René Pijnen Explained

René Pijnen
Fullname:Marinus Augustinus Josephus Pijnen
Nickname:René
Birth Date:3 September 1946
Birth Place:Woensdrecht, the Netherlands
Height:1.75m (05.74feet)
Weight:72kg (159lb)
Currentteam:Retired
Discipline:Track and road
Role:Rider
Ridertype:Six-day / Madison race
Show-Medals:yes

Marinus "René" Augustinus Josephus Pijnen (born 3 September 1946) is a Dutch former racing cyclist. He became Olympic champion in the 100 km team time-trial in the 1968 Summer Olympics with Joop Zoetemelk, Fedor den Hertog and Jan Krekels; he finished fifth in the individual road race.

Professional career

A professional from 1969 to 1987, Pijnen was a capable track cyclist, winning the European madison championship six times, a record he shares with Patrick Sercu). He also won 72 six-day races out of 233 starts, with numerous partners. He was also a time trial expert, winning several. He won four stages of the Vuelta a España, three of those in the 1971 Vuelta, which he led for 10 days.

Pijnen rode on the road with TI–Raleigh, managed by another Dutch track specialist, Peter Post, but he said the length of road races bored him, and that he frequently found himself looking at his watch to see how much longer he would have to ride.

After cycling

When he retired, he ran – among other enterprises he already started during his cycling career – a hotel in Bergen op Zoom, the North Brabant province where he was born.

See also