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Louis Caput

Louis Caput
Louis Caput.jpg
Personal information
Full name Louis Caput
Born 1923
Saint-Maur-des-Fosses, France
Died 1985
Paris, France
Team information
Discipline Road
Role Rider and manager
Professional team(s)
1942-1944 Dilecta-Wolber
1945 Genial Lucifer
1946-1947 Metropole-Dunlop
1948-1950 Olympia-Dunlop
1951 Dilecta-Wolber
1952 Carrara-Dunlop
1953 Gitane-Hutchinson
1954 Rochet-Dunlop
1955 Arliguie-Hutchinson
1956 Saint-Raphael-R. Géminiani
1957 Essor-Leroux
Managerial team(s)
1966-1967 Kamomé-Dilecta
1968-1969 Frimatic-Viva-De Gribaldy
1969 Frimatic-Viva-de Gribaldy-Wolber
1970-197 Fagor-Mercier
1972-1975 Gan-Mercier
1976 Gan-Mercier France
1977-1978 Miko-Mercier
Major wins
2 stages Tour de France
Paris–Tours (1948)

Louis Caput (Saint-Maur-des-Fosses, 23 January 1923, died Paris - 1985) was a French professional racing cyclist and then team manager. He won Paris–Tours in 1948, and two stages of the Tour de France. He was national champion in 1946.

Caput rode as a professional from 1942 to 1957. René de Latour said:

He rode the Tour de France nine times between 1947 and 1956, failing to finish six times but coming 45th in 1951, 54th in 1955 and 56th in 1956. He won stages in 1949 and 1955. He came third in the Tour of Flanders of 1950.

Caput stopped racing in 1957 and went into the real estate business in Vincennes, an eastern suburb of Paris. In 1966 he became directeur sportif of a new team, Kamomé-Dilecta, sponsored by a maker of Japanese washing machines and a French bicycle company that had last had a team in the 1930s. The team soon ran into trouble and riders were no longer paid. "We were paid à la musette, which means only if we won. Kamomé was in financial difficulties," said one of the riders, Raymond Lebreton.

The French businessman, Jean de Gribaldy, took over sponsorship the following year with Frimatic, another maker of washing machines, as main backer. Caput went with him to run the team but, said, Lebreton, his organisation was chaotic. "The de Gribaldy team was badly organised. We were told we were to ride raced only a few hours before they started. It was a bazaar, and I wanted to leave." Caput ran the team from 1968 to 1969. The following year Antonin Magne retired from running the Mercier team, which had lost BP as secondary sponsor. Fagor, a Spanish maker of refrigerators and other household goods, took over. An incidental effect of Caput's arrival as manager is that Raymond Poulidor and the other riders were allowed zips at the necks of their jerseys, something Magne had always thought unhealthy.


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