Vincent Lavenu (born 12 January 1956 in Briançon, Hautes-Alpes) is a French former professional road bicycle racer and is currently the team manager of the UCI ProTour AG2R La Mondiale cycling team.
Lavenu had been competing as an amateur in France for the Parisian amateur team La-Motte-Servolex and had been in contact with Jean-Pierre Danguillaume of the COOP-Mercier team and Jean de Gribaldy of Skil Sem about becoming a professional, but it was not until the autumn of 1982 when Pierre Rivory and Michel Nedelec turned the elite amateur team Pelussin into a professional team that they contacted Lavenu with the offer of becoming professional. Lavenu was 27 years of age when he became professional with the Union cycliste Saint Etienne Pelussin team in 1983. As a first year professional, he crashed in the Dauphiné Liberé and spent 8 days in hospital after which he could only compete in several races at the end of the season. The Saint Etienne Pelussin team did not obtain the necessary sponsorship and left the professional peloton at the end of 1983. Lavenu found himself without a commercial team for the following two seasons but was able to continue competing in professional races by wearing the jersey of the cycling union of France, the Union Nationale des Cyclistes Professionnels. This was not a commercial team but a team organised by Marcel Tinazzi that enabled professionals without commercial contracts to continue racing in professional competition. Lavenu also raced track events such as six-day races. In 1986 he joined the Miko-Carlos team that fellow professional Jean-Francois Chaurin was setting up. The team also signed Régis Clère, Laurent Biondi and Franck Pineau. When the team was not selected for the 1986 Tour de France, the sponsors decided to pull out of the sport. In 1987 Lavenu joined the R.M.O. team when Bernard Thévenet was directeur sportif. Lavenu won the first race of the season with his new team, the Ronde pyrénéenne. He joined the Fagor team of Stephen Roche and directeur sportif Patrick Valcke in 1988 and 1989. He won a stage in the Tour of Portugal, finished fifth in 1988 Bordeaux–Paris, seventh in the 1989 French national road race championships, seventh in the 1989 Route du Sud. He rode the 1989 Tour de France where he finished in 65th place.