der Poel is named after him. Van der Poel was a professional from 1981 to 2000. His biggest wins included 6 classics, two stages of the Tour de France and the World Cyclo-Cross Championships in 1996. He also obtained the second place and silver medal in the World Road Championships in 1983 behind Greg LeMond and five second places in the World Cylo-Cross championships.

 
 
Steve Bauer

Steve Bauer

Steven Todd Bauer, MSM is a former professional road bicycle racer from Canada. Bauer joined the Canadian national cycling team in 1977, competing in team pursuit. He would remain on the national team for seven years, winning the national road race championship in 1981, 1982, and 1983, competing in the Commonwealth Games (1978, 1982), the Pan American Games (1979) and capping his amateur career with a silver medal in the men's cycling road race at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.

 
 
Marc Madiot

Marc Madiot

Marc Madiot is a French former professional road racing cyclist and double winner of Paris-Roubaix. Retired from racing in 1994, he is now best known as the directeur sportif of Française des Jeux, a UCI ProTour cycling team.

 
 
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Davis Phinney

Davis Phinney (born July 10, 1959 in Boulder, Colorado) is a former professional road bicycle racer from the United States. Phinney claims to have won the most race wins in American history and in 1986 became the first American to win a stage at the Tour de France while riding on an American based team and the first American to win a road stage there.

 
 
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Harry Leary

Harry Clarence Leary Jr. was a "Old School" professional bicycle motocross (BMX) racer. Nicknamed "Scary Harry Leary", and later "Turbo", the former for his aggressive racing style, the latter was a moniker coined by Bicycle Motocross Action magazine when he "Turboed" himself into finishing National No. 2 in both the American Bicycle Association (ABA) and the National Bicycle League (NBL)) in 1981 after being relatively far back in the national standings during that year.