Bert Oosterbosch Explained

Bert Oosterbosch
Fullname:Bert Oosterbosch
Birth Date:30 July 1957
Death Place:Lekkerkerk, Netherlands
Birth Place:Eindhoven, Netherlands
Discipline:Road and track
Role:Rider
Ridertype:Time triallist
Proyears1:1979–1981
Proteam1:TI–Raleigh
Proyears2:1982
Proteam2:DAF Trucks
Proyears3:1983
Proteam3:TI–Raleigh
Proyears4:1984–1986
Proteam4:Panasonic
Proyears5:1987
Proteam5:Panasonic-Isostar
Proyears6:1988
Proteam6:TVM-Van Schilt
Majorwins:World Champion professional individual pursuit
6 Tour de France stages
Ronde van Nederland

Bert Oosterbosch (30 July 1957 – 18 August 1989) was a Dutch racing cyclist. Oosterbosch was a successful track and road racer.

Early career

In 1978, he won the World amateur team time trial championship (with Jan van Houwelingen, Bart van Est and Guus Bierings). A year later, he turned professional for the TI–Raleighteam of Peter Post. That year he won the World Professional individual pursuit title beating Francesco Moser in the final. He was also three times Dutch pursuit champion.

Road success

As a professional Oosterbosch was especially successful in time trials; he won 14 stage race prologues, including three in the Tour de France. He won three other stages of the Tour: his victory in Bordeaux in 1983 was the one hundredth Dutch stage win in the Tour.

Oosterbosch also won stages in the Vuelta a España and the Tour de Suisse. In 1982 he won the Ronde van Nederland.

Poor health

Oosterbosch suffered poor health on occasions, twice contracting meningitis. In 1988 he was hit by severe knee trouble and had to end his professional career. He returned as an amateur and on 13 August 1989 he won a race. Five days later he died, aged thirty-two years old, after an acute cardiac arrest. He was buried at the Roman Catholic Cemetery Our Lady of Lourdes in Eindhoven. His tombstone depicts cycle racing.

Bert Oosterbosch was married to Marian Bik. The couple had two daughters: Nathalie and Joyce.

Allegations of doping

It has been suggested that Oosterbosch's early death was caused by EPO use,[1] but this is disputed.[2]

Willy Voet, the disgraced former soigneur, talks about Oosterbosch riding the 1982 Grand Prix des Nations. Oosterbosch came in 18th at more than two and a half minutes behind the winner Bernard Hinault, even though he was expected to do well. Voet said "Oosterbosch was flat from the start due to the Synacthen he had taken. The drugs initially blocked his ability to work hard. An hour after the injection it started working as planned and his tempo increased."[3] In fact, Oosterbosch came third in the 1982 event. Voet may be referring to the 1979 or 1984 runnings which Hinault also won.[4]

Major results

1979
  • World Professional pursuit champion
    1980
  • Tour of Luxembourg
  • 1 stage, Tour de France
    1981
  • Four Days of Dunkirk
    1982
  • Ronde van Nederland
  • 1 stage, Tour de Suisse
    1983
  • Tour of the Americas
  • Étoile de Bessèges
  • 2 stages, Tour de France
    1984
  • E3 Prijs Vlaanderen
  • Driedaagse van De Panne
  • 1 stage, Tour de Suisse
    1985
  • 1 stage, Vuelta a España

    See also

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Simon Hart (28 June 2003). "Tour de France: Cycle of cynicism keeps rolling on" . Daily Telegraph. Retrieved on 2012-11-18.
    2. Book: Peter G. J. M. Janssen . Lactate Threshold Training: Running, Cycling, Multisport, Rowing, X-Country Skiing . 18 November 2012 . 2001 . Human Kinetics . 978-0-7360-3755-6 . 190–.
    3. http://autobus.cyclingnews.com/results/1999/may99/may20.shtml Willy Voet goes for the jugular in his book
    4. http://www.memoire-du-cyclisme.net/disparues/anc_gp_nations.php Palmares of the Grand Prix des Nations at