Robert Millar
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![]() Millar (right) with Laurent Fignon |
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Personal information | |
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Full name | Robert Millar |
Date of birth | September 13, 1958 (age 48) |
Country | ![]() |
Team information | |
Current team | Retired |
Discipline | Road |
Role | Rider |
Rider type | Climbing specialist |
Professional team(s) | |
1980-1985 1986-1987 1988 1989-1991 1992-1994 1995 |
Peugeot Panasonic Fagor Z-Peugeot TVM Le Groupement |
Major wins | |
Tour de France, 3 stages
Giro d'Italia, 1 stage
Vuelta a España, 1 stage |
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Infobox last updated on: | |
January 17, 2007 |
Robert Millar (born 13 September 1958) was a Scottish professional cyclist who won the “King of the Mountains” competition and finished fourth in the 1984 Tour de France – the highest ever Tour finishing position for a British cyclist, and the only time that a Briton has won one of the major Tour classifications. He also achieved the highest ever finish by a Briton in the Giro d'Italia, finishing second in 1987 and winning the King of the Mountains classification too. He is also notable in that he was a vegetarian sportsman. He is not related to fellow Scot and cycling namesake David Millar.
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[edit] Early life
Raised in Glasgow and at one time destined for a career as a factory engineer, Robert Millar was a leading amateur road racing rider. Riding for Glasgow Wheelers cycling club, he won the Scottish junior title in 1976 and was Scottish hill-climb champion the following year.
In 1978, Millar established himself firmly on the British scene. He was 21st in the Milk Race, and won the British amateur road race championship. He then moved to France in 1979 to join the elite ACBB (Athletic Club Boulogne-Billancourt), then Europe's top amateur team. A year later, after retaining his British road race title, taking fourth place in the world amateur road race championship, claiming five race victories in France and winning the French 'Best Amateur' Trophy, he turned professional for the Peugeot cycling team, and as a climbing specialist focused on single-day road races and stage races in hilly or mountainous terrain.
[edit] Professional career
His early professional career included high finishing positions in the Tour of Vaucluse (3rd in 1980), Criterium du Dauphiné Libéré (7th in 1981 and second in 1983), Tour of Romandie (7th in 1981 and 1982) and Tour de l'Avenir (second in 1982).
In 1983, he rode the Tour de France for the first time, finishing 14th on general classification and winning stage 10, Pau-Bagneres de Luchon. That year also saw him take second place in the Dauphiné Libéré stage race.

1984 saw continued improvement. In the early season Paris-Nice stage "Race to the Sun" he held the overall lead for a while before taking 6th place, and in the Tour de Romandie he took fifth place overall, the Mountains competition and a stage win at Crans-Montana. It was all good preparation for the Tour de France – he finished fourth overall (surpassing Tom Simpson's sixth place in the 1960s) and won "King of the Mountains", aided by another mountain stage victory on stage 11 from Pau to Guzet-Neige.
In 1985, he won the Volta a Catalunya and took another sixth place in Paris-Nice. He also raced well in the Vuelta a España, finishing second overall and taking a stage win (both feats he repeated in 1986), but in the Tour de France he finished 11th. Riding for the Dutch Panasonic team in 1987, Millar got his first taste of the Giro d'Italia, finishing second, taking a stage victory and the mountains competition. In the Tour de Romandie, he finished fourth; in the Tour de France 19th.
In 1988, Millar rode for the French Fagor team and managed his best finishing position in a one-day 'Monument' Classic, grabbing third in Liège-Bastogne-Liège.
In 1989, racing for the Z-Peugeot team, he was close to victory in the Dauphiné Libéré, taking a stage en route to second place overall. In the Tour de France, he finished 10th and added another final stage victory to his palmares, taking stage 10 from Cauterets to Superbagnères. He also won the Tour of Britain.
Victory in the Dauphiné Libéré finally arrived in 1990, along with a fourth place in another Classic, the Giro di Lombardia. In between, he also took second place in the 1990 Tour of Britain.
[edit] Later career
However, the final years of his professional career were relatively less successful. Riding for the Dutch TVM Squad, he completed the Tour de France in 1991 (72nd), 1992 (18th) and 1993 (24th), and the Vuelta in 1992 (20th) and 1993 (15th), and achieved numerous top 10 finishes, but victories eluded him. His final major victory came in June 1995 when he dominated and won the British road race championship. However, soon after, his French team, Le Groupement, went bust and Millar quietly retired from the professional ranks.
However, he retained an interest in cycling. In 1997 he became British coach, and in 1998 he managed the Scottish team in the PruTour, an eight-day round-Britain stage race.
Millar also was employed as a cycling journalist, mainly testing out new products due to his expert background, but in more recent years he has cut his ties with the sport, and seems to have disappeared. In 2003 he was inducted to the Scottish Sports Hall of Fame but didn't attend the induction ceremony.
A book about Millar - In Search of Robert Millar, written by Richard Moore - is to be published by HarperCollins in June 2007.
