Rolf Järmann
Swiss cyclist (born 1966)
Personal information | |
---|---|
Full name | Rolf Järmann |
Born | (1966-01-31) 31 January 1966 (age 58) Arbon, Switzerland |
Height | 1.82 m (6 ft 0 in) |
Weight | 73 kg (161 lb; 11 st 7 lb) |
Team information | |
Current team | Retired |
Discipline | Road |
Role | Rider |
Major wins | |
Amstel Gold Race (1993, 1998) | |
Rolf Järmann (born 31 January 1966 in Arbon) is a retired road bicycle racer from Switzerland, who was a professional rider from 1988 to 1999. He twice won the Amstel Gold Race (1993 and 1998) during his career. He was the Swiss National Road Race champion in 1990.[1] He won the Tour de Pologne in 1997.[2] He won a stage in the 1989 Giro d'Italia, the 1992 Tour de France and also won the 1998 Tirreno-Adriatico.
According to a Cyclingnews.com report, in his book Doping, Spitzensport als gesellschaftliches Problem (Doping, Top Sport as a Social Problem), Järmann admits to using EPO.[3]
Teams
- 1988: Cyndarella-Isotonic (Switzerland)
- 1989: Frank-Toyo-Magniflex (Switzerland)
- 1990: Pneuhaus Frank-Toyo (Switzerland)
- 1991: Weinmann-Eddy Merckx (Switzerland)
- 1992: Ceramiche Ariostea (Italy)
- 1993: Ceramiche Ariostea (Italy)
- 1994: GB-MG Maglificio (Italy)
- 1995: MG Maglificio-Technogym (Italy)
- 1996: MG Maglificio-Technogym (Italy)
- 1997: Casino-C'est votre equipe (France)
- 1998: Casino-C'est votre equipe (France)
- 1999: Post Swiss Team (Switzerland)
Tour de France
- 1991 – 83rd place
- 1992 – 62nd place (most combative rider on 3 stages, winner 12th stage)
- 1993 – 54th place
- 1994 – 73rd place
- 1995 – 67th place
- 1996 – 90th place
Major results
- 1988
- Stausee-Rundfahrt Klingnau
- 1989
- Giro d'Italia:
- Winner stage 4
- 1990
- 1st Road race, National Road Championships
- 1992
- Tour de France:
- Winner stage 12
- 1993
- Amstel Gold Race
- 1995
- GP Ouest-France
- Tour de Luxembourg
- 1997
- Tour de Pologne
- 1998
- 1st Overall Tirreno–Adriatico
- Amstel Gold Race
References
External links
- Rolf Järmann at Cycling Archives
- Official Tour de France results for Rolf Järmann
- v
- t
- e
- Edouard Wicky (1892–1893)
- Henri Favre (1894–1895)
- Jean Viarret (1896–1897)
- Albert Furrer (1898)
- Fritz Ryser (1899)
- Charles Lugon (1900)
- Ernst Dubach (1902)
- Alexandre Castellino (1904)
- Henri Rheinwald (1908)
- Charles Guyot (1909–1910)
- Marcel Perrière (1911)
- Henri Rheinwald (1912)
- Otto Wiedmer (1913)
- Oscar Egg (1914)
- Marcel Perrière (1915–1916)
- Ernst Kaufmann (1917–1918)
- Henri Rheinwald (1919)
- Heiri Suter (1920–1922)
- Henri Guillod (1923)
- Kastor Notter (1924–1925)
- Heiri Suter (1926)
- Kastor Notter (1927)
- Albert Blattmann (1928)
- Heiri Suter (1929)
- Georges Antenen (1930)
- Albert Büchi (1931)
- August Erne (1932)
- Georges Antenen (1933)
- Hans Gilgen (1934)
- Paul Egli (1935–1936)
- Leo Amberg (1937–1938)
- Karl Litschi (1939)
- Edgar Buchwalder (1940)
- Karl Litschi (1941)
- Edgar Buchwalder (1942)
- Hans Knecht (1943)
- Ernst Näf (1944)
- Ernst Wüthrich (1945)
- Hans Knecht (1946–1947)
- Ferdinand Kübler (1948–1951)
- Gottfried Weilenmann (1952)
- Fritz Schär (1953)
- Ferdinand Kübler (1954)
- Hugo Koblet (1955)
- Rolf Graf (1956)
- Hans Hollenstein (1957)
- Jean-Claude Grèt (1958)
- Rolf Graf (1959)
- René Strehler (1960)
- Ernst Fuchs (1961)
- Rolf Graf (1962)
- Attilio Moresi (1963)
- Rudolf Hauser (1964)
- Robert Hagmann (1965)
- Paul Zollinger (1966)
- Alfred Rüegg (1967)
- Karl Brand (1968)
- Bernard Vifian (1969)
- Kurt Rub (1970)
- Louis Pfenninger (1971)
- Josef Fuchs (1972–1973)
- Roland Salm (1974–1977)
- Gottfried Schmutz (1978)
- Hansjörg Aemisegger (1979)
- Gottfried Schmutz (1980)
- Stefan Mutter (1981)
- Gilbert Glaus (1982)
- Serge Demierre (1983)
- Erich Maechler (1984)
- Gottfried Schmutz (1985)
- Urs Zimmermann (1986)
- Jörg Müller (1987)
- Hubert Seiz (1988)
- Pascal Richard (1989)
- Rolf Järmann (1990)
- Laurent Dufaux (1991)
- Thomas Wegmüller (1992)
- Pascal Richard (1993)
- Felice Puttini (1994–1995)
- Armin Meier (1996)
- Oscar Camenzind (1997)
- Niki Aebersold (1998)
- Armin Meier (1999)
- Markus Zberg (2000)
- Martin Elmiger (2001)
- Alexandre Moos (2002)
- Daniel Schnider (2003)
- Grégory Rast (2004)
- Martin Elmiger (2005)
- Grégory Rast (2006)
- Beat Zberg (2007)
- Markus Zberg (2008)
- Fabian Cancellara (2009)
- Martin Elmiger (2010)
- Fabian Cancellara (2011)
- Martin Kohler (2012)
- Michael Schär (2013)
- Martin Elmiger (2014)
- Danilo Wyss (2015)
- Jonathan Fumeaux (2016)
- Silvan Dillier (2017)
- Steve Morabito (2018)
- Sébastien Reichenbach (2019)
- Stefan Küng (2020)
- Silvan Dillier (2021)
- Robin Froidevaux (2022)
- Marc Hirschi (2023)
- Mauro Schmid (2024)
This biographical article relating to Swiss cycling is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e