Karel Kaers | |
Fullname: | Karel Kaers |
Nickname: | Le Phénomène |
Birth Date: | 1914 6, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Vosselaar, Belgium |
Death Place: | Antwerp, Belgium |
Discipline: | Road, track |
Role: | Rider |
Ridertype: | Sprinter |
Proyears1: | 1933-1934 |
Proteam1: | Individual |
Proyears2: | 1935 |
Proteam2: | Pélissier-Hutchinson |
Proyears3: | 1936 |
Proteam3: | Colin-Wolber and Bristol |
Proyears4: | 1937-1938 |
Proteam4: | Alcyon-Dunlop and Bury |
Proyears5: | 1939-1940 |
Proteam5: | Alcyon |
Proyears6: | 1941-1943 |
Proteam6: | Individual |
Proyears7: | 1944 |
Proteam7: | A. Trialoux-Wolber |
Proyears8: | 1945-46 |
Proteam8: | Individual |
Proyears9: | 1947 |
Proteam9: | Magali |
Majorwins: | One-day races and Classics World Road Race Championships (1934) National Road Race Championships (1937) Tour of Flanders (1939) Track Championships Individual pursuit (1939) |
Karel Kaers (3 June 1914[1] – 20 December 1972) was a Belgian professional cyclist with 30 wins.[2]
Kaers was born in Vosselaar. In 1934 he became the youngest world road champion, winning in Leipzig at 20. It was the first time he had ridden the race. He also won the Tour of Flanders in 1939, and the Belgian national championship in 1937.[3]
His last race was on the track at Ordrup, near Copenhagen, Denmark, on 9 May 1948. He finished fourth in an omnium competition.[4]
Lance Armstrong is frequently described as the youngest world champion. In fact, he was only the third youngest road champion when he took the rainbow jersey in Oslo in 1993. Armstrong was two weeks short of 22; Kaers had just turned 20. Jean-Pierre Monseré was three weeks short of 22 when he became champion in Leicester on 16 August 1970.
Karel Kaers started racing at 14 and won 37 events in his first two years, including the Belgian boys' championship on the road.[5] He became a junior in 1931 and won the national sprint championship. He became an independent, or semi-professional, and then a full professional in 1932, riding mainly on the track until 1934.[6]
In 1934 he began riding more on the road, winning the world championship at Leipzig. That winter he rode 1m 9.6s for a standing-start kilometre and, another track record, 1m 48s for the flying-start kilometre, both on the Vélodrome d'Hiver in Paris.[7] He won the 320 km Circuit of Paris road race in 1937, then rode the track again in the winter and equalled Jef Scherens' record of 29.6s for 500 metres. He then broke the world one-mile record at Wembley, during the six-day race, by riding 1m 49.6s.
His weight, 85 kg, made him a poor climber and he never succeeded in hilly races.[8]
Karel Kaers ran a bar inside the entrance to the Sportpaleis track in Antwerp after he stopped racing.[9] He died in Antwerp, aged 58 after an intracranial hemorrhage.