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John Gadret

John Gadret
2011 Giro - John Gadret.jpg
Gadret riding in the 2011 Giro d'Italia
Personal information
Full name John Gadret
Born (1979-04-22) 22 April 1979 (age 38)
Épernay, France
Height 1.70 m (5 ft 7 in)
Weight 58 kg (128 lb)
Team information
Discipline Road
Cyclo-cross
Role Rider
Rider type Climber
Amateur team(s)
2003 Cofidis (stagiaire)
Professional team(s)
2004–2005 Vlaanderen–T Interim
2006–2013 AG2R Prévoyance
2014–2015 Movistar Team
Major wins

Grand Tours

Giro d'Italia
1 individual stage (2011)

Stage races

Tour de l'Ain (2007)

Other

National cyclo-cross championships (2004, 2006)

Grand Tours

Stage races

Other

John Gadret (born 22 April 1979) is a retired French professional racing cyclist in cyclo-cross and road racing. He became a stagiaire for Cofidis in 2003 before turning professional with the Vlaanderen–T Interim team in 2004.

In 2004 he became national cyclo-cross champion of France for the first time. At this stage he was specialized in the cyclo-cross discipline but was beginning to perform well in stage races such as the Deutschland Tour. Gadret won again the French cyclo-cross championships. In the 2006 Giro d'Italia Gadret showed great potential in the mountains by finishing 7th, 6th and 5th on the three mountain stages. He crashed on the 18th stage and was forced to abandon with a broken collar bone. Despite these promising results on the road, Gadret was back in the 2006–2007 cyclo-cross season where he challenged the domination of Belgian Sven Nys in the Koppenbergcross and finished 8th in the UCI World Cyclo-cross Championships. Returning to the road with the aim of competing in his first Tour de France, Gadret took his first road victory at the Grand Prix of Aargau Canton. After the 2007 Tour de France Gadret won the third stage and took the leaders jersey in the Tour de l'Ain which he won the following day.

On Stage 15 of the 2010 Tour de France Gadret caused controversy when he refused to give his wheel to his team leader, Nicolas Roche, following a puncture on the final climb of the day and then began attacking the group ahead of Roche. He later finished 19th overall


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