*** Welcome to piglix ***

Alex Zülle

Alex Zülle
Alex ZUELLE.jpg
Zülle at the 1993 Tour de France
Personal information
Full name Alex Zülle
Nickname Perro Loco "Rompetechos"
Born (1968-07-05) 5 July 1968 (age 48)
Wil, Switzerland
Team information
Discipline Road
Role Rider
Rider type All-rounder
Amateur team(s)
1988-1991 Helvetia, Isotonic, Churrasco, Mavick
Professional team(s)
1991–1997 ONCE
1998 Festina
1999–2000 Banesto
2001–2002 Team Coast
2003–2004 Phonak
Major wins

Grand Tours

Tour de France
2 stages
Giro d'Italia
3 stages
Vuelta a España
General classification (1996, 1997)
9 stages

Stage races

Tour de Suisse (2002)
Tour of the Basque Country (1995, 1997)
Paris–Nice (1993)
Volta a Catalunya (1996)
Setmana Catalana de Ciclisme (1992, 1996)

One-day races and classics

World Time-Trial Champion (1996)

Grand Tours

Stage races

One-day races and classics

Alex Zülle (born 5 July 1968) is a Swiss former professional road bicycle racer. During the 1990s he was one of the best cyclists in the world, winning back-to-back in the 1996 and 1997 Vuelta a España, taking second place in the 1995 and the 1999 Tour de France. He was world time-trial champion in Lugano in 1996.

Zülle was born and brought up in Wil in the canton of St. Gallen, son of a Swiss father, Walter Zülle and Wilhelmine, from Brabant, Netherlands. As a child he wanted to be a skier but at 18 he was injured in an accident. He began cycling in the Netherlands for rehabilitation before giving up because it was too windy.

His father, having bought cycling equipment, persuaded him to give cycling another go when they returned to Switzerland. After several years as a successful amateur, Zülle turned professional in 1991. He approached the former sporting director of the Swiss team, Helvetia, Paul Köchli, but Köchli signed Laurent Dufaux instead.

Zülle then approached Manolo Saiz, but was rebuffed because, among reasons, he did not contract riders who wore earrings. Eventually, Saiz softened and Zülle rode for ONCE as a stagaire or apprentice in the Volta a Catalunya. He attacked frequently and finished third. Saiz relented and Zülle signed his first professional contract in September 1991. He remained with ONCE until 1997. Most of its riders were Spanish. Zülle spoke only Swiss-German when he joined but at the end of the Vuelta a España he answered journalists in Spanish.


...
Wikipedia

...