Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Maurice Burton (cyclist)

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Full name
  
Maurice Joseph Burton

1977
  
?

Height
  
1.78 m

Current team
  
De Ver Cycles

1978
  
Fragel – Norta

Weight
  
55 kg


Discipline
  
Track & Road

Name
  
Maurice Burton

Career start
  
1974

1975
  
Role
  
Cyclist

Career end
  
1984

Maurice Burton (cyclist) itelegraphcoukmultimediaarchive02345germain

Born
  
25 October 1955 (age 68) London, England (
1955-10-25
)

Maurice burton cyclist on neovite


Maurice Burton (born 25 October 1955) is an English cycle shop owner and former racing cyclist from Catford, London.

Contents

Born in London to an English mother and a Jamaican father, Maurice Burton was the first black British champion in cycling. His first taste of success came when he won the Junior Sprint national title in 1973. He won the amateur scratch title the following year, raced over a 20 km distance although he was booed as he crossed the line. He went on to represent Britain at the 1974 Commonwealth Games, but was not selected for the Olympic squad in 1976.

Burton became frustrated by the racism pervasive in Britain at the time, he moved to Belgium in 1977, basing himself in Ghent. He was described as the first coloured professional cyclist.

Burton rode 56 professional Six Day events, and retired from competitive cycling after a serious racing accident at the Buenos Aires Six Day in 1984. In 1987, he took over De Ver Cycles, a thriving bike shop in Streatham, South London.

His son Germain Burton is also a racing cyclist who has represented Great Britain on an international level as a junior.

Maurice burton


References

Maurice Burton (cyclist) Wikipedia