Hennie Kuiper

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Hennie Kuiper
HennieKuiper.JPG
Kuiper in 1988
Personal information
Full name Hendrikus Andreas Kuiper
Born (1949-02-03) 3 February 1949 (age 75)
Denekamp, Netherlands
Team information
Current team Retired
Discipline Road
Role Rider
Rider type All-Rounder
Major wins
Grand Tours
Tour de France
3 individual stages + 2 TTT stages
Vuelta a España
2 stages

Stage Races

Tour of Britain (1972)
Tour de Suisse (1976)

Single-Day Races and Classics

World Road Race Champion (1975)
Dutch Road Race Championship (1975)
Tour of Flanders (1981)
Giro di Lombardia (1981)
Paris–Roubaix (1983)
Milan–San Remo (1985)

Hendrikus Andreas "Hennie" Kuiper (born 3 February 1949) is a Dutch former professional road racing cyclist. His career includes a gold medal in the Olympic road race at Munich in 1972, becoming world professional road race champion in 1975, as well as winning four of the five “Monument” classics. He rode the Tour de France 12 times, finishing second twice and winning the stage to Alpe d'Huez on two occasions. Kuiper, Ercole Baldini and Paolo Bettini are the only riders to have won both the Olympic road race and the world professional road race.

Biography

Kuiper was born in Denekamp, in Overijssel province. His serious introduction to the bicycle was to and from school in Enschede. He started participating in junior races from 14 and from 19 to 23 he won 39 times as an amateur. The climax of his amateur career was gold in the Olympic road race in Munich in 1972, riding the final 40 km alone.[1] He also won the Tour of Britain (Milk Race) that year.

Professional career

Kuiper turned professional in 1973 with the small German team Haro-Rokado. His career took off in 1975 when he signed for the Dutch team, Frisol, where he got more chances to shine and formed a partnership with José De Cauwer (who worked for Kuiper in races) that lasted until 1980. The 1975 season saw Kuiper become world champion at Yvoir in Belgium, winning a tough race over 260 km, with 21 ascents of a two-mile climb.

Kuiper signed for TI-Raleigh in 1976 and finished second in the 1977 Tour de France 48 seconds behind Bernard Thévenet, who later admitted using steroids. Kuiper won the mountain stage at Alpe d’Huez, a feat he repeated in 1978. Kuiper finished fourth in the 1979 Tour and second in 1980 behind Joop Zoetemelk. That second place ended his best years as a stage race rider and in 1981 he moved to DAF Trucks and re-invented himself as a one-day classics rider. 1981 saw him win the Tour of Flanders and the Giro di Lombardia while in 1983 he won Paris–Roubaix at the 11th attempt. In 1985, at 36, he won Milan–San Remo. His retirement came on 6 November 1988 at 39 at a small cyclo-cross at Oldenzaal in his home province.

Team manager

After retirement Kuiper managed the small German pro squad Team Stuttgart between 1989 and 1990. In 1991 he became head of the Telekom team. In 1992 he was approached by Jim Ochowicz, manager of the American Motorola team, to become assistant team manager. Kuiper stayed with Motorola for four years. Since 1997 he has worked for the Rabobank team in public relations, as well as coaching the Dutch national team on occasions. He has two sons from his first marriage with Ine Nolten: Patrick Kuiper and Bjorn Kuiper. He lives with his second wife, Marianne, in Lonneker.

Career highlights

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1970

  • 3rd Overall Tour of Yugoslavia
    • 1st Stage 2

1971

  • 3rd Overall Rheinland-Pfalz Rundfahrt
    • 1st Stage 7
  • 1st Overall Circuit de Saône-et-Loire
  • 1st Stage 5 Tour of Yugoslavia
  • 1st Stage 1a Trois jours de Hénin Liétard

1972

1973

  • 1st Stage 2 Tour de l'Aude

1974

  • 1st GP Union Dortmund
  • 1st Overall Tour d'Indre-et-Loire

1975

1976

1977

1978

1979

1980

1981

1982

1983

1985

Grand Tours overall classification results timeline

Grand Tour 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988
Pink jersey Giro 16 DNF - - - - - - - - - - - 22 44 -
Yellow jersey Tour - - 11 DNF 2 DNF 4 2 30 9 DNF 56 DNF - - 95
gold jersey Vuelta - - 5 6 - - - - - - 5 - - - - -

DNF = Did Not Finish

Teams

  • 1973 Haro
  • 1974 Rokado
  • 1975 Frisol
  • 1976-78 TI-Raleigh
  • 1979-80 Peugeot
  • 1981-82 DAF Trucks
  • 1983 Aernoudt
  • 1984 Kwantum Hallen-Yoko
  • 1985 Verandalux
  • 1986 Skala-Skil
  • 1987 Roland-Skala
  • 1988 Sigma-FINA

See also

References

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External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by Dutch National Road Race Champion
1975
Succeeded by
Jan Raas
Awards
Preceded by Dutch Sportsman of the Year
1977
Succeeded by
Gerrie Knetemann