Robbie McEwen

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Robbie McEwen
McEwen in 2008
McEwen in 2008
Personal information
Full name Robbie McEwen
Nickname Pocket Rocket
Date of birth June 24, 1972 (1972-06-24) (age 35)
Country Australia
Height 1.71 m (5 ft 7+12 in)
Weight 67 kg (150 lb/10.6 st)
Team information
Current team Silence-Lotto
Discipline Road
Role Rider
Rider type Sprinter
Professional team(s)
1996-1999
2000
2001
2002
2003-
Rabobank
Farm Frites
Domo-Farm Frites
Lotto-Adecco
Lotto-Domo (2003-2004)
Davitamon-Lotto (2005-2006)
Predictor-Lotto (2007)
Silence-Lotto (2008-)
Major wins
Tour de France, Green Jersey (2002, 2004, 2006), 12 stages
Giro d'Italia, 12 stages
Flag of Australia Australia Road Race Champion (2002, 2005)
Paris-Brussels (2002, 2005, 2006, 2007)
Infobox last updated on:
September 16, 2007

Robbie McEwen (born June 24, 1972, Brisbane, Queensland) is an Australian professional road bicycle racer, specializing in fast sprint finishes. As a triple winner of the Tour de France's spinters' classification, he is considered one of the fastest sprinters in the world.

A former junior Australian BMX champion, McEwen switched to road racing in 1990 at the age of 18. He was first selected for the Australian National Road Team in 1994. McEwen lives in Brakel, Belgium with his wife Angélique Pattyn, his son Ewan, and his daughter Elena, and speaks Dutch fluently.

Contents

[edit] Career

McEwen started his road cycling career in 1992 at the Australian Institute of Sport in Canberra under AIS Head Coach Heiko Salzwedel. He previously competed in the Road race at the 1996 Summer Olympics (placed 23rd) and the 2000 Summer Olympics (placed 19th). Also included on the Australian team for the 1994 UCI Road Cycling World Championship in Italy, and the 2002 UCI Road Cycling World Championship in Belgium where he won a silver medal. McEwen was selected for the Australian cycling team at the 2004 Summer Olympics as part of the road race team of Michael Rogers, Stuart O'Grady, Baden Cooke and Matthew White. He was named 2002 Australian Cyclist of the Year, 2002 Male Road Cyclist of the Year and 1999 Australia Male Road Cyclist of the Year.

Robbie McEwen in the 2006 Bay Cycling Classic
Robbie McEwen in the 2006 Bay Cycling Classic

[edit] Tour de France

Robbie McEwen has participated in the Tour de France on ten occasions, in 1997 (117th), 1998 (89th), 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007. He has had twelve stage wins. In 1999 on Stage 20 he won the sprint finish in Paris on the Champs-Elysées. In 2002 he won Stage 3: Metz - Reims and Stage 20: Melun – Paris. In 2004 he won stage 3 and stage 9. In 2005, he was relegated in stage 3 by race referees after clashing with fellow Australian Stuart O’Grady. He was the victor in stage 5 to Montargis, stage 7 to Karlsruhe in Germany and stage 13 to Montpellier. He started off the 2007 Tour with a great victorious sprint on stage 1 to Canterbury but was forced out of the race after failing to finish stage eight within the time limits set by race officials. The stage win was also seen as remarkable as at one point during the race he had to work his way from the back of the pack with the help of his team. From here a sprint to the end was won at the finish line.

As of 2006, McEwen has won the sprinters' green jersey points competition three times in the Tour de France in 2002 and 2004 against rival Australian sprinters, Baden Cooke and Stuart O'Grady, and again in 2006 against Erik Zabel and Thor Hushovd. He was the first Australian to win the overall Sprint Classification of the Tour de France.

In 2002 McEwen won the green jersey with O’Grady third and Cooke fourth in the final sprint rankings. In 2003 Baden Cooke won the green jersey with Robbie McEwen second and Stuart O’Grady seventh in the final sprint rankings.

