Gastone Nencini
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Personal information | |||||||||||||||
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Full name | Gastone Nencini | ||||||||||||||
Nickname | Il Leone del Mugello Faccia di fatica (Fatigue-face)[1] | ||||||||||||||
Born | Barberino di Mugello, Italy | 1 March 1930||||||||||||||
Died | 1 February 1980 Florence, Italy | (aged 49)||||||||||||||
Team information | |||||||||||||||
Discipline | Road | ||||||||||||||
Role | Rider | ||||||||||||||
Professional teams | |||||||||||||||
1953–1954 | Legnano–Pirelli | ||||||||||||||
1955–1958 | Leo–Chlorodont | ||||||||||||||
1959–1960 | Carpano | ||||||||||||||
1961–1962 | Ignis | ||||||||||||||
1963–1965 | Springoil–Fuchs | ||||||||||||||
Major wins | |||||||||||||||
Grand Tours
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Medal record
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Gastone Nencini (Italian pronunciation: [ɡaˈstoːne nenˈtʃiːni]; 1 March 1930 – 1 February 1980) was an Italian road racing cyclist who won the 1960 Tour de France and the 1957 Giro d'Italia.[2]
Nicknamed Il Leone del Mugello, "The Lion of Mugello" (from his birthplace Barberino di Mugello, near Florence), Nencini was a powerful all-rounder, particularly strong in the mountains.
He was an amateur painter and a chain smoker.[3] He was a gifted descender. "The only reason to follow Nencini downhill would be if you had a death wish", said the French rider Raphaël Géminiani.[4] It was in trying to follow Nencini down a mountain on Stage 14 of the 1960 Tour de France that Roger Rivière missed a bend, crashed over a wall and broke his spine.[5]
Downhill race
[edit]Nencini's downhill race with Henry Anglade has become part of the legend of cycling. Anglade was a proud rider and Nencini one of the fastest down hills. They met at a col in the Dolomites during the Giro d'Italia. The weather was bad and a snowstorm had forced 57 riders to abandon that day. Anglade said:
- I couldn't tolerate the idea that Nencini was the best descender of the peloton. I said to him, call the blackboard man,[6] we'll do the descent together and whoever comes second pays for the aperitifs this evening. So he called the ardoisier and asked him to follow us. The road was of compressed earth. We attacked the drop flat out. I let Nencini take the lead so that I could see how he negotiated the bends before attacking him. In the end I dropped as though I was alone. At the bottom, I had taken 32 seconds out of him, written on the blackboard. I was really tickled. I had beaten Nencini. The next time I saw him was that evening in the hotel I was staying at. He had just bought me an apéritif![7]
Memory
[edit]At the Futa pass, on the mountains over his native Barberino di Mugello, a monument is placed to his memory: a big bronze bas-relief portrait of him racing and the inscription saying: "A Gastone Nencini. Il comune di Barberino, gli sportivi, i compagni di tante battaglie ricordano il campione mugellano" (translated from Italian: "To Gastone Nencini. The administration of Barberino, the sportsmen, the comrades of many battles remember the Mugello-born champion").
