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Scott Sports
Swiss manufacturer of sporting goods
Swiss manufacturer of sporting goods
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Scott |
| logo | Scott Sports logo.svg |
| logo_size | 200px |
| founder | Ed Scott |
| foundation | (as Scott USA) |
| location_city | Givisiez, canton of Fribourg |
| location_country | Switzerland |
| industry | Bicycles, skiing, snowboarding and Motocross equipment |
| products | Helmets, Goggles, Bicycles, Skis, Apparel, Footwear |
| homepage |
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Scott Sports SA (formerly Scott USA) is a producer of bicycles, winter equipment, motorsports gear, running shoes and sportswear. The company's main office is in Givisiez, Switzerland, with branches in Europe, the United States, South Africa and India.
History

In 1958, engineer and skier Ed Scott from Sun Valley, Idaho, invented a ski pole made of aluminium instead of bamboo or steel that proved popular. The company produced sporting goods in many fields. In 1970, Scott sold their first protection goggles for motocross riders.
Scott expanded to Europe in 1978, settling their headquarters in Fribourg, Switzerland.
In 1990, Scott introduced the clip-on, aerodynamic bicycle handlebar. The handlebar was used by American Greg LeMond in his 1989 Tour de France win, when he beat Frenchman Laurent Fignon by over a minute in the 24.5 km final time trial. Previous to this event it was widely used in triathlon and Race Across America.
In 1991, Scott produced their first suspension fork named "Unishock" and a year later, their first full-suspension mountain bicycle was shown to the public.
Its 2001 Team Issue road bike frame was the lightest frame available at the time at 895 grams.
In 2005 the name 'Scott USA' was changed to 'Scott Sports', representing a shift in emphasis to the European market.
In 2011, Scott launched its E-Bike line E-Sub and E-Sportster, replaced in 2012 with E-Venture line models.
in 2012, Scott bought Syncros, a maker of bicycle components.
In 2015, the Korean Youngone Corporation took a 50.1% stake in the company, with the previous Swiss owner Beat Zaugg retaining 49.9%.
Sponsorship

In 2002, stage 10 of the Tour de France was won by Patrice Halgand riding for the Jean Delatour team, which was at that time supported by Scott. Scott supplied the teams Mitchelton-Scott (male) and Mitchelton Scott (female) with equipment through 2020, after which the teams were renamed Team BikeExchange and began riding Bianchi bicycles.
In 2014, Scott Sports partnered with the US Military Endurance Sports organization to be a sponsor and provide Scott equipment to the US Domestic Elite Road Team and Elite Triathlon Team.
In 2017, Scott Sports was sponsoring teams and individuals in various sports. Its bike division was sponsoring 12 racing and mountain biking teams. Its wintersport division sponsored 35 people, its running division 10 and motorsports division 40 athletes.
In 2022, Jonas Deichmann cycled across United States of America, from New York to Los Angeles on a Scott Addict Gravel HMX. The trip was a world record attempt and a fundraiser for World Bicycle Relief.
References
References
- "Legal {{!}} SCOTT".
- "First Aero Bar". Scott Sports.
- (2005-08-23). "SCOTT Is Back In The U.S.". Scott Sports.
- BikeshopsTV. (2010-09-21). "Scott SUB10 eBike 2011".
- "Company History {{!}} SCOTT".
- Gerteis, Björn. (2011-09-01). "Scott E-Venture: Neue urbane Pedelecs mit Bosch-Antrieb - Infos und Bilder". ElektroBIKE.
- (2012-01-11). "Syncros Through the Years". Bike Mag.
- [http://www.scottusa.com/en_us/company SCOTT]
- "Home 1".
- (2014-02-20). "Scott sponsors US Military Endurance Sports organization". Bicycle Retailer and Industry News.
- "Teams {{!}} SCOTT".
- Poland, SCOTT. (2023-07-09). "Zawodnik Scott Jonas Deichmann przemierzy Amerykę... dwukrotnie".
- Loponen, Suvi. (2023-07-09). "Check out the Scott Addict Gravel HMX that Jonas Deichmann will ride across America (before running back)".
- Smith, Shawn. (2023-05-13). "Double Cross: Jonas Deichmann to Cycle and Run Across America for Charity".
- Smith, Shawn. (2023-09-17). "Endurance Beyond Limits: Jonas Deichmann's Dual Crossing of America for a Cause".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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