Lucien Didier
Luxembourgian cyclist
Personal information | |
---|---|
Born | (1950-08-05) 5 August 1950 (age 73) Luxembourg, Luxembourg |
Height | 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m) |
Weight | 148 lb (67 kg) |
Lucien Didier (born 5 August 1950) is a former Luxembourgian cyclist. He competed at the 1972 Summer Olympics and the 1976 Summer Olympics.[1] He rode in ten Grand Tours between 1978 and 1984, including six Tours de France. In each of his Tour starts he completed the race and helped his team leader to overall victory - Bernard Hinault four times and Laurent Fignon twice.[2] He was the son-in law of racing cyclist Bim Diederich[3] and is the father of racing cyclist Laurent Didier.[4]
References
- ^ "Lucien Didier Olympic Results". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
- ^ Cossins, Peter (22 July 2014). "Renault: The best Tour de France team ever?". cyclingnews.com. Retrieved 28 March 2016.
- ^ ""Le Duc" Bim Diederich, est décédé" ["The Duke" Bim Diederich has passed away]. L'essentiel (in French). 6 December 2012. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
- ^ Quénet, Jean-François (2 February 2015). "Laurent Didier, a Luxembourger helping Contador". cyclingnews.com. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
External links
- Lucien Didier at Cycling Archives
- Lucien Didier at ProCyclingStats
- Lucien Didier at Olympedia
- v
- t
- e
- 1954–56: Charly Gaul
- 1957: Josy Stoffel
- 1958: Charly Gaul
- 1959: Jean Link
- 1960: Josy Stoffel
- 1961: Sylvie Hülsemann
- 1962–63: Norbert Haupert
- 1964: Charles Sowa
- 1965: René Kilburg
- 1966: René Kilburg
- 1967: Charles Sowa
- 1968–69: Louis Pilot
- 1970: Nicolas Koob
- 1971–72: Charles Sowa
- 1973: Robert Schiel
- 1974: Marcel Balthasar
- 1975–78: Roland Bombardella
- 1979: Lucien Didier
- 1980: Justin Gloden
- 1981: Fonsy Grethen
- 1982–83: Roland Jacoby
- 1984: Raymond Conzemius
- 1985: Claude Michely
- 1986: Fonsy Grethen
- 1987: Robby Langers
- 1988–89: Marc Girardelli
- 1990: Guy Hellers
- 1991: Marc Girardelli
- 1992: Eugène Berger
- 1993–94: Marc Girardelli
- 1995: Guy Hellers
- 1996: Marc Girardelli
- 1997: Christian Poos
- 1998: Dan Dethier
- 1999: Jeff Strasser
- 2000: Kim Kirchen
- 2001: Jeff Strasser
- 2002: David Fiegen
- 2003–05: Kim Kirchen
- 2006: Fränk Schleck
- 2007–08: Kim Kirchen
- 2009–11: Andy Schleck
- 2012: Laurent Carnol
- 2013: Dirk Bockel
- 2014–17: Gilles Müller
- 2018: Bob Jungels
- 2019: Bob Bertemes
- 2021: Charles Grethen
- 1966: Sylvie Hülsemann
- 1967: Colette Flesch
- 1968: Sylvie Hülsemann
- 1969: Annette Berger
- 1970–71: Jeanny Dom
- 1972: Nelly Wies
- 1973: Jeanny Dom
- 1974: Berty Krier
- 1975–78: Jeanny Dom
- 1979–82: Carine Risch
- 1983–84: Jeannette Goergen
- 1985–86: Danièle Kaber
- 1987: Nancy Arendt
- 1988: Danièle Kaber
- 1989: Nancy Arendt
- 1990: Marion Hammang
- 1991: Malou Thill
- 1992: Marion Hammang
- 1993: Anne Kremer
- 1994: Raymonde Moes
- 1995–97: Nancy Kemp-Arendt
- 1998–99: Anne Kremer
- 2000: Nancy Kemp-Arendt
- 2001: Ni Xialian
- 2002: Tessy Scholtes
- 2003: Claudine Schaul
- 2004–07: Elizabeth May
- 2008: Marie Muller
- 2009: Elizabeth May
- 2010: Marie Muller
- 2011: Mandy Minella
- 2012: Marie Muller
- 2013: Christine Majerus
- 2014: Jennifer Warling
- 2015–18, 20–21: Christine Majerus
This biographical article relating to Luxembourgian cycling is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e