Oscar Egg

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Oscar Egg
Personal information
Full name Oscar Egg
Date of birth March 2, 1890
Date of death February 9, 1961
Country Flag of Switzerland Switzerland
Team information
Discipline Road and track
Role Rider
Professional team(s)
1911
1912-1914
1915-1916
1917-1919
1920-1926
Griffon
Peugeot
Individual
Bianchi
Individual
Major wins
set the hour record 3 times
2 stages Tour de France (1914)
1 stage Giro d'Italia (1919)
Paris Tours (1914)
Milano-Torino (1917)
Infobox last updated on:
March 21, 2007

Oscar Egg (2 March 1890 in Schlatt, Switzerland - 9 February 1961 in Nice, France) was a Swiss track and road bicycle racer. He captured the world hour record three times before the First World War. He also won major road races and stages of the Tour de France and Giro d'Italia.

Contents

[edit] The hour record

Between 1907 and 1914 Oscar Egg and Marcel Berthet improved the hour record six times between them. Egg's 1914 mark of 44.247km then stood until 1933. Egg set all three of his records at the Vélodrome Buffalo in Paris. The track was a 333m outdoor track surfaced with concrete. The sequence was as follows:

  • 20 Jun 1907, Marcel Berthet, Paris, 41.520km
  • 22 Aug 1912, Oscar Egg, Paris, 42.122km
  • 7 Aug 1913, Marcel Berthet, Paris, 42.741km
  • 21 Aug 1913, Oscar Egg, Paris, 43.525km
  • 20 Sep 1913, Marcel Berthet, Paris, 43.775km
  • 18 Aug 1914, Oscar Egg, Paris, 44.247km

Only Chris Boardman has equalled Egg and Berthet's feat of taking the record three times.

[edit] Road racing

In 1911 Egg participated in the Tour de France des indépendants winning three stages (the 8th, 10th and 11th).

He first rode the Tour de France in 1912. In the 1914 running of the event he won stages 4 (Brest-La Rochelle, 470km) and 5 (La Rochelle-Bayonne, 379km). He was 13th overall on general classification.

In 1914 he won the classic Paris-Tours road race. In 1917 he won the Milano-Torino road race.

In 1919 he won the third stage of the Giro d'Italia.

[edit] Track racing

Major track victories include:

  • 1914 Chicago six day race
  • 1915 Chicago six day race with Francesco Verri
  • 1916 New York six day race with Marcel Dupuy
  • 1921 New York six day race with Piet Van Kempen
  • 1921 Paris six day race with Georges Sérès père
  • 1922 Six Days of Ghent with Marcel Buysse
  • 1923 Paris six day race with Piet Van Kempen
  • 1923 Chicago six day race with Maurice Brocco
  • 1924 Chicago six day race with Alfred Grenda
  • 1924 Bol d'Or

[edit] External links