Frankie Thomas (cyclist) explained

Frankie Thomas
Fullname:Frankie Thomas
Birth Date:28 November 1906 [1]
Birth Place:Bendigo, Australia
Death Date:1978
Death Place:Melbourne
Discipline:Road
Role:Rider

Frankie Thomas was an Australian racing cyclist who competed on both road and track, as was typical of Australian cyclists of the era such as Hubert Opperman.

Major results

1929
  • Fastest Gippsland 100 mile race
    1930
  • 5th Sydney to Melbourne stage race
    2nd fastest time Goulburn to Sydney 1931
  • Competed in the Tour de France but did not finish
    1932
  • 2nd in Brisbane, Six Days, Brisbane (Queensland), Australia
    Fastest time in 140 mile Tour of Gippsland 1933
  • Fastest time in Melbourne to Ballarat
  • Fastest time Goulburn to Sydney 2nd Tour of Tasmania
    1936

    Australian professional cycling career

    Thomas rode as an amateur from 1926 to 1928 and turned professional in 1929. In 1929 Thomas rode a Preston Star bicycle but by 1930 he was riding for the Malvern Star bicycle company.

    In his first year as a professional, Thomas beat Opperman in a Gippsland 100miles race.

    In 1930 Thomas set the second fastest time in the Goulburn to Sydney handicap race behind Opperman. Thomas rode in the Sydney to Melbourne stage race, a five-day stage race styled on the European races covering 706miles in which the celebrity riders were Opperman and two Frenchmen, Joseph Mauclair and Jean Bidot. Thomas won stage 3 and was 2nd in stage 4 and stage 5. Mauclair won the race with Thomas finishing 5th overall.

    Thomas rode in the 1931 Tour de France in a combined Australia/Switzerland team including Opperman, Ossie Nicholson and Richard "Fatty" Lamb. Thomas finished 56th in stage 1, 54th in stage 2. Thomas had stomach trouble and did not finish stage 3.

    In 1933 he set the fastest time in the Melbourne to Ballarat, the fastest time in the Goulburn to Sydney and finished 2nd in the Tour of Tasmania, a six-day stage race covering 566miles, beaten by Fatty Lamb by just 1 second.

    In July 1934 Thomas was disqualified for 18 months for pushing P. Veitch in the Quayle road race at Ballarat, on 21 July 1934.

    Thomas returned to cycling in 1936 and set the fastest time in the 140miles Tour of Gippsland.

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Event registration number 8297 (1906) Births Deaths & Marriages Victoria