Major results
[edit]- 1953
- 2nd Road race, UCI World Amateur Championships
- 1954
- 4th GP di Prato
- 5th Giro dell'Emilia
- 1955
- 3rd Overall Giro d'Italia
- 1st Mountains classification
- 1st Stages 9 & 12
- Held after Stages 15–19
- 4th Road race, UCI Road World Championships
- 1956
- 1st Tre Valli Varesine
- 1st Stage 22 Tour de France
- 1st Stage 2b (TTT) Giro d'Italia
- 3rd Giro di Campania
- 7th Giro della Provincia di Reggio Calabria
- 1957
- 1st Overall Giro d'Italia
- 1st Giro della Provincia di Reggio Calabria
- 3rd Giro di Campania
- 3rd Giro del Lazio
- 4th Road race, National Road Championships
- 6th Overall Tour de France
- 1st Mountains classification
- 1st Stages 10 & 18
- 6th Tour of Flanders
- 9th Overall Vuelta a España
- 1958
- 5th Overall Tour de France
- 1st Stage 19
- 5th Overall Giro d'Italia
- 1st Stages 10 & 18
- 5th Giro della Provincia di Reggio Calabria
- 8th GP di Prato
- 1959
- 2nd Overall Gran Premio Ciclomotoristico
- 1st Stage 6
- 3rd Overall Giro di Sardegna
- 6th Overall Paris–Nice
- 9th Giro di Toscana
- 10th Overall Giro d'Italia
- 1st Stage 9
- 1960
- 1st Overall Tour de France
- 2nd Overall Giro d'Italia
- 1st Stages 5 & 10
- 2nd Giro di Campania
- 2nd Giro della Provincia di Reggio Calabria
- 3rd Milano–Torino
- 5th Overall Giro di Sardegna
- 5th Giro di Toscana
- 8th Road race, National Road Championships
- 8th Giro del Lazio
- 9th GP di Prato
- 10th Giro della Romagna
- 1961
- 2nd Trofeo Matteotti
- 3rd Overall Tre Giorni del Sud
- 7th Giro dell'Emilia
- 8th Tre Valli Varesine
- 8th Road race, UCI Road World Championships
- 1962
- 2nd Giro dell'Appennino
- 5th Overall Giro di Sardegna
- 8th Sassari-Cagliari
- 1963
- 5th Giro di Campania
- 7th GP di Prato
- 10th Giro della Provincia di Reggio Calabria
- 1964
- 2nd Züri-Metzgete
- 3rd Overall Tour de Romandie
- 8th Giro della Provincia di Reggio Calabria
- 1965
- 7th Grand Prix de Cannes
General classification results timeline
[edit]Grand Tour general classification results | |||||||||||||||||
Grand Tour | 1953 | 1954 | 1955 | 1956 | 1957 | 1958 | 1959 | 1960 | 1961 | 1962 | 1963 | 1964 | 1965 | ||||
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Vuelta a España | Not held | 18 | — | 9 | DNF | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | |||||
Giro d'Italia | — | 16 | 3 | DNF | 1 | 5 | 10 | 2 | — | 13 | DNF | — | — | ||||
Tour de France | — | — | — | 22 | 6 | 5 | — | 1 | — | DNF | — | — | — |
— | Did not compete |
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DNF | Did not finish |
See also
[edit]Notes and references
[edit]- ^ Vergne, Laurent (22 July 2015). "Cannibale, Chéri-pipi, Wookie, Andy torticolis… le Top 20 des surnoms mythiques du cyclisme" [Cannibal, Chéri-pipi, Wookie, Andy Torticollis... the Top 20 mythical nicknames of cycling]. Eurosport (in French). Retrieved 11 April 2016.
- ^ Gastone Nencini at Cycling Archives (archived)
- ^ Brisson, Jean-Pascal (2014). Les 100 plus grands cyclistes de l'histoire. Paris: Editions Clément. p. 77. ISBN 979-1092547-65-8.
- ^ McGann, Bill; McGann, Carol (2006). The Story of the Tour de France: How a Newspaper Promotion Became the Greatest Sporting Event in the World. Vol. 1: 1903-1964. Indianapolis: Dog Ear Publishing. p. 243. ISBN 1-59858-180-5.
- ^ McGann, Bill; McGann, Carol (2006). The Story of the Tour de France: How a Newspaper Promotion Became the Greatest Sporting Event in the World. Vol. 1: 1903-1964. Indianapolis: Dog Ear Publishing. p. 244. ISBN 1-59858-180-5.
- ^ A motorcyclist who times riders' lead or deficit during a race and displays it on a blackboard
- ^ Coup de Pédales, Belgium, undated cutting