In 2004 McEwen won the green jersey for a second time defeating Thor Hushovd of Norway 2nd, and Erik Zabel of Germany 3rd, with fellow Australians, O'Grady 4th and Cooke 12th. His win was remarkable when it was revealed that he had suffered fractures to two vertebra early in the Tour and had ridden the rest of the race in serious pain. Three days after the Tour de France he was back in the saddle coming second behind Lance Armstrong in a post-Tour criterium race in the Netherlands.

When asked about his selection for the Australian road team to the 2004 Summer Olympics McEwen said "If I can ride the Pyrenees, the Alps and the Champs Élysées and win the green jersey with a broken back, then one day in Athens is no problem".[1]

[edit] Major victories

Medal record
Competitor for Flag of Australia Australia
Road bicycle racing
World Championships
Silver 2002 Zolder Elite Men's Road Race
2001
Trofeo Palmanova-Palmanova
Circuit de Brabant Wallon
Stage 2 Ronde van Nederland
Stage 4 Tour de la Region Wallonne
Stage 2 Tour Méditerranéen
Stages 3 and 4 Herald Sun Tour
Stages 2 and 3, International Uniqa Classic
Stage 5, Challenge Mallorca
2002
Flag of Australia Australia National Road Race Champion
Tour de France
Sprint Classification
Stages 3 and 20
Stage 4 and 10, Giro d'Italia
Stage 2 and 7, Paris-Nice
Paris-Brussels
Tour Down Under
Sprint Classification
Stages 1, 3, 4 and 6
Étoile de Bessèges
Overall winner
Winner stage 1
Circuit Franco-Belge
1st Overall
Winner stages 2 and 3
Grote Scheldeprijs
Delta Profronde
2003
Giro d'Italia
Stages 4 and 11
Stage 2 Tour de Suisse
Stage 4 Étoile de Bessèges
Dwars door Vlaanderen Waregem
Stage 3, Tour Down Under
2004
Tour de France
Sprint Classification
Stages 2 and 9
Stage 5, Giro d'Italia
Stage 2 and 4, Tour de Suisse
Tour Down Under
Sprint Classification
Stages 1 and 4
Aalst Criterium
Memorial Samyn-Fayt-le-Franc
Wateringse Wielerdag
Spektakel van Steenwijk
Profronde van Ooostvoorne
Gouden Pijl
2005
Paris-Brussels
Tour de France
Winner stages 5, 7 and 13
Stage 4, Tour de Suisse
Giro d'Italia
Stages 2, 6 and 10
Flag of Australia Australia National Road Race Champion
Tour Down Under
Stages 1, 2 and 6
GP de Fourmies
Bay Classic
Overall victory
Rounds 1 and 4
2006
Tour de France
Sprint Classification
Stages 2, 4 and 6
Giro d'Italia
Stages 2, 4 and 6
Paris-Brussels
Jacobs Creek Classic
Aalst Criterium BEL
2007
Stage 1, Tour de France
Points Classification leader
Stage 1
Stage 5, Tour de Suisse
Stage 2, Giro d'Italia
Stage 1, Tour de Romandie
Stage 1, Tirreno-Adriatico
Stage 5, Tour Down Under
Stage 3, Jayco Bay Classic
Stage 3, Eneco Tour
Paris-Brussels
2008
Stage 2, Tour de Romandie

[edit] References

  1. ^ Collins, Gerry. "Robbie McEwen: Too tough to quit", ABC News, 2nd August 2004. Retrieved on 2007-07-29. 

[edit] External links

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Sporting positions
Preceded by
Erik Zabel
Winner of the green jersey in the Tour de France
2002
Succeeded by
Baden Cooke
Preceded by
Baden Cooke
Winner of the green jersey in the Tour de France
2004
Succeeded by
Thor Hushovd
Preceded by
Thor Hushovd
Winner of the green jersey in the Tour de France
2006
Succeeded by
Tom Boonen


Persondata
NAME McEwen, Robbie
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION Road bicycle racer
DATE OF BIRTH 1972-06-24
PLACE OF BIRTH Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH