Full name Zdenek Stybar 2005–2011 Telenet-Fidea Name Zdenek Stybar Height 1.83 m Current team Team Quick Step Children Lewis Zdenek Stybar | Nickname Styby 2011– Quick Step Role Cyclist Weight 68 kg Disciplines Cyclo-cross | |
![]() | ||
Born 11 December 1985 (age 38) Plana u Marianskych Lazni, Czechoslovakia ( 1985-12-11 ) Rider type Cyclo-crossClassics specialist (Road) Spouse Ine Vanden Bergh (m. 2014) Profiles |
Incycle riders zdenek stybar
Zdeněk Štybar ( [ˈzdɛɲɛk ˈʃtɪbar]; born 11 December 1985) is a Czech professional cyclist who rides for UCI WorldTeam Quick-Step Floors. While best known as a cyclo-cross racer, in 2011 Štybar began his professional road career while continuing to race cyclo-cross.
Contents
- Incycle riders zdenek stybar
- Zdenek stybar horiffic cycling crash eneco tour 2014
- Career
- Road racing
- References

Zdenek stybar horiffic cycling crash eneco tour 2014
Career

Štybar was born in Planá u Mariánských Lázní. Following consecutive second places in 2008 and 2009, Štybar won the 2010 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships in his home nation. In 2011, he won the World championships for a second time. In 2012 he pulled off a victory on the road by winning a stage in the Four Days of Dunkirk. In 2013, Štybar came in sixth in Paris–Roubaix. He was in contention for the victory as he was part of the leading trio with Sep Vanmarcke and Fabian Cancellara when he hit a spectator, causing him to slow down to clip in his pedals. He tried to get back to the two leaders, but to no avail. In August of the same year, Štybar took the overall victory in the Eneco Tour – part of the UCI World Tour – winning two stages in the process. Later that month, Štybar won stage 7 of the 2013 Vuelta a España beating world champion Philippe Gilbert.

In 2014, Štybar won the World Cyclo-cross championships for a third time in an intense battle with defending world champion Sven Nys.

In trying to defend his title in the 2014 Eneco Tour, Stybar crashed into the steel barriers in the fourth stage near the finish line and had to undergo hospitalization. He broke and lost his front upper teeth in the crash. Upon his return, he complained to the UCI that the same dangerous barriers were used in the Grand Prix Cycliste de Québec. His first victory upon his return was Binche–Chimay–Binche, where he attacked inside two kilometers to go on a small cobbled climb after being led out by his teammate Niki Terpstra at the foot of the rise. Štybar had time to celebrate, coming in 2 seconds before John Degenkolb and the charging sprinters.

In 2015, Stybar won the Italian Classic Strade Bianche. He also had a good Belgian classics campaign. He finished second in E3 Harelbeke behind Geraint Thomas. At the Tour of Flanders, his false set of front teeth he broke in 2014 rattled loose as he was riding a cobbled climb and he had to take them off. He still managed to finish the race in ninth position. He grabbed second place in Paris–Roubaix, being outsprinted by John Degenkolb at Roubaix Velodrome.

He was named in the start list for the 2015 Tour de France. He met success on Stage 6, where he powered away on a short but steep incline situated a few hundred meters before the line. He kept Peter Sagan from reaching him, crossing the line with a two seconds advantage over the reduced group.
Road racing
Classics results timeline

This chart shows Štybar's progress in five monuments and the classics he mostly participated in from 2012 to present.
Grand Tour general classification results timeline
