Damiano Cunego

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Damiano Cunego
Personal information
Full name Damiano Cunego
Nickname Il Piccolo Principe (The Small Prince)
Date of birth September 19, 1981 (age 25)
Country Flag of Italy Italy
Height 1.69 m
Weight 65 kg
Team information
Current team Lampre-Fondital
Discipline Road
Role Rider
Rider type Climbing specialist
Professional team(s)
2002-2004
2005-
Saeco
Lampre
Major wins
Giro d'Italia (2004), 4 stages
Giro di Lombardia (2004)
Tour de France, young rider classification (2006)
Infobox last updated on:
January 11, 2007

Damiano Cunego (born September 19, 1981) is an Italian professional cyclist. He rides for the Italian-based Lampre-Fondital team (formerly Lampre-Caffita). Primarily a climber, he has improved his time-trialing performance and is a general classification contender for the stage races.

[edit] Career

Cunego was born at Cerro Veronese (Veneto).

He shot to fame during May in the 2004 cycling season, sensationally winning the 2004 Giro d'Italia at the age of 22 with the Saeco team, which became Lampre-Caffita in 2005. Cunego's stunning strength in the 2004 Giro was a surprise to fans and pundits alike, and came as a blow to the prestige of his then team captain Gilberto Simoni. Relations between the two riders during the race were obviously strained and finally, when Cunego stole Simoni's solo breakaway to win the 18th stage, Simoni erupted, calling Cunego "a bastard and an idiot" in an interview with La Gazzetta dello Sport. Cunego's Giro win instantly made him the golden boy of Italian cycling, with thousands of fans reaching out to touch the young man in the maglia rosa as he passed.

During the 2004 season he went on to win the Giro di Lombardia UCI Road World Cup race in October, his thirteenth victory of the season. He finished the season ranked number one in the UCI Road World Rankings, making him the youngest rider ever to achieve this, aged just 23. He was also the last rider ranked first on the world ranking, because as of the 2005 season the world ranking was replaced by the UCI ProTour.

In the 2005 Giro d'Italia, Simoni and Cunego were co-captains of the Lampre-Caffita team. As it happened, however, Cunego posed no threat to Simoni. He faltered badly during the first serious climb in the Dolomites, losing six minutes in the day and any prospect of winning the general classification. At the time his team attributed his loss to a "psychological crisis" and Cunego himself said that "a great weight has been lifted from me by this defeat." After the race, however, he was found to have an acute infection of Epstein-Barr virus which might have accounted for his weakness. He did not enter the 2005 Tour de France as he had planned.

In 2006, after an uneventful start to the season, Cunego finished in third on the 2006 edition of the prestigious Liège-Bastogne-Liège cycling classic losing to Alejandro Valverde and Paolo Bettini in a sprint finish. In his first Tour de France, Cunego captured the maillot blanc (or white jersey) in the Best Young Rider classification at the 2006 Tour de France from Markus Fothen on the last time-trial stage. He finished 2nd on stage 15 to L'Alpe D'Huez, after losing to Fränk Schleck, who broke away in the final 2kms. He also finished 3rd on stage 17, on the road to Morzine.

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Gilberto Simoni
Winner of the Giro d'Italia
2004
Succeeded by
Paolo Savoldelli


Riders on Lampre-Fondital

Fabio Baldato  | Alessandro Ballan | Daniele Bennati | Matteo Bono | Paolo Bossoni | Marzio Bruseghin | Giampaolo Caruso | Jaime Alberto Castaneda Ortega | Claudio Corioni | Damiano Cunego | Giuliano Figueras | Paolo Fornaciari | Enrico Franzoi | Francesco Gavazzi | David Loosli | Marco Marzano | Massimiliano Mori | Danilo Napolitano | Morris Possoni | Daniele Righi | Gorazd Stangelj | Sylvester Szmyd | Paulo Tiralongo | Tadej Valjavec |  Francisco Javier Vila Errandonea

Manager
Giuseppe Saronni