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Tony Rominger

Tony Rominger (born 27 March 1961) is a Swiss former professional road racing cyclist who won the Vuelta a España in 1992, 1993 and 1994 and the Giro d'Italia in 1995.


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Rominger at the 1993 Paris–Nice
Tony Rominger
(1961-03-27) 27 March 1961Vejle, Denmark
1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
65 kg (143 lb; 10 st 3 lb)
Retired
Road
Rider
All-rounder
Cilo–Aufina–Gemeaz Cusin
Supermercati Brianzoli–Chateau d'Ax
Toshiba
CLAS–Cajastur
Mapei–CLAS
Cofidis
Grand Tours
Tour de France
Mountains classification (1993)
3 individual stages (1993)
Giro d'Italia
General classification (1995)
Points classification (1995)
Intergiro classification (1995)
5 individual stages (1988, 1995)
Vuelta a España
General classification (1992, 1993, 1994)
Points classification (1993)
Mountains classification (1993, 1996)
Combination classification (1992)
13 individual stages(1992, 1993, 1994, 1996)
Stage races

Tour of the Basque Country (1992, 1993, 1994) Paris–Nice (1991, 1994) Tirreno–Adriatico (1989, 1990) Tour de Romandie (1991, 1995) One-day races and Classics

Giro di Lombardia (1989, 1992) Other

Vélo d'Or (1994) Hour record 55.291 km (5 November 1994) |

Tony Rominger (born 27 March 1961) is a Swiss former professional road racing cyclist who won the Vuelta a España in 1992, 1993 and 1994 and the Giro d'Italia in 1995.

Rominger grew up in Menzingen in the canton of Zug, but began cycling late, spurred by competition with his younger brother, Lars, and gained his first professional victory at the age of 23 years-old.

Rominger's strengths were time-trialling, climbing and recuperation. Rominger displayed his aptitude for stage races by winning back-to-back at the 1989 and 1990 Tirreno–Adriatico, and by winning the 1991 Paris-Nice. In one-day races, Rominger rode solo for over 100 kilometres to win the 1989 Giro di Lombardia, and placed second overall to Sean Kelly in the 1989 UCI Road World Cup standings.

Rominger secured three consecutive wins in the Vuelta a España between 1992 and 1994, a record at the time, which included the record for the most individual time trial victories. In 2005, Roberto Heras broke the overall wins record with a fourth title, although not consecutive. However, two months later he tested positive for the blood-boosting drug EPO and was disqualified. Heras' win was later reinstated on appeal, after he claimed inaccuracies in the testing and improper handling of his samples.

Rominger was a rival to Miguel Indurain in the Tour de France and was placed second in 1993 having won the final time trial, as well as winning the mountains classification. Expected to challenge again the following year, Rominger publicly conceded defeat to Indurain after falling over four minutes behind with ten stages remaining, despite luring second overall. He abandoned the Tour after losing more time in the Pyrenees.

In the latter part of 1994, Rominger won the Grand Prix des Nations, and broke the world hour record twice in a few days. For his attempt on the hour record in 1994, he was coached by Dr Michele Ferrari, who was at the trackside during the ride, and with whom he had worked closely for the previous eight years.

He used Bordeaux velodrome to ride 53.832 km and then 55.291 km, although a track novice. His first mark in October 1994 was 792m more than the previous record set by Miguel Indurain on the same track the month prior, with Romiger riding close to a second faster than Indurain for every kilometre. The first mark was carried out behind closed doors and had been only regarded as a warm-up. Of his rivalry with Indurain, Rominger said in 1995, "To defeat him is not an obsession with me. He is a kind guy and I cannot see him as an enemy".

Rominger won the 1995 Tour de Romandie in spring, and dominated the 1995 Giro d'Italia, taking the overall lead after winning the second stage time trial, and not relinquishing it over the remaining three weeks, winning four stages in total. He was joined on the podium by defending champion Evgeni Berzin and his Latvian teammate Piotr Ugrumov. Rominger's average speed of 23.9mph was the fastest edition of the race since that won by Francesco Moser in 1984.

At age 36, he announced he would retire prior to racing a final year in 1997. At the Tour de France that year he placed fifth overall in the prologue, but finished the race on a stretcher after breaking his collarbone early in the race in Plumelec. The incident also ended his plans to make a last attempt to regain the one hour distance record from Chris Boardman.

He retired with 120 professional victories. After his cycling career, Rominger became the agent of young athletes, including the Austrian racing cyclist Matthias Brändle.

Rominger is multi-lingual, speaking French, German, Italian, Danish, Spanish and English.

By 1995, he was married with two children and lived in Monaco. He later married Swiss singer Francine Jordi.

Did not finish
  • Palmarès
  • Tony Rominger at Cycling Archives (archive)
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