Evgeni Berzin | |
Full Name: | Evgeni Valentinovich Berzin Евге́ний Валенти́нович Берзин[1] |
Birth Date: | 3 June 1970 |
Birth Place: | Vyborg, Soviet Union |
Height: | 1.70 m |
Weight: | 640NaN0 |
Currentteam: | Retired |
Discipline: | Road |
Role: | Rider |
Ridertype: | All-rounder |
Proyears1: | 1993 - 1996 |
Proyears2: | 1997 |
Proyears3: | 1998 |
Proyears4: | 1999 |
Proteam4: | Amica Chips–Costa de Almería |
Proyears5: | 1999 - 2000 |
Proteam5: | Mobilvetta Design–Northwave |
Majorwins: | Grand Tours
1 individual stage (1996) Young rider Classification (1994) 5 individual stages (1994, 1995, 1996)One-day races and Classics |
Evgeni Valentinovich Berzin (; born 3 June 1970 in Vyborg, Russia) is a Russian former road cyclist.
Coming from track cycling, where he successfully represented the Soviet Union at World Championships, he moved to Italy in 1992 and turned professional with in 1993. His second season in 1994 was to be his best, with victories at the Giro d'Italia and Liège–Bastogne–Liège. He finished second at the 1995 Giro d'Italia, but failed to live up to high expectations in the years after. A brief spell in the race leader's yellow jersey and a stage win at the 1996 Tour de France were his last big results. In 1997, he unsuccessfully attempted to break Chris Boardman's hour record. He retired from the sport in 2001.
Berzin began his career as a track rider in the youth system of the Soviet team, under Alexandre Kuznetsov, joining when he was 14 years old. He won the Men's Amateur Individual Pursuit and the Team Amateur Pursuit at the 1990 UCI Track Cycling World Championships and gained silver in the Team Amateur Pursuit a year later.[2] In 1992, Berzin wanted to switch to road racing in order to compete in the road race at the 1992 Olympics, but Kuznetsov refused, instead aiming to focus on the track events. Berzin subsequently left Russia and went to Italy with his girlfriend, Stella. There, he teamed up with Emanuele Bombini, a recently retired rider in the process of building a cycling team around former world champion Moreno Argentin with Mecair, an engineering company, as the main sponsor. The team,, was formed for 1993 and Berzin became part of it, alongside his friend Vladislav Bobrik.[3]
In his first season as a professional, Berzin rode as a domestique for team captain Piotr Ugrumov, who would finish second overall at the Giro d'Italia. Berzin himself finished the Giro in 90th place.[3] He also rode the 1993 Tour of Britain, where he finished second on stage 4. The end of the stage was notable for the on-road arguments between Berzin and the stage winner, Peter de Clercq, as Berzin had refused to assist with pace-making over the final 10km (10miles) of the stage.[4] The same year, he was the runner-up in the Settimana Ciclistica, in Lombarda, Italy. He finished the season ranked 379th in the UCI Road World Rankings.[3]
Electronics company Gewiss took over lead sponsorship of Berzin's team for 1994 and brought on sports physician Michele Ferrari from the University of Ferrara as the new team doctor. Berzin was competitive right from the outset of the new season. He was in the top three at the Tour Méditerranéen, Trofeo Laigueglia, and Settimana Siciliana. He then finished second overall to teammate Giorgio Furlan at Tirreno–Adriatico. He won the time trial at the Critérium International, and finished third overall, as Furlan again won the race. Berzin finished the Tour of the Basque Country in second place behind Tony Rominger and signed a contract extension with Gewiss–Ballan at higher wages until 1996.[3]
A week after signing his new contract, Berzin lined up at Liège–Bastogne–Liège, one of the most important classic races in cycling. Late in the race, he was part of a six-man leading group, including reigning world champion Lance Armstrong and Rominger. He accelerated away from the group and won the race.[3] Just three days later, at La Flèche Wallonne, Berzin and his teammates Argentin and Furlan broke away from the field at the first passage of the Mur de Huy, 65km (40miles) from the finish. The rest of the field was unable to counter what cycling journalist William Fotheringham called "the greatest show of strength in any Classic by any team". Argentin was allowed to win, in what was his last season as a professional, and Berzin finished third behind Furlan. Comments by Ferrari to the press afterwards, saying that "anything that doesn’t result in a positive test isn’t doping" cast doubts over the performance.[3]
Following his strong performances in the classics, tensions between Berzin and his team grew. On stage 3 of the Giro del Trentino, Berzin was ordered back from an attack on his team leader, Argentin, eventually finishing the race in second place behind him. At the same time, Berzin demanded that his contract, valued at an estimated £17,000 per month, be renegotiated, which his team refused.[3]
Berzin entered the 1994 Giro d'Italia as co-leader next to Ugrumov, but soon established himself as the leading rider, finishing the first-day time trial ahead of favourite Miguel Induráin, second just to Armand de las Cuevas. On stage 4 to Campitello Matese, he attacked, winning the stage and taking a minute from Induráin and three minutes from Ugrumov.[3] The first long time trial of the race followed on stage 8 to Follonica. Berzin was again victorious and he extended his advantage over Induráin to 3:39 minutes. On stage 15, Berzin attempted to follow an attack by Marco Pantani, but was dropped. Induráin then left Berzin behind as well, joining up with eventual stage winner Pantani. Berzin would lose four minutes to Pantani and thirty seconds to Induráin, but retained the race lead by 1:18 over the former. He then won the last time trial of the race on stage 18, ahead of Induráin. Over the two final mountain stages in the Alps, Berzin stayed with Pantani and Induráin, helped significantly by Argentin to cover the relentlessness of Pantani's attacks. He became the first Russian and first rider from a former Eastern bloc country to win a Grand Tour. His final winning margin over Pantani was 2:51 minutes. However, the tensions within the team increased during the Giro. Berzin still demanded higher pay and came into conflict with his teammates, who accused him of not showing enough respect.[3]
Embroiled in his contract dispute, he raced only two more times over the rest of 1994, finishing 21st at the inaugural world time trial championship. Having been offered a lucrative contract by, Berzin tried to force his way out of riding for by means of a lawsuit, but on 1 December 1994, the court ruled against him. He would stay with the team for the remainder of his contract.[3]
In 1995, Berzin returned to the Giro d'Italia, with Rominger also on the start line. Berzin would eventually finish second overall,[5] but a strained relationship between himself and teammate Ugrumov, third overall, prevented them from seriously challenging Rominger. During stage 14, Ugrumov even actively rode with Rominger to distance Berzin, who managed to get back with some difficulty. Berzin's best moment of the race came on the penultimate day, when he won the stage to Salita di Montegrino Valtravaglia, coming in 25 seconds ahead of Rominger and Ugrumov, thereby securing second place.
