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Tom Simpson

Tom Simpson
Tom Simpson wearing a white cycling jersey with horizontal rainbow stripes across the body
Simpson c. 1966
Personal information
Full name Thomas Simpson
Nickname Major Simpson
Born (1937-11-30)30 November 1937
Haswell, County Durham, England
Died 13 July 1967(1967-07-13) (aged 29)
Mont Ventoux, Provence, France
Height 1.81 m (5 ft 11 in)
Weight 69 kg (152 lb; 10.9 st)
Team information
Discipline Road and track
Role Rider
Rider type All-rounder
Amateur team(s)
Harworth & District CC
Scala Wheelers
Gentse Wielersport
Saint-Raphaël VC 12e
Professional team(s)
1959 Saint-Raphaël–R. Geminiani–Dunlop
1960–1961 Rapha–Gitane–Dunlop
1962 Gitane–Leroux–Dunlop–R. Geminiani
1963–1967 Peugeot–BP–Englebert
Major wins

Grand Tours

Vuelta a España
2 individual stages (1967)

Stage races

Paris–Nice (1967)

One-day and classic races

World Road Race Championships (1965)
Tour of Flanders (1961)
Bordeaux–Paris (1963)
Milan–San Remo (1964)
Giro di Lombardia (1965)

Grand Tours

Stage races

One-day and classic races

Thomas Simpson (30 November 1937 – 13 July 1967) was one of Britain's most successful professional cyclists. He was born in Haswell, County Durham and later moved to Harworth, Nottinghamshire. Simpson began road cycling as a teenager before taking up track cycling, specialising in pursuit races. He won a bronze medal for track cycling at the 1956 Summer Olympics and a silver at the 1958 British Empire and Commonwealth Games.

In 1959, at age 21, Simpson was signed by the French professional road-racing team Saint-Raphaël–R. Geminiani–Dunlop. He advanced to their first team (Rapha–Gitane–Dunlop) the following year, and won the 1961 Tour of Flanders. Simpson then joined Gitane–Leroux–Dunlop–R. Geminiani; in the 1962 Tour de France he became the first British rider to wear the yellow jersey, finishing sixth overall.

In 1963 Simpson moved to Peugeot–BP–Englebert, winning Bordeaux–Paris that year and the 1964 Milan–San Remo. In 1965 he became Britain's first world road race champion and won the Giro di Lombardia; this made him the BBC Sports Personality of the Year, the first cyclist to win the award. Injuries hampered much of Simpson's 1966 season. He won two stages of the 1967 Vuelta a España before he won the general classification of Paris–Nice that year.


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