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Thomas Allier

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Full name
  
Thomas Allier

1997-1998
  
Sunn/Nike

Height
  
1.85 m

Current team
  
Free Agent Bicycles

1998-1999
  
Sunn/Nike

Weight
  
86 kg

Rider type
  
Off Road

Name
  
Thomas Allier

Disciplines
  
BMX

1993-1997
  
Sunn/Chipie

Role
  
Bicycler


Thomas Allier BMX le palois Thomas Allier dtecteur de talents

Born
  
March 24, 1975 (age 49) Fontenay-aux-Roses, France (
1975-03-24
)

Thomas allier


Thomas Allier (born March 24, 1975 in Fontenay-aux-Roses, Hauts-de-Seine) is a French professional "Mid/Current School" Bicycle Motocross (BMX) racer whose prime competitive years were from 1993-2006. Allier was a member of the French Olympic BMX Team participating in the debut of BMX racing at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, China. Allier did not make it past the quarter finals.

Contents

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Bmx 1994 aba fall nationals a pro mains day 1 thomas allier blaser fuzzy hall roebuck


Racing career milestones

Thomas Allier pekinfranceolympiquecomhautniveauimagesathle

Started Racing: September 1989 at 14 years old.

Thomas Allier ClicBMX Ile de la Runion

Sanctioning Body: UCI

Thomas Allier BMX News

First race result: Third place.

Thomas Allier Thomas Allier en enroul BMX Blog de lebeaugosse1999

First win (local):

Thomas Allier dsc07236jpgjpg

First sponsor:

First national win:

Turned Professional: 1998

First Professional race result:

First Professional win:

First Junior Pro* win:

First Senior Pro** race result:

First Senior Pro win:

Retired: Active

Height & weight at height of his career (1995–2006): Ht:6'1" Wt:188 lbs (1.85m, 85.5 kg).

Amateur

  • Sunn/Chipie: 1993-September 1997
  • Sunn/Nike: September 1997 – 1999 Allier would turn pro in the US with this sponsor.
  • Professional

  • Sunn/Nike: September 1997 – 1999
  • GT (Gary Turner) Bicycles/Pansonic Shock Wave: 1999-October 2001. GT dropped its entire BMX and freestyle teams after Pacific Coast Cycles brought Schwinn/GT. Previously in October 1998 Schwinn Cycling & Fitness acquired GT Bicycles Inc. and merged.
  • Giant Bicycles: Late December 2001-Late October 2003. In an odd repeat of his experience in 2001 with GT Bicycles, Giant Bicycles dropped its professional members of its team. Ironically, GT Bicycles which dropped its team two years before due to financial difficulties, picked him up for its European division after Allier moved back to France after the 2003 NBL season. and after the ABA Fall Nationals in Delmar, California on October 26, 2003.
  • GT Bicycles: Late October 2003-December 11, 2006
  • Free Agent Bicycles: December 12, 2006–Present
  • Amateur

    Association Francaise de Bicrossing (AFdB)

    La Fédération Française de Bicrossing (FFB)

    Fédération Française de Cyclisme (FFC)

  • 1994 Junior Men French Champion.
  • National Bicycle Association (NBA)

  • None (defunct)
  • National Bicycle League (NBL)

  • None
  • American Bicycle Association (ABA)

  • None
  • United States Bicycle Motocross Association (USBA)

  • None (Defunct)
  • International Bicycle Motocross Federation (IBMXF)*

  • 1991 16 Expert Bronze Medal World Champion
  • 1994 18-24 Cruiser World Champion
  • Fédération Internationale Amateur de Cyclisme (FIAC)*

    Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI)*

    Professional

    Association Francaise de Bicrossing (AFdB)

    La Fédération Française de Bicrossing (FFB)

    Fédération Française de Cyclisme (FFC)

  • 1995-1998 Elite Men French Champion
  • 2005 Elite Men French Champion
  • National Bicycle Association (NBA)

  • None (defunct)
  • National Bicycle League (NBL)

  • 2000 National No.1 Pro
  • American Bicycle Association (ABA)

  • 2000, 2002 Pro World Cup Champion
  • United States Bicycle Motocross Association (USBA)