Just a few days after the Giro ended, Berzin took victory at the Euskal Bizikleta.[6] He was also part of the team that won the team time trial at the 1995 Tour de France on stage 3.[7] He eventually retired from the race on stage 10, having lost 15 minutes to Induráin the day before and, according to Dutch newspaper De Volkskrant, being "physically demolished and mentally broken".[8]
By 1996, his performances began to fade, leading the press to question his abilities and focus on his personal life, which included him and his wife Stella separating.[9] Berzin returned for the 1996 Giro d'Italia, where he won the time trial on stage 19,[10] putting him into provisional third place overall, just 14 seconds behind leader Pavel Tonkov. He would however lose significant time the next day, and eventually finished in 10th place overall.[11] At the Tour de Suisse, he won the prologue, two seconds ahead of Bjarne Riis.[12] He won the time trial on stage 8 as well, this time ahead of Gianni Faresin and Armstrong.[13] In the overall classification, he was eventually fourth.[14]
At the 1996 Tour de France, he took the yellow jersey as leader of the general classification on stage 7 to Les Arcs, the day that saw Induráin falter at the Tour for the first time in six years.[15] He was the first Russian rider to wear the yellow jersey at the Tour.[16] Berzin then won the time trial to Val-d'Isère the next day. Stage 9 to Sestriere was shortened due to snow. Riis attacked almost from the beginning of the now 46km (29miles)-long stage. Riis would win the stage and take the yellow jersey from Berzin[17] en route to eventual overall victory. Berzin finished in Paris in 20th place.[18]
For 1997, Berzin followed Bombini, who set up a new team, Batik–Del Monte, which included many riders from the former Gewiss squad.[19] At the 1997 Giro d'Italia, Berzin placed second to Tonkov at the difficult stage-three time trial to San Marino.[20] He faded later in the race and finished 20th overall, 49 minutes behind the winner, Ivan Gotti.[21] He rode the Tour de France again, finishing third in the prologue time trial in Rouen, but he later abandoned the race, due to a broken clavicle.[22]
His contract with the Batik–Del Monte team stipulated that Berzin had to try to break the hour record in 1997. The plan to attempt the effort right after the Tour de France was foiled by his injuries sustained during the race. He eventually attempted to beat the record set by Chris Boardman in Bordeaux on 19 October. Prevented from using the same aerodynamic handlebars Boardman had used due to a change in regulations and further hindered by riding at sea level, Berzin abandoned his run after just 17 minutes, with an average speed 5kph slower than Boardman's.[23] [24]
Trying to rebuild his career, Berzin joined the team for 1998, but failed to deliver. He launched unsuccessful breakaways at Liège–Bastogne–Liège and at the Four Days of Dunkirk. He left the team at the end of the year, with team manager Marc Madiot stating that "his good days were behind him, no matter what".[25] Since his team was not invited,[26] Berzin missed the Giro d'Italia, but rode the Tour de France, finishing in 25th position, almost 43 minutes behind winner Marco Pantani.[27]
By 1999, his performances had deteriorated considerably. He rode his final Giro d'Italia, this time for Amica Chips–Costa de Almería, but he finished in 52nd place, over 2 hours down on the winner, Gotti.[28]
Berzin was prevented from starting the 2000 Giro d'Italia, as he received a two-week ban, due to an elevated hematocrit level, indicating the use of erythropoietin (EPO), a product used for the purposes of doping.[29] [30] His contract with the team was subsequently terminated. Berzin retired in 2001.[31]
Berzin owns a car showroom in Oltrepò Pavese, where he lives,[32] and a Fiat dealership near Milan.[18] For several years, he organised a criterium race for professionals, held shortly after the Giro d'Italia, the "Criterium Gran Premio Città di Broni".[31]
Source:[33]
Grand Tour | 1993 | 1994 | 1995 | 1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Giro d'Italia | 90 | bgcolor=pink | 1 | 2 | 10 | 20 | — | 52 | DNS | |
Tour de France | — | — | DNF | 20 | DNF | 25 | — | — | ||
Vuelta a España | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | ||
Source: |
— | Did not compete | |
---|---|---|
DNF | Did not finish | |
DNS | Did not start |