Pietro Bixio
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Full name | Pietro Bixio | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Born | Genoa, Italy | 11 August 1875|||||||||||||||||||||||
Died | 26 July 1905 Mignanego, Italy | (aged 29)|||||||||||||||||||||||
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Discipline | Sprint | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Role | Rider | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Pietro Bixio (11 August 1875 – 26 July 1905) was an Italian track cyclist.[1]
Pietro Bixio won the Italian professional sprint championship three times, in 1895, 1903 and 1904. In 1900 he raced during the Olympic Games in Paris at the Grand Prix de l’Exposition, a race for professionals for 15.000 French Francs, the biggest prize purse in the world at the time. Bixio was eliminated in the semi-final. In the Grande Course de Nations team competition over 1500 meters (a kind of points race) he was third (teaming up with Gian Ferdinando Tomaselli and Giuseppe Singrossi).
At the 1902 UCI Track Cycling World Championships in Rome, Bixio won the bronze medal in the sprint tournament, becoming the first Italian to win a medal at the World Championships.[2] In 1903 he was also third in the prestigious Grand Prix de Paris.[3] Other wins include the Gran Premio d'Italia in 1895, the Gran Premio della U.V.I. in 1899 and the Groote Prijs van Antwerpen in 1903.
Bixio died in 1905, aged 29, from tuberculosis.[4]
Literature
[edit]- Volker Kluge: Olympische Sommerspiele. Die Chronik I. Athen 1896 – Berlin 1936. Sportverlag Berlin, Berlin 1997, ISBN 3-328-00715-6, p. 72.
References
[edit]- ^ "Spartaco Pietro Bixio". CyclingArchives.com.
- ^ "Ellegaard champion du monde". L'Auto. 16 June 1902.
- ^ "G.P. de Paris 1903". CyclingArchives.com.
- ^ "La mort de Bixio". L'Auto-Vélo. 29 July 1905.