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Georges Passerieu

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Full name
  
George Passerieu

1911
  
La Francaise

Discipline
  
Road

Name
  
Georges Passerieu

1906–1908
  
Peugeot

Role
  
Bicycler

1909
  
Griffon


Georges Passerieu

Nickname
  
l'Anglais du Paris (The Englishman from Paris)

Born
  
November 18, 1885 London, United Kingdom (
1885-11-18
)

Died
  
May 5, 1928, Epinay-sur-Orge, France

George Leon Passerieu (London, 18 November 1885–Épinay-sur-Orge, 5 May 1928) was a British-born French professional road bicycle racer, who won seven stages in the Tour de France, and reached the podium twice. He also was the winner of Paris–Roubaix and Paris–Tours.

Biography

Passerieu first rode the Tour in 1906, after he had just become a professional cyclist. He was strong in the mountains, finishing second to René Pottier in the third stage. Pottier was dominant in that Tour, but Passerieu was the best of the rest. Passerieu won the first stage, beating Pottier in Marseille after they had climbed the mountains together. Later he also won the twelfth stage, and finished second in the general classification.

In 1907, Passerieu was riding for the Peugeot team, which saw potential in Belgian cyclist Cyrille Van Hauwaert. Van Hauwaert refused requests from Peugeot to ride as helper for Passerieu, but instead signed for the La Française team. In the 1907 edition of Paris–Roubaix, Passerieu finished first, followed by Van Hauwaert.

Passerieu rode the 1908 Tour de France. He was the only cyclist to climb the Ballon d'Alsace and the Chartreuse without dismounting his bicycle.

References

Georges Passerieu Wikipedia