Didier Rous Explained

Didier Rous
Fullname:Didier Rous
Birth Date:18 September 1970
Birth Place:Montauban, France
Weight:700NaN0
Currentteam:Retired
Discipline:Road
Role:Rider
Proyears1:1993 - 1996
Proteam1:GAN
Proyears2:1997 - 1999
Proteam2:Festina
Proyears3:2000 - 2007
Proteam3:Bouygues Télécom
Majorwins:Tour de France, 1 stages (1997)
French National Road Race Champion (2001, 2003)
Grand Prix du Midi Libre (2000)

Didier Rous (born 18 September 1970 in Montauban, France) is a French former professional road bicycle racer. He competed in the men's individual road race at the 1996 Summer Olympics.[1]

Biography

He started his professional career with Gan in 1993 before leaving for Festina in 1997, the year in which he won a stage of the Tour de France. In 1998 the Tour and in particular the Festina team were struck by a doping scandal which led to revelations that the team had organised a doping fund under the managemt of Bruno Roussel, the directeur sportif, and the team's doctor, Erik Rykaert. Rous said he had taken the blood enhancer, EPO.

In 2000 he joined a new team, Bonjour, sponsored by a newspaper chain and managed by the former rider Jean-René Bernaudeau. He stayed with Bernaudeau as the team's sponsors changed and ride under its new sponsor, Brioches La Boulangère (2003–2004) and then Bouygues Telecom (2005).

Rous said on 11 June 2007 that he was stopping racing because of health problems and joined the management of the Bouygues Telecom team.

Major results

1993
  • 1st, Grand Prix d'Ouverture La Marseillaise
    1994
  • 4th, Overall, Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré
    1996
  • 1st, Stage 4, Volta a la Comunitat Valenciana
  • 1st, Stage 3 (ITT), Critérium International
  • 2nd, La Flèche Wallonne
    1997
  • 1st, Stage 18, Tour de France
    2000
  • 1st, Overall, Grand Prix du Midi Libre
  • 1st, Paris–Camembert
    2001
  • National Road Race Champion
  • Four Days of Dunkirk
  • 1st, Overall, Stage 5 and 6 (ITT)
  • 1st, Overall, Tour de Vendée
  • 1st, Trophée des Grimpeurs
  • 1st, Prologue, Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré
  • 11th, Overall, Tour de France
    2002
  • 1st, Overall, Circuit de la Sarthe
  • 2nd, Overall, Four Days of Dunkirk
    2003
  • National Road Race Champion
  • 1st, Trophée des Grimpeurs
  • 1st, Overall, Tour du Limousin
  • 2nd, Overall, Four Days of Dunkirk
    2004
  • 1st, GP Ouest-France
  • 1st, Stage 3, Four Days of Dunkirk
    2005
  • 1st, Stage 3 (ITT), Route du Sud
    2006
  • Paris–Corrèze
  • 1st, Overall, Points Competitions and Stage 1
  • 1st, Trophée des Grimpeurs

    See also

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Didier Rous Olympic Results . https://web.archive.org/web/20200417194733/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/ro/didier-rous-1.html . dead . 17 April 2020 . 3 March 2020.