Dario Cioni
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Personal information | |
---|---|
Full name | Dario David Cioni |
Date of birth | December 2, 1974 (age 32) |
Country | Italy |
Team information | |
Current team | Predictor-Lotto |
Discipline | Road (formerly MTB) |
Role | Rider |
Rider type | Time Trialist, Climber |
Professional team(s) | |
1992-2000 2000-2002 2003-2004 2005-2006 2007- |
Mapei mountainbike teams Mapei-Quick Step Fassa Bortolo Liquigas Predictor-Lotto |
Major wins | |
Italy Time Trial Champion 2004 | |
Infobox last updated on: | |
January 7, 2006 |
Dario David Cioni (born December 2, 1974 in Reading, Berkshire, England) is an Italian professional road bicycle racer for UCI ProTour team Predictor-Lotto.
Contents |
[edit] Career
[edit] Mountain bike career
Cioni began his career as a professional mountain bike racer at the age of 19. He found success early with victory in the Italian Winter Championship and second place at both the Italian Cup and Italian Championships. Selected to represent Italy at the World Championships, Cioni finished tenth. He continued with similar results through his mountain bike career, with several top five placings at the World Championships including second at St. Wendel in 1996. Cioni also rode some Cyclo-cross towards the end of the nineties.
[edit] Road racing career
In 2000, Cioni was selected for the Mapei-Quick Step Pro Development Team, alongside, amongst others, Filippo Pozzato, Fabian Cancellara, Michael Rogers and Charlie Wegelius. His intention was to use the training on the road to help his mountain bike career with the specific aim of riding for Italy at the 2000 Summer Olympics. However, he was not selected for the Olympics and it was at this point that Cioni decided to concentrate on road racing. In his first season, Cioni won a stage of the Tour of Slovenia and was second in a stage of the Tour de Normandie. He also rode his first Vuelta a España. In 2001, Cioni won his first stage race, the Vuelta Minho in Portugal. Cioni moved to Fassa Bortolo in 2003, where he was used as a domestique for Alessandro Petacchi. Whilst Petacchi flourished that season, Cioni had no notable results.
It was in 2004 that Cioni made his breakthrough in sustaining his abilities in time trialing and climbing through important stage races. After a promising Tour de Romandie, where he finished fifth overall, Cioni finished fourth in the Giro d'Italia and followed this up with third place in the Tour de Suisse. Cioni was subsequently chosen to represent Italy at the World Cycling Championships, however, was not allowed to complete when he registered a hematocrit level over 50%. Although Cioni was aware his hematocrit level was naturally high, he had failed to get an exemption and personal level from the Italian federation in 1999, since his level was not consistently higher than 50%, but consistently around it. The UCI awarded Cioni an exemption certificate, with a personal level, after further tests in October 2004[1]. In 2005, Cioni moved to the newly formed Liquigas-Bianchi team where, despite being one of the team's leaders and hence liberated from the role of domestique, he had no notable successes. The best that Cioni achieved at Liquigas was a second place in stage four in the 2005 Giro d'Italia, third place at the 2005 Italian National time trial championships and sixth place overall at the 2006 Tour de Romandie. In 2007, Cioni moved to the Belgian ProTour team Predictor-Lotto. His first victory with this team came when he bagged the first stage of that year's Vuelta a Andalucía, outsprinting his breakaway companion Antón Luengo.
[edit] Personal life
He currently lives in Montelupo Fiorentino, Tuscany, with his wife. In 2004, Cioni graduated from the European School of Economics with an honours degree in International Business with specialisation in Sports Management.
[edit] Palmarès
- 2007
- Vuelta a Andalucía stage 1
- 2004
- Italy National Time Trial Champion
[edit] References
[edit] External links
Riders on Predictor-Lotto |
---|
Mario Aerts | Christophe Brandt | Dario Cioni | Dominique Cornu | Wim De Vocht | Dries Devenyns | Bart Dockx | Cadel Evans | Nick Gates | Chris Horner | Leif Hoste | Nick Ingels | Josep Jufré Pou | Olivier Kaisen | Bjorn Leukemans | Matthew Lloyd | Robbie McEwen | Pieter Mertens | Fred Rodriguez | Bart Roesems | Roy Sentjens | Tom Steels | Geert Steurs | Greg Van Avermaet | Jurgen Van Den Broeck | Preben Van Hecke | Wim Van Huffel | Johan Van Summeren | Wim Vansevenant |
Manager |
Marc Sergeant |