Daan de Groot

Daan de Groot
Daan de Groot
Personal information
Full name Daniël de Groot
Born May 25, 1933(1933-05-25)
Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Died January 8, 1982(1982-01-08) (aged 48)
Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Team information
Discipline Road
Role Rider
Infobox last updated on
May 16, 2011

Daniël ("Daan") de Groot (May 25, 1933 in Amsterdam, Noord-Holland – January 8, 1982 in Amsterdam, Noord-Holland) was a road bicycle and track cyclist from the Netherlands, who represented his native country at the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki, Finland.

In the 1952 Olympics, De Groot was eliminated in the quarterfinals of the men's 4,000 m team pursuit, alongside Adrie Voorting, Jan Plantaz and Jules Maenen. In 1954, he became a professional road cyclist, which he remained until 1962.

During the 1955 Tour de France, De Groot was in the thirteenth initially dropped by the peloton, and had problems with the heath. When he passed a field with cabbage, he took two leafs and put them in his neck and on his head, to protect him from the sun. He regained his strength, and was able to get back to the peloton. The peloton was also suffering from the heath, and De Groot decided to go for his chance, and escaped from the peloton. Nobody answered his attack, so he went solo. After some time, he was told his advantage was "treize minutes" (thirty minutes), but De Groot's knowledge of the French language was not perfect, and he thought his advantage was three minutes, and he increased his speed. In the end he won the stage by more than twenty minutes.[1]

His sister Jannie competed as a swimmer for the Netherlands at the 1948 Summer Olympics. De Groot committed suicide in 1982, a year after his wife had died.

Palmarès

1954
Omloop der Kempen
1955
Tour de France:
Winner stage 13
1956
Assen
 Netherlands national track pursuit championship
1957
Nuth
1959
Oostburg
Alphen aan de Rijn

References

  1. ^ De Haan, Rob (11 August 2010). "Dankzij de koolbladeren" (in Dutch). NuSport. http://www.nusport.nl/rob-de-haan/2310064/dankzij-koolbladeren.html. Retrieved 12 August 2010. 

External links


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