Tom Boonen

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Tom Boonen
Personal information
Full name Tom Boonen
Nickname Tornado Tom/Torpedo Tom
Date of birth October 15, 1980 (1980-10-15) (age 27)
Country Flag of Belgium Belgium
Height 1.92 m (6 ft 3+12 in)
Weight 82 kg (180 lb)
Team information
Current team Quick Step-Innergetic
Discipline Road
Role Rider
Rider type Classics specialist, sprinter
Professional team(s)
2002
2003–
US Postal Service
Quick Step-Innergetic
Major wins
World Cycling Champion (2005)
Tour de France, 6 stages
Tour de France, points jersey (2007)
Paris-Roubaix (2005)
Ronde van Vlaanderen (2005, 2006)
Gent-Wevelgem (2004)
Infobox last updated on:
July 29, 2007

Tom Boonen (born on October 15, 1980 in Mol, Belgium) is a professional road bicycle racer and is the 2005 World Road Race Champion. He is considered a single-day road race specialist with a strong finishing sprint. His personality and looks, combined with his successes, also turned him into Belgium's main male sports idol of the mid-2000s.

Contents

According to CyclingNews, Belgian newspaper, Het Laatste Nieuws reports that Boonen is currently (December 2007) dating 16 year-old Sophie van Vliet, daughter of former pro Leo van Vliet, who organizes the Amstel Gold Race and Amstel Curaçao Race. Boonen first denied and then admitted to the story.

At the start of 2002 Boonen rode for the US Postal Service team, finishing third in Paris-Roubaix after an early breakaway. Fellow Flemish rider Johan Museeuw had escaped off the front of the race to a solo victory, and team captain George Hincapie crashed in a slippery section of the course leaving Boonen to ride for himself. Boonen's performance in the race compelled Museeuw - his childhood hero - to publicly declare Boonen his natural successor.

However, Boonen was not completely happy at US Postal, claiming he did not get enough chances to ride for himself. Towards the end of the year he announced he would leave the team, despite being under contract, and joined Quick Step-Davitamon at the start of 2003. The 2003 season, however, did not go well for Boonen, who saw lacklustre performance due to fatigue and a knee injury. In this season Museeuw was the undisputed team leader for the spring classics campaign.

The 2004 season saw Boonen rise up to the challenge to win the E3 Prijs Vlaanderen, the classic race Gent-Wevelgem and the Grote Scheldeprijs. In addition, he also won two stages of the Tour de France including the prestigious final stage in Paris, just like Museeuw did years ago.

2005 was the year in which Boonen firmly established himself as a competitor on the world stage. Winning the Ronde van Vlaanderen, Paris-Roubaix, E3 Prijs Vlaanderen, and finishing second in the Omloop "Het Volk" (behind teammate Nick Nuyens), he stamped his authority on the brutal cobbled Spring Classics.

In his Ronde van Vlaanderen victory Boonen was considered the strongest sprinter in the final group of riders. However, instead of waiting for the final moment, he attacked a few kilometers from the finish to the surprise of other riders in the group, and stayed away for a solo victory. One of the other riders in the peloton, Erik Dekker, afterwards declared that he was "happy that he would not have to race against Boonen the next ten years, because [he] would have to race for second place". In his Paris-Roubaix victory, he entered the Roubaix velodrome in the leading trio, and waited until the last moment before launching a sprint that saw him beat American George Hincapie and Spaniard Juan Antonio Flecha.

In the Tour de France, he won the second and the third stage. In this edition, Boonen claimed the green jersey after the second stage. However, he was forced to retire from the race after stage 11, after multiple crashes. The jersey was reliquished to Norwegian Thor Hushovd, who held on for the rest of the tour, becoming the eventual winner.

On September 25 he became the twenty-first Belgian World Champion after the World Cycling Championships in Madrid. A seven-man breakaway was reeled in in the final straight by the group that he was in, before he powered home ahead of Alejandro Valverde. He is the first Belgian since Museeuw, in 1996, to don the rainbow jersey.

Boonen is the first cyclist in history to win the Ronde van Vlaanderen, Paris-Roubaix, and the World Cycling Championship in one and the same season. With these victories he secured second place in the overall standings of the 2005 UCI ProTour.

Boonen preparing for a mountain stage in the 2006 Tour de France
Boonen preparing for a mountain stage in the 2006 Tour de France

Boonen currently rides for Quick Step-Innergetic and lived in Balen (Belgium) before moving to Monaco (end 2005).

At the end of the year Boonen won several awards: Kristallen Fiets (Crystal Bicycle), Vélo d'Or (Golden Bicycle), Trofee voor Sportverdienste (Trophy For Sporting Merit), Belgian Sportsman of the Year 2005 and Belgian Sports Personality of the Year.

In 2006, Boonen again had an incredible start of the season, highlighted by winning the Ronde van Vlaanderen again.

After the incredible start, Boonen diminished and had a somewhat disappointing Tour of Belgium. Before the start of the 2006 Tour de France, Boonen claimed that he considered himself the strongest and smartest sprinter. However, he did not win a stage in the first week and found himself outclassed by the speed of Robbie McEwen and the clever tactics of Freire. In spite of this, Boonen was able to claim the yellow jersey for the first time in his career, but soon lost it in the first time trial to time trial specialist Sergei Honchar.

