Sergei Ivanov (cyclist) explained

Sergei Ivanov
Fullname:Sergei Valeryevich Ivanov
Birth Date:1975 3, df=yes
Birth Place:Cheboksary, Soviet Union
Discipline:Road
Role:Retired
Proyears1:1996
Proteam1:Lada-Samara
Proyears2:1997–2000
Proyears3:2001–2003
Proyears4:2004–2006
Proyears5:2007–2008
Proyears6:2009–2011
Majorwins:Grand Tours

Tour de France

2 Individual Stages (2001, 2009)Stage races

Tour de Pologne (1998)One-day races and Classics

National Road Race Championships (1998, 1999, 2000, 2005, 2008, 2009)

E3 Prijs Vlaanderen (2000)

Amstel Gold Race (2009)

Sergei Valeryevich Ivanov (Russian: Серге́й Валерьевич Иванов) (born 5 March 1975 in Chuvashia, Soviet Union) is a former professional road bicycle racer, who competed between 1996 and 2011. Ivanov had been a member of six different teams, competing for CSKA Lada–Samara, TVM–Farm Frites, Fassa Bortolo, T-Mobile Team, and . In this time he completed in five Grand Tours, and also won six national championship titles.[1] He also won the Tour de Pologne 1998.[2] He finished his sports career in 2009

He now lives in Bekkevoort, Belgium.

Major results

1995
  • 1st Overall Tour de Hongrie
  • 1st Overall Vuelta Ciclista a Navarra
    1996
  • 2nd Overall Tour de l'Avenir
  • 1st Points classification
  • 1st Mountain classification
  • 1st Stages 5 & 10
  • 3rd Overall Course de la Paix
  • 3rd Route Adélie de Vitré
  • 4th Overall Tour de Normandie
    1997
  • 6th Brussels–Ingooigem
  • 9th Tour de Berne
  • 10th Overall Circuit Cycliste Sarthe – Pays de la Loire
    1998
  • 1st Road race, National Road Championships
  • 1st Overall Tour de Pologne
  • 1st Stages 5 & 8
  • 1st Brussels–Ingooigem
  • 2nd GP du canton d'Argovie
  • 7th Overall Circuit Cycliste Sarthe – Pays de la Loire
  • 9th Overall GP Tell
    1999
  • 1st Road race, National Road Championships
  • 1st Druivenkoers Overijse
  • 2nd Overall Tour de Langkawi
  • 2nd La Côte Picarde
  • 3rd GP Ouest–France
  • 4th Rund um den Henninger Turm
  • 10th Overall Circuit Cycliste Sarthe – Pays de la Loire
  • 1st Stage 2
    2000
  • 1st Road race, National Road Championships
  • 1st E3 Prijs Vlaanderen
  • 3rd Overall KBC Driedaagse van De Panne-Koksijde
  • 3rd Overall Tour de Pologne
  • 1st Stages 6 & 7
  • 4th Overall Tour de Luxembourg
  • 5th Milan–San Remo
  • 7th Paris–Camembert
    2001
  • 1st Stage 9 Tour de France
  • 1st Stage 5 Tour de Suisse
  • 1st Stage 4 Giro della Liguria
  • 3rd Trofeo Pantalica
  • 9th Overall Tour de Luxembourg
  • 9th Kuurne–Brussels–Kuurne
    2002
  • 1st Trofeo Luis Puig
  • 2nd Amstel Gold Race
  • 3rd Rund um den Henninger Turm
  • 7th Overall Ronde van Nederland
  • 1st Stage 5
  • 10th GP du Midi-Libre
    2003
  • 1st Stage 5 Tour de Luxembourg
  • 1st Stage 6 TTT Tour Méditerranéen
  • 3rd GP du canton d'Argovie
  • 4th Coppa Bernocchi
  • 7th Tour of Flanders
  • 10th Paris–Roubaix
  • 10th Rund um den Henninger Turm
    2004
  • 8th Amstel Gold Race
    2005
  • 1st Road race, National Road Championships
  • 1st Stage 4 Tour of Britain
  • 9th Tour of Flanders
  • 10th Eneco Tour
    2006
  • 8th GP Ouest–France
  • 9th La Flèche Wallonne
  • 10th Amstel Gold Race
    2008
  • 1st National Road Race Championships
  • 1st Overall Tour de Wallonie
  • 3rd Overall Driedaagse van West-Vlaanderen
  • 3rd Overall Tour of Belgium
  • 7th Amstel Gold Race
    2009
  • 1st Amstel Gold Race
  • 1st National Road Race Championships
  • 1st Stage 14 Tour de France[3]
  • 5th Liège–Bastogne–Liège
  • 7th Clásica de San Sebastián
  • 9th Overall Tour of Belgium
  • 1st Stage 1
    2010
  • 1st Points classification, Tour of Luxembourg

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. News: Six-times Russian national champion Ivanov retires. Cycling Weekly. IPC Media Limited. Alasdair. Fotheringham. 3 January 2012. 3 January 2012.
    2. Web site: Tour de Pologne . 28 March 2015 . Cycling Archives.
    3. Web site: Ivanov wins as Hincapie moves up . 2009-07-18. BBC Sport. 2009-07-18.