Maurice De Waele

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Maurice De Waele
Personal information
Full name Maurice De Waele
Date of birth December 27, 1896(1896-12-27)
Date of death February 14, 1952 (aged 55)
Country Flag of Belgium Belgium
Team information
Discipline Road
Role Rider
Major wins
1929 Tour de France
Infobox last updated on:
May 24, 2008

Maurice De Waele (December 27, 1896 LovendegemFebruary 14, 1952) was a Belgian professional road bicycle racer. De Waele is most famous for winning the 1929 Tour de France. He placed 2nd in the 1927 Tour, 3rd in 1928, and 5th in 1931. Other notable wins include the 1928 and 1929 Vuelta al País Vasco.

After winning the 1929 Tour, the organiser, Henri Desgrange despaired so much of the trickery that he thought had let such a minor rider succeed that he abandoned commercially sponsored teams and ran the Tour for national teams for two decades. Desgrange had until then insisted that while riders could compete in the name of their sponsors, cooperation or tactics between those riders was not allowed. They were to consider everyone their rival and ride against them whether they had the same sponsor or not.

De Waele was sponsored by the French bicycle company, Alcyon, whose ability to employ many of the leading riders gave it a dominant place in the sport. Clashes between Alcyon and Desgrange were frequent and came to a head when De Waele won the Tour with the illegal help of other Alcyon riders even though he was ill.

"My Tour has been won by a corpse," Desgrange complained and from the following year denied entries to commercial teams and accepted national teams instead.

[edit] Major achievements

1927 – Labor-Dunlop
Tour de France
2nd overall, @ + 1h 48' 21"
1st, Stage 2 (Dieppe - Le Havre), 103km
1st, Stage 13 (Perpignan - Marseille), 360km
1928 – Alcyon-Dunlop
Tour de France
3rd overall, @ + 56' 16"
1st, Stage 8 (Bordeaux - Hendaye), 225km
1st, Stage 20 (Charleville - Malo-les-Bains), 271km
1st overall, Vuelta al País Vasco
1929 – Belgium
Tour de France
1st overall, 5254km in 186h 39' 16" (28.319km/h)
1st, Stage 20 (Charleville - Malo-les-Bains), 270km
1st overall, Vuelta al País Vasco
1931 – Belgium
1st overall, Tour of Belgium
Sporting positions
Preceded by
Nicolas Frantz
Winner of the Tour de France
1929
Succeeded by
André Leducq