  • None (defunct)
  • International Bicycle Motocross Federation (IBMXF)*

  • None (defunct)
  • Fédération Internationale Amateur de Cyclisme (FIAC)*

  • None (defunct)
  • Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI)*

  • 1997 Elite Men Grand Prix BMX Valkenswaard Champion (World Cup Pre-Race)
  • 1998 Elite Men European Elite/Junior Champion
  • 1998, 1999 Gold medal Elite Cruiser World Champion
  • 1998 Gold medal Elite Men European Champion
  • 1998 Gold medal Elite Men World Champion
  • 2000 Gold medal Elite Men World Champion
  • 2004, 2005 Elite Men European Champion
  • International Olympic Committee (IOC)

    Games of the XXIX Olympiad (2008 Summer Olympics) Discipline: Men's BMX French BMX Teammates: Damien Godet, Anne-Caroline Chausson, Laëtitia Le Corguillé Location: Laoshan BMX Field Beijing, China Number of competitors: 32 Positions: Event Results Wednesday August 20 Men's First Seeding Run‡: 37.176sec. Men's Second Seeding Run: 36.649sec. Seconds behind leader: +0.957 (19th place). Seeding Run leader: Mike Day  United States Allier advances to Quarterfinals† Men's Quarter Finals (Overall after three motos of Run 4): 6th place; did not qualify for Semi Final*. Event Results Thursday August 21 Postponed due to rain. Event Results Friday August 22 Men's Semi Finals:DNQ Men's Final (Medal Round): DNQ Bronze medal winner: Donny Robinson  United States Silver medal winner: Mike Day  United States Gold medal winner:** Māris Štrombergs  Latvia

    Allier's teammate on the Men's French team Damien Godet, the fourth member of the French team made the Men's Finals but came in last place with a DNF, Did Not Finish. His teammates the women's team Anne-Caroline Chausson and Laëtitia Le Corguillé won the first Gold and Silver medals respectively to be awarded in the Olympic Games for BMX.
    Independent Invitationals and Pro Series Championships

    Significant injuries

  • Dislocated finger on left hand on July 23, 1998
  • Broke hand at the 1999 ABA Super Nationals in Desoto, Texas on day 1 in the last pro main. Soon after while cross training on his mountain bike he slipped a pedal resulting in the chainring imbedding itself into his right leg, tearing muscle.
  • Suffered a shoulder/collarbone separation at the UCI World Championships in Louisville, Kentucky on the weekend of July 26, 2001. He crashed on the first set of jumps in the first straight. He had to miss the 2001 X Games Downhill BMX race.
  • Miscellaneous

  • Set the World Bunny Hoping record of 47" in 2001 at the BMX Plus! BMX Olympics, breaking Steve Veltman's previous record of 46" set in 1996. It still stands. Note: This BMX "Olympics," which was created and held by BMX Plus! magazine every five years, has nothing to do with the international olympic games held every four years and sanctioned by the International Olympic Committee (IOC). He would later claimed to have broken his own record unofficially by achieving a jump of 48" later in 2001. This is confirmed by some friends training with him : "Thomas could do some bunny hups at an insane altitude. As I was breaking at 95cm, I saw him succeeding several times at 120cm, making me feel I was crappy."
  • He won the first Republic of China pro BMX race which was held in Taiyuan, China on Saturday, September 25, 2004 (local time, east of the International Dateline). It was seen as either as a vehicle to have Taiyuan as an Olympic sports venue or to introduce BMX to China. It was seen in any case as a preparatory race for the 2008 Summer Olympics.
  • BMX magazine covers

    Bicycle Motocross Action & Go:

  • None
  • BMX Plus!:

    Snap BMX Magazine & Transworld BMX:

  • January 2000 Vol.7 Iss.1 No.39 (Snap)
  • Moto Mag:

    ABA Action, American BMXer, BMXer (The official publication of the ABA under three names):

    BMX press magazine interviews and articles

  • "The French Invasion" Snap BMX Magazine May 1999 Vol.6 Iss.3 No.31 pg.40 Joint interview with fellow countryman and racer Christophe Lévêque.
  • "Thomas Allier: The One" Transworld BMX July 2001 Vol.8 Iss.6 No.57 pg.50
  • References

    Thomas Allier Wikipedia