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UCI Hall of Fame

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UCI Hall of Fame
SportCycling
History
First award2002

The UCI Hall of Fame, that not to be confused with Cycling Hall of Fame or the University of California, Irvine's Hall of Fame, was launched by the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) in 2002 to "honor all those who by their heroic deeds or their personalities have greatly contributed to the glory and development of cycling sport throughout the world".[1] The inauguration was part of the celebrations marking the 100th anniversary of both the Paris–Roubaix race and the founding of the UCI, which also included the opening of the World Cycling Centre in Aigle, Switzerland,[1] where the hall of fame is located.[2] There have been no inductions since 2002.

Hall of Fame members

Inductee Nationality Discipline
Vittorio Adorni  Italy Road
Jacques Anquetil  France Road
Moreno Argentin  Italy Road
Federico Bahamontes  Spain Road
Ercole Baldini  Italy Road
Félicia Ballanger  France Track
Gino Bartali  Italy Road
Alfredo Binda  Italy Road
Louison Bobet  France Road
Gianni Bugno  Italy Road
Maria Canins  Italy Road
Eugène Christophe  France Road
Fausto Coppi  Italy Road
Erik De Vlaeminck  Belgium Cyclo-cross
André Dufraisse  France Cyclo-cross
Urs Freuler  Switzerland Track
Maurice Garin  France Road
Charly Gaul  Luxembourg Road
Felice Gimondi  Italy Road
Bernard Hinault  France Road
Michael Hübner  Germany Track
Miguel Indurain  Spain Road
Jan Janssen  Netherlands Road
Sean Kelly  Ireland Road
Ferdinand Kübler  Switzerland Road
Hennie Kuiper  Netherlands Road
André Leducq  France Road
Greg LeMond  United States Road
Lucien Lesna  France Road
Roland Liboton  Belgium Cyclo-cross
Jeannie Longo  France Road
Renato Longo  Italy Cyclo-cross
Antonin Magne  France Road
Freddy Maertens  Belgium Road
Fiorenzo Magni  Italy Road
Antonio Maspes  Italy Track
Eddy Merckx  Belgium Road
Daniel Morelon  France Track
Francesco Moser  Italy Road
Ned Overend  United States Mountain bike
Raymond Poulidor  France Road
Stephen Roche  Ireland Road
Michel Rousseau  France Track
Giuseppe Saronni  Italy Road
Jef Scherens  Belgium Track
Briek Schotte  Belgium Road
Georges Speicher  France Road
Major Taylor  United States Track
Klaus-Peter Thaler  Germany Cyclo-cross
Philippe Thys  Belgium Road
Rik Van Looy  Belgium Road
Rik Van Steenbergen  Belgium Road
Rolf Wolfshohl  Germany Cyclo-cross
Arie van Vliet  Netherlands Track
Arthur Augustus Zimmerman  United States Track
Joop Zoetemelk  Netherlands Road
Albert Zweifel  Switzerland Cyclo-cross

References

  1. ^ a b "Les 100 ans de Paris-Roubaix et l'inauguration du CMC de l'UCI a Aigle" (in French). Union Cycliste Internationale. 14 April 2002. Archived from the original on 10 November 2017. Retrieved 10 November 2017.
  2. ^ "Guided visit" (PDF). Union Cycliste Internationale. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 November 2017. Retrieved 10 November 2017.