[edit] Palmares
- 1980:
- no wins.
- 3rd Tour of Vaucluse.
- 8th Tour of Romandie.
- 5th National Championship.
- 11th World Championship.
- 1981:
- No wins.
- 7th, Tour of Romandie.
- 7th Dauphine Libere.
- 5th Tour de l'Aude.
- 5th GP Gippingen.
- 14th World Championship.
- 1982:
- No wins.
- 7th Tour of Romandie.
- 2nd Tour de l'Avenir.
- 1983:
- 1 win; Stage 10 Tour de France.
- 3rd Dauphine Libere.
- 14th Tour de France.
- 37th World Championship.
- 25th Giro di Lombardia.
- 1984:
- 3 wins; Stage two,Tour of Romandie; Stage four, Midi Libre; Stage 11 Tour de France.
- King of the Mountains, Tour de France.
- 2nd Nice-Alassio.
- 2nd Tour of Haut Var.
- 6th Paris-Nice.
- 15th Liege-Baston-Liege.
- 5th Tour of Romandie.
- 4th Midi Libre.
- 4th Tour de France.
- 6th World Championship.
- 7th Volta a Catalunya.
- 1985:
- 1 win; Volta a Catalunya overall.
- 7th Tour of Haut Var.
- 6th Paris-Nice.
- 6th Criterium International.
- 6th Tour Midi-Pyrenees.
- 2nd Tour of Spain.
- 9th Dauphine Libere.
- 11th Tour de France.
- 10th World Championship.
- 4th GP Wallonia.
- 3rd Tour of Piedmont.
- 1986:
- 1986: 1 win; Stage six, Tour of Spain.
- 2nd Tour of Spain.
- 6th Tour of Aragon.
- 2nd Tour of Switzerland.
- 10th GP d'Isbergues.
- 13th Giro di Lombardia.
- 7th Montjuich hill-climb.
- 1987:
- 2 wins; Stage, Tour of the Mediterranean; Stage 21, Giro d'Italia.
- 6th Tour of the Mediterranean.
- 7th Catalan Week.
- 12th Fleche Wallone.
- 5th Liège-Bastogne-Liège.
- 4th Tour of Romandie.
- 2nd Tour of Italy.
- 19th Tour de France.
- 21st Giro di Lombardia.
- 1988:
- no wins.
- 9th Paris-Nice.
- 3rd Criterium International.
- 3rd Liège-Bastogne-Liège.
- 6th Tour of Spain.
- 3rd Rut de Sud.
- 2nd Bicicleta Vasca.
- 8th Volta a Catalunya.
- 1989:
- 4 wins; Stage four, Tour of Romandie; Stage seven, Dauphine Libere; Stage ten, Tour de France; Tour of Britain overall.
- 7th GP Bessesges.
- 8th GP Cannes.
- 8th Paris-Camembert.
- 8th Tour of Vaucluse.
- 2nd Gp Wallonia.
- 3rd Tour of Romandie.
- 2nd Dauphine Libere.
- 6th National Championship.
- 10th Tour de France.
- 9th GP of Americas.
- 30th World Championship.
- 1990:
- 2 wins; Stage four, Tour of Romandie; Dauphine Libere overall.
- 4th Tour of Andalucia.
- 7th GP Rennes.
- 9th Fleche Wallone.
- 15th Liège-Bastogne-Liège.
- 2nd Tour of Switzerland.
- 14th Wincanton Classic.
- 2nd Tour of Britain.
- 4th GP Ouest France.
- 13th GP of Americas.
- 4th Giro di Lombardia.
- 19th World Cup.
- 1991:
- 1 win; Stage five, Tour of Switzerland.
- 10th Sicilian Week.
- 2nd Tour of Romandie.
- 2nd Classique des Alpes.
- 4th Dauphine Libere.
- 5th Tour of Switzerland.
- 72nd Tour de France.
- 22nd Wincanton Classic.
- 4th Tour of Britain.
- 5th GP of Americas.
- 1992:
- no wins.
- 9th Catalan Week.
- 9th Liège-Bastogne-Liège.
- 20th Tour of Spain.
- 18th Tour de France.
- 21st San Sebastian Classic.
- 9th Tour of Britain.
- 6th Tour of Lazio.
- 7th Tour of Piedmont.
- 1993:
- no wins.
- 15th Tour of Spain.
- 9th Classique des Alpes.
- 7th Tour of Asturias.
- 6th Midi Libre.
- 2nd Tour of the Mining Valleys.
- 5th National Championship.
- 24th Tour de France.
- 22nd San Sebastian Classic.
- 1994:
- no wins.
- 9th Tour of Galicia.
- 4th Climber's Trophy.
- 6th Coppa Piacci.
- 7th Coppa Sabatini.
- 16th Giro di Lombardia.
- 1995:
- one win; National Championship.
- 9th Classique des Alpes.
- 14th Route de Sud.