Djamolidine Abdoujaparov

Djamolidine Abdoujaparov
Джамолидин Абдужапаров
Personal information
Full name Djamolidine Abdoujaparov
Nickname The Tashkent Terror
Born February 28, 1964
Tashkent, Soviet Union
Team information
Current team Retired
Discipline Road
Role Rider
Rider type Sprinter
Professional team(s)
1990 Alfa Lum
1991–1992 Carrera
1993 Lampre
1994 Polti
1995 Novell
1996 Ceramiche Refin - Mobilvetta
1997 Lotto
Major wins

Tour de France

Points classification (1991, 1993, 1994)

Giro d'Italia

Points classification (1994)
Intergiro classification (1994)

Vuelta a España

Points classification (1992)

Djamolidine Abdoujaparov (English: Jamoliddin Abdujaparov, Жамолиддин Абдужапаров; Russian: Джамолиди́н Абдужапа́ров) (born 28 February 1964 in Tashkent) is a former professional road racing cyclist from Uzbekistan.[1] Abdoujaparov was a sprinter, nicknamed "The Tashkent Terror"[2] as he was so ferocious in the sprints. His unorthodox and often erratic sprinting caused a number of crashes.

Abdoujaparov was born in Tashkent to a Crimean Tatar family which was forcibly deported to Uzbekistan during Soviet rule.[1] A graduate of the Soviet sports programme, he came into his prime just as his country gained independence; after initial difficulties (including Uzbekistan's not being affiliated to the UCI, which caused problems with the Cycling World Championship) he signed for a Western professional team and became one of the world's top sprinters.

Abdoujaparov had numerous tussles with Laurent Jalabert in the Tour de France's green sprinters jersey competition in the early 1990s. In 1991 Abdoujaparov won the competition despite a spectacular crash during the final stage on the Champs-Élysées in Paris, where he collided with the barriers 100 m before the finish and somersaulted into the air. Despite still holding enough points to win the sprinters' jersey, he had to cross the line unaided. Members of his team picked him up, put him back on the bike, and he rode slowly over the last few meters, medical staff walking alongside him.

In his last complete tour in 1996, Abdoujaparov achieved a mountain breakaway for his last stage win, unusual for a sprinter. By this stage, though, results were not as good, and after failing anti-doping tests during the 1997 Tour de France’s second stage, he retired from cycling. He failed the tests screening for the presence in his body of, among others, the anti-asthma drug Clenbuterol.

Abdoujaparov, a British rock band formed by former Carter USM guitarist Les "Fruitbat" Carter, is named after him.[3]

Victories

1987 Soviet national team Soviet Union
Peace race
3 stages winner
1988 Soviet national team Soviet Union
Peace race
Points classification winner (white jersey)
2 stages winner
Olympic games Seoul
5. place
1989 Soviet national team Soviet Union
Peace race
1 stage winner
1990 Alfa Lum
first year as professional
1991 Carrera
Gent–Wevelgem
Giro del Piemonte
Tour de France
points classification winner
Winner stages 1 and 4
1 stage winner Semana Siciliana
2 stages winner Vuelta a Murcia
1 stage winner Volta a Catalunya
G.P. Montreal
1992 Carrera
Vuelta a España
points classification winner
4 stages winner
1 stage Tour of Britain
1993 Lampre
Tour de France
points classification winner
Winner stages 3,18 and 20
Vuelta a España
3 stages winner
Tour de Suisse
1 stage
Criterium Amiens
Criterium Lisieux
Criterium Hendaya
1994 Polti
Giro d'Italia
points classification winner
Intergiro Classification winner
1 stage winner
Tour de France
points classification winner
winner stages 1 and 20
2 stages winner Paris–Nice
2 stages winner Three Days of De Panne
1 stage Tour DuPont
Omnium Elsloo
Profronde Roosendaal
G.P. Rik van Steenbergen
Poly Normande
2 stages winner Tour of Holland + 2nd place in overall classification
Criterium Vayrac
Criterium Bavikhove
1995 Novell
Tour de France
Winner stage 20
1 stage winner Tour DuPont
Criterium Quillan
1996 Refin-Mobilvetta
Tour de France
Winner stage 14
1 stage winner Vuelta a Murcia
1 stage winner Tirreno–Adriatico
1 stage winner Giro di Sardegna
Criterium Dijon
Criterium Cauderan-Burdeos
1997 Lotto
La Côte Picarde
1 stage Four Days of Dunkirk
2 stages Dauphiné Liberé

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Djamolidine Abdoujaparov interview from ATR". ATR. 30 May 2012. Archived from the original on 2 December 2012. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  2. "'Tashkent terror' banned from cycling for one year". BBC News. 26 January 1998. Retrieved 18 July 2007.
  3. Carlson, Dean. "Abdoujaparov - Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 28 April 2014.