Levi Leipheimer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Personal information | |
---|---|
Full name | Levi Leipheimer |
Date of birth | October 24, 1973 (age 33) |
Country | United States |
Height | 1.70 m |
Weight | 62 kg |
Team information | |
Current team | Discovery Channel |
Discipline | Rider |
Role | Rider |
Rider type | All-rounder |
Professional team(s) | |
1998-99 2000-01 2002-04 2005-06 2007- |
Saturn U.S. Postal Service Rabobank Gerolsteiner Discovery Channel |
Major wins | |
Tour of California (2007) Dauphiné Libéré (2006) Deutschland Tour (2005) Route du Sud (2002) |
|
Infobox last updated on: | |
January 10, 2007 |
Levi Leipheimer (born October 24, 1973 in Butte, Montana) is an American professional cyclist who rides with the Discovery Channel Pro Cycling Team. He previously rode for the German cycling team Gerolsteiner. [1].
His major results to date are 1st overall in the 2007 Tour of California (winning the Prologue and Stage 5 time trials), 1st overall in the 2006 Dauphiné Libéré, 1st overall in the 2005 Deutschland Tour, 3rd overall in the 2001 Vuelta a España, and three top-ten finishes in the Tour de France general classification. He currently resides in Santa Rosa, California, with his wife Odessa.
Contents |
[edit] Career
[edit] Early years
A competitive skier from age 12-19, Leipheimer originally began cycling in 1987 to train for downhill ski racing. He turned pro in 1997, and rode for Saturn in 1998 and 1999. He won the U.S. National Time Trial Championships in 1999, and was invited to join the U.S. Postal Service cycling team.
[edit] 2001-2003
Leipheimer's breakthrough performance came in the 2001 Vuelta a España. He was riding exceptionally strong and was riding in support of his team leader Roberto Heras. Going into the last Individual Time Trial Leipheimer was in 4th overall and trailed his team leader by a few seconds. During that time trial Leipheimer showed his form was solid and improved his position over his team leader to finish 3rd overall.
Following his 2001 Vuelta a España podium finish, the Dutch team Rabobank recruited Leipheimer as a team leader. In 2002, his first year with the new team, Leipheimer finished eighth overall in his first ever Tour de France.
[edit] 2004
After Lance Armstrong declined his spot, Leipheimer was selected to represent the United States in the 2004 Athens Olympics cycling road race. He did not finish.
[edit] 2005
On August 23, 2005 Leipheimer won the Deutschland Tour title by 31 seconds ahead of T-Mobile's Jan Ullrich and Gerolsteiner teammate Georg Totschnig. He solidified his lead on the field by defeating Jan Ullrich in stage four on the climb of the Rettenbachferner, the highest climb in European racing that year at 8,760 feet (2,670 meters) above sea level.
[edit] 2006
In 2006, Leipheimer started the season strong and was a favorite to win the Tour of California in February. Indeed, he took the golden leader's jersey on the first day by winning the time trial prologue up to San Francisco's Coit Tower, and retained it until Stage 2 when George Hincapie claimed the overall lead by earning a ten second bonus in the sprint finish in San José. Arriving in his hometown, Santa Rosa, in the lead at the end of Stage 1 was very special to him, his family, and his fans, tens of thousands of whom greeted and cheered him upon his arrival. Leipheimer remained competitive throughout the race (which was eventually won by Floyd Landis), and he won the competition for best climber.
After a several month hiatus from racing that Leipheimer spent mostly training at home in California, he emerged in June at the Dauphiné Libéré in excellent condition. Third place in the individual time trial coupled with a dominant performance on the stage that ended at Mont Ventoux, Leipheimer took the overall lead, donned the yellow jersey, and never relinquished it to become the first American since Lance Armstrong in 2003 to the overall (general classification) title at the 2006 Dauphiné Libéré.
Leipheimer faced high expectations in the 2006 Tour de France, especially when the main top contenders (including Ivan Basso and Jan Ullrich) were suspended from the Tour days before it started as a result of the Operación Puerto doping case. Because of this and Lance Armstrong's retirement, none of the top five General Classification riders from the 2005 Tour de France competed in 2006. Having placed sixth in 2005, Leipheimer was considered a top contender. However, a terrible performance in the stage 7 time trial that has been described as the worst time trial of Leipheimer's professional career put him five minutes behind the leader, squarely in the middle of the pack, and making a top 10 finish a challenge for him. The cause of this major loss of time was kept tight lipped by Leipheimer who later revealed that he did not sustain his caloric intake throughout the Tour by not eating enough, as well the debilitating affects of diarrhea are also suspected.[citation needed] Further losses in the first mountain stage hurt his chances further, and made even a top 20 finish questionable. But in the epic Stage 11, with five difficult climbs, a resurgent Leipheimer produced a strong second place finish, finishing with the same time as stage winner Denis Menchov and new race leader Floyd Landis. This result vaulted Leipheimer from 58th to 13th place, albeit still 5:39 behind Landis.
[edit] 2007
In his first season riding with Discovery, Leipheimer was the team leader in the 2007 Tour of California. Leipheimer repeated his Prologue win from the previous year on the same course, won the Stage 5 individual time trial, and held the race lead from start to finish, despite strong challenges from other ProTour teams.
[edit] Major results
- 1998 – Saturn
- 1st overall and Stage 3, Tour de Beauce
- 1999 – Saturn
- United States National Time-Trial Champion
- 1st overall and Stage 3, Tour de Beauce
- 3rd overall, Vuelta a España
- 3rd overall, Vuelta a Castilla-Leon
- Stage 6 and Mountains Classification - Redlands Classic
- 2002 – Rabobank
- 1st overall and stage 3 (ITT), Route du Sud
- 8th overall, Tour de France
- 2004 – Rabobank
- 9th overall, Tour de France
- 2005 – Team Gerolsteiner
- 1st overall, Deutschland Tour
- 1st, King of the Mountains classification
- 1st, Stage 4
- 2nd overall, Tour de Georgia
- 3rd overall, Dauphiné Libéré
- (After Stages 3 and 4) - 1st, General classification (maillot jaune et bleu)
- (After Stages 4 and 5) - 1st, Points classification (maillot vert)
- 6th overall, Tour de France
- 2006 – Team Gerolsteiner
- 1st overall, Dauphiné Libéré (maillot jaune et bleu)
- 2nd overall, Deutschland Tour
- 1st, Stage 5
- 6th overall, 2006 Tour of California
- 1st, King of the Mountains final classification; orange jersey
- 1st, Prologue (ITT); leader's golden jersey
- 13th overall, Tour de France
- 2nd place, stage 11, Tour de France
- 2007 – Team Discovery
- 1st overall, 2007 Tour of California
[edit] External links
Riders on Discovery Channel Pro Cycling Team |
---|
Ivan Basso | Fumiyuki Beppu | Volodymyr Bileka | Janez Brajkovič | Alberto Contador | Antonio Cruz | Steve Cummings | Tom Danielson | John Devine | Stijn Devolder | Vladimir Gusev | George Hincapie | Levi Leipheimer | Fuyu Li | Trent Lowe | Egoi Martínez | Jason McCartney | Gianni Meersman | Uroš Murn | Benjamín Noval | Pavel Padrnos | Sérgio Paulinho | Yaroslav Popovych | José Luis Rubiera | Tomas Vaitkus | Jurgen Van Goolen | Brian Vandborg | Matt White |
Manager |
Johan Bruyneel |