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Jean Dotto

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Full name
  
Jean-Baptiste Dotto

1951-1953
  
France Sport Dunlop

Nickname
  
Le Vigneron de Cabasse

Name
  
Jean Dotto


Discipline
  
Road

Role
  
Cyclist

1950
  
Urago

Rider type
  
Climbing

Jean Dotto CapoVelocom Jean Dotto


Born
  
27 March 1928 St-Nazaire, France (
1928-03-27
)

1948-1950
  
Independent (semi-professional)

Died
  
February 20, 2000, Ollioules, France

Jean-Baptiste Dotto (27 March 1928, in St-Nazaire – 20 February 2000, in Ollioules, France) was the first French racing cyclist to win the Vuelta a España. He rode the Tour de France 13 times, coming fourth in 1954.

Jean Dotto CapoVelocom Jean Dotto

Jean Dotto was born with Italian nationality. He became French in 1937. Dotto was a good climber. He became an independent, or semi-professional, in 1948 and won a race up Mont Ventoux that year and won Marseille-Toulon-Marseille and the climb of La Turbie, near Nice in 1950. He turned professional in 1951 for France-Sport-Dunlop and won five races, including three hill climbs, in his first season. He rode until 1963, winning 35 races, including the Dauphiné-Libéré twice. He won stage 19 of the 1954 Tour de France and next year won the Vuelta by beating Julio Jiménez of Spain and Raphaël Géminiani of France.

Of his era, he said: "We took amphetamine but not all the year. That allowed us to win and it wasn't very dangerous."

References

Jean Dotto Wikipedia