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Jeroen Blijlevens
Road bicycle racer

Jeroen Blijlevens

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Road bicycle racer
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Rijen, Netherlands
Age
53 years
Awards
cycliste néerlandais de l'année
 
Sports Teams
TVM
Polti
Lotto
Domo-Farm Frites
Bankgiroloterij
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Jeroen Johannes Hendrikus Blijlevens (born 29 December 1971) is a retired road bicycle racer from the Netherlands, who was a professional rider from 1994 to 2004. He now works as a directeur sportif for UCI Women's Team CCC Liv, and has also worked as a cycling co-commentator at Eurosport Netherlands.

Nicknamed Jerommeke, he was one of Holland's leading sprinters in the 1990s, claiming a total of 11 stage victories across the three Grand Tours (Tour de France, Vuelta a España and Giro d'Italia). He won a total number of 74 races in his professional career.

Biography

Blijlevens was born in Gilze en Rijen, North Brabant in 1971, as a son of a shoe sales man. In 1990, he won his first race as an amateur. He scored nineteen victories as an amateur, and at the end of 1993 was signed by Cees Priem for TVM–Bison Kit. Blijlevens showed good results in his first years, and in 1995 was selected to ride the Tour de France, where he won the fifth stage. Blijlevens, not a good climber, left the race before the Alps.

In 1996, Blijlevens again won a stage in the Tour de France. In 1997, he finished second to Erik Zabel in the sixth stage of the Tour de France, but when the jury disqualified Zabel for irregular sprinting, the victory was given to Blijlevens. In 1998 Blijlevens won the fourth stage of the Tour. That Tour was full of doping allegations, also towards the TVM team, and as soon as the race had passed the French-Swiss border, Blijlevens left the race, as a protest against the treatments by the French police.

In 1999, Blijlevens wore the pink jersey as leader of the general classification in the Giro d'Italia, after winning the third stage. After the events of 1998, the TVM team was excluded from the 1999 Tour de France. The cyclists of TVM started a legal procedure to force the Tour organisers to invite them, but failed. At the end of that year, Blijlevens left TVM for Team Polti.

In 2000, Blijlevens invested in his climbing-abilities, but this did not work out as planned, and Blijlevens was not as successful as before. He failed to win a stage in the Tour de France, and was even disqualified after finishing the last stage for seeking out and assaulting Bobby Julich. When Polti stopped as a sponsor at the end of the year, Blijlevens signed for Lotto–Adecco for 2001.

In 2001, Blijlevens rode the Giro d'Italia, where the Italian police raided his team's hotel, but no forbidden products were found. As a protest against this treatment, the cyclists refused to start the eighteenth stage.

At the end of 2001, Blijlevens could not find a new team, and made plans to ride as an amateur again, but finally he signed a contract for one year at Domo–Farm Frites. Blijlevens rode for a low base salary, with bonuses for victories. After a year full of injuries, Blijlevens was not given a contract for 2003, and switched to the BankGiroLoterij–Batavus team.

After his retirement at the end of 2004, Blijlevens made plans to break the speed record on a bicycle, but failed to do so.

In June 2013 he became sports director of the new Blanco Pro Cycling team, and as part of a Dutch nationwide doping inquiry signed a statement saying he had never used doping. In July he was named in a French Senate report as one of many cyclists who had tested positive for EPO during retesting of samples from the 1998 Tour de France, Blijlevens then confessed that he had used EPO since 1997, and that he had lied in the investigation because he wanted to keep his job.

Major results

1992
PWZ Zuidenveld Tour
1993
GP de Lillers
1995
Draai van de Kaai
Profronde van Pijnacker
Ronde van Midden-Zeeland
Trofeo Alcudia
Made
Tour de France:
Winner stage 5
Vuelta a España:
Winner stage 10
1996
Draai van de Kaai
Trofeo Mallorca
Profronde van Heerlen
Tour de France:
Winner stage 5
Vuelta a España:
Winner stage 5
1997
Hengelo
Veenendaal–Veenendaal
Profronde van Wateringen
Profronde van Surhuisterveen
Tour de France:
Winner stage 6
1998
Woerden
Tour de France:
Winner stage 4
Vuelta a España:
Winner stages 2 and 5
1999
Grand Prix de Denain
Profronde van Pijnacker
Trofeo Mallorca
Nokere Koerse
Scheldeprijs
Made
Profronde van Stiphout
Dwars door Gendringen
Vuelta a España:
Winner stage 21
Giro d'Italia:
Winner stages 3 and 7
2000
Mijl van Mares
2003
Ruddervoorde
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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