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Native Country: Italy Professional Career:
Major Victories
1940
Giro d'Italia
1942
Hour Record - 45.871 at Milan, Italy
World War II
Fausto Coppi fought in World War II in Tunisia. He was a prisoner of war in 1943.
1946
Tour of Lombardy
1947
Giro d'Italia
World Pursuit Champion
Tour of Lombardy
1948
Tour of Lombardy
1949
Giro d'Italia
Tour de France
World Pursuit Champion
Tour of Lombardy
1952
Giro d'Italia
Tour de France
1953
Giro d'Italia
World Road Race Champion
1954
Tour of Lombardy
*Fausto Coppi also took victories in these classics:
Milan - San Remo (3 times)
Paris - Roubaix (1 time)
Fleche - Wallonne (1 time)
Baracchi Trophy (4 times)
Italian National Champion (4 times)
Despite his career being interupted by World War II, Fausto
Coppi massed together an astonishing amount of victories, and aquired imortal status in
his native Italy in the process. When Coppi died in 1960, Italy had lost its greatest
champion. His funeral procession could have been mistaken for a head of state, or even a
saint. Thousands lined the streets, many kneeling and kissing the pavement, to bid
farewell to their great campionissimo.
Coppi loved racing as much as Italy loved him. In fact, it
was that drive to keep going, even as he was well past his prime, that ultimately cost him
his life. Having spent several days racing in North Africa during the winter, Coppi
returned to Italy with malaria. The Italian was dead the day after he was taken to the
hospital.
Becoming the
first to equal Alfredo Binda's five victories in the Giro d'Italia, Coppi put himself on a unique
level by taking all of the most important Italian races several times. His two wins
in the Tour de France were among the Italian's most legendary performances. During his
first Tour win, Coppi came back from an 18-minute deficit after pulverizing the field in
the race's final week. In 1949, the Italian became the first to win the Giro d'Italia and
the Tour de France in the same season. Coppi also became the first winner at l'Alpe d'Huez
in 1952, decimating the field with a solo break which helped establish his overall winning
margin of 28:17. And victory in the classics Paris - Roubaix and Flech - Wallonne
confirmed his supremacy. Had World War II not taken away some of his prime years, there is
no telling what the Italian might have achieved.
Being a master of cycling's disciplines, Coppi's stylish
riding combined an elegant smoothness with magnificent power. He was one of the best
climbers of his generation and a brilliant rider against the clock. In 1942, Coppi set a
new standard of 45.871 km for the Hour Record.
As his career began to diminish, the Italian found it
difficult to give up his racing. Having used stimulants to stay in competition, Coppi's
immune system might not have been at its strongest when malaria set in. The champion's
condition was fatal by the time doctors were able to diagnose the disease.
Today, Coppi's memory is alive and well. Along the course
of the Giro d'Italia and Tour of Lombardy, the tifosi still paint his name on the
roads to remember their beloved champion, who was certainly one of the greatest cycling
champions who ever lived.
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