Personal information | |
---|---|
Full name | Luciano Armani |
Born | Felegara, Medesano, Italy | 12 October 1940
Died | 4 February 2023 82) Fidenza, Italy | (aged
Team information | |
Discipline | Road |
Role | Rider |
Luciano Armani (12 October 1940 – 4 February 2023)[1] was an Italian professional road bicycle racer.[2]
In the 1971 Tour de France, Luis Ocaña was leading the race after his great victory in the 11th stage, Eddy Merckx was more than 10 minutes behind. After the rest day, Merckx attacked in the 12th stage from the start, following his teammate Rini Wagtmans. Armani and some other cyclists joined them, and the group stayed away.
In the peloton, the teams of Luis Ocaña and Cyrille Guimard (the holder of the green jersey) were trying to get the group back. The entire stage (245 km) the difference stayed between 40 seconds and two minutes. At the end of the stage, Armani surprised Merckx, and the difference was 1 minute and 50 seconds.
Because of the high speed of the stage (45,351 km/h), the finish was reached 90 minutes faster than the fastest time schedule of the organizers, which caused a chaos. The latest group of cyclists had to fight to finish the race in the allowed time limit, even though they did the 245 km in more than 42 km/h.[3]
Major results
- 1965
- Coppa Sabatini
- Giro d'Italia:
- Winner stage 7
- 1967
- Giro di Sardegna
- GP Monaco
- Coppa Placci
- 1968
- Tre Province
- 1969
- Castiglione del Lago
- Lisboa – Porto
- 1970
- Genoa–Nice
- Giro d'Italia:
- Winner stage 21
- Milano–Torino
- 1971
- Tour de France:
- Winner stage 12
References
- ↑ Morto Armani, compagno di squadra di Adorni (in Italian)
- ↑ Luciano Armani at Cycling Archives
- ↑ Luciano Armano Memo. cyclingwebsite.net (in Dutch)
External links