Boonen pulled out of the Tour de France during the 15th stage over 187km from Gap to l'Alpe d'Huez. According to the team manager, Boonen lost a lot of weight during the Tour and got a much needed rest period were he had to gain some weight again.

An indication that Boonen is regaining his strength was the Eneco Tour of Benelux, in which he totally overclassed the other sprinters to take the victories of stage 1, 3 and 5. Boonen has stated that he indeed is getting stronger, however, in the World Cycling Championships, he was not as strong as hoped to (on a circuit that was less flat than in Madrid 2005) and lost his title to Quick Step-Innergetic teammate Paolo Bettini, finishing ninth.

In his 2007 season, Boonen won stages 6 and 12 in the Tour de France, and won the sprinter's competition.

According to CyclingNews, Belgian newspaper, Het Laatste Nieuws reports that Boonen is currehtly dating 16 year-old Sophie van Vliet, daughter of former pro Leo van Vliet, who organizes the Amstel Gold Race and Amstel Curaçao Race. Boonen first denied and then admitted to the story.

Medal record
Competitor for Flag of Belgium Belgium
Road bicycle racing
World Championships
Gold 2005 Madrid Elite Men's Road Race
Boonen signing in at Tarbes during the 2006 Tour de France
Boonen signing in at Tarbes during the 2006 Tour de France
2002
Volta a Catalunya
First place in Stage one
International Uniqua Classic
First place in Stage 2
Wilrijk (derny Criterium)
3rd Paris-Roubaix
2003
Tour of Belgium
1st, Stage 3
2004
1st, Gent-Wevelgem
120th, Overall, Tour de France (GT)
1st, Stage 6 (Bonneval to Angers)
1st, Stage 20 (Montereau to Paris)
1st, E3 Prijs Vlaanderen
1st, Grote Scheldeprijs
1st, Overall, Tour de Picardie
1st, Points Classification
1st, Stage 1
1st, Stage 2
Deutschland Tour
1st, Stage 2
1st, Stage 7
Tour of Qatar
1st, Stage 2
Ruta del Sol
1st, Stage 1
Ster Elektrotour
1st, Prologue
1st, Stage 1
Circuit Franco-Belge
1st, Stage 3
1st, Stage 4
Tour of Britain
1st, Stage 3
Draai van de Kaai Roosendaal
GP Rik Van Steenbergen
thirty 3th Nacht van Peer
forty 3nd Mijl van Mares
Omloop Mandel-Leie-Schelde
2005
Road World Championships - Road RaceMadrid, Spain
Tour de France (GT)
1st, Stage 2, (Challans to Les Essarts)
1st, Stage 3, (La Châtaigneraie to Tours)
Paris-Nice (PT)
1st, Stage 1
1st, Stage 2
1st, Paris-Roubaix (PT)
1st, Ronde van Vlaanderen (PT)
1st, E3 Prijs Vlaanderen (1.HC)
1st, Overall, Tour of Belgium (2.1)
1st, Stage 1
1st, Stage 2
4th, Overall, Tour of Qatar (2.1)
1st, Points Classification (Silver Jersey)
1st, Stage 1
1st, Stage 2
10th, Overall, Tour de Picardie (2.2)
1st, Stage 2
1st, Ronde van Made, Criterium
1st, Na Tour Broker Criterium
1st, Acht van Chaam
1st, Criterium Herentals
1st, Derny Criterium Antwerpen
2006
1st, Doha International GP in Qatar
1st, Overall, Tour of Qatar
1st, Stages 1, 2, 3 and 5
1st, Stage 5, Ruta del Sol in Andalucia
1st, Stages 1, 2 and 4, Paris-Nice
1st, E3 Prijs Vlaanderen
1st, Ronde van Vlaanderen
2nd, Paris-Roubaix
1st, Grote Scheldeprijs
1st, Stages 2 and 3, Tour de Belgique
1st, Veenendaal-Veenendaal
1st, Stage 1, Tour de Suisse
Tour de France
Yellow Jersey (overall leader) in Stage 3-6
Green Jersey (points leader) in Stage 3
Eneco Tour of Benelux
1st, Stage 1 from Wieringerwerf to Hoogeveen
1st, Stage 3 from Beek to Westmalle
1st, Stage 5 from Hasselt to Balen
1st, Stage 6, Tour of Britain from Greenwich to The Mall
2007
Tour of Qatar
1st, Stages 1 (TTT), 2, 3, 4, and 6
Vuelta a Andalucía
1st, Stage 4
3rd, Omloop "Het Volk"
1st, Kuurne-Brussels-Kuurne
3rd, Milan-Sanremo
1st, Dwars door Vlaanderen
1st, E3 Prijs Vlaanderen
Tour de France
Green Jersey (points leader) in Stage 3-5, 6-20
Green Jersey (points classification) winner
1st, Stage 6
1st, Stage 12

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Sporting positions
Preceded by
Flag of Spain Óscar Freire
World Road Racing Champion
2005
Succeeded by
Flag of Italy Paolo Bettini
Awards
Preceded by
Flag of Belgium Stefan Everts
Belgian Sportsman of the Year
2005
Succeeded by
Flag of Belgium Stefan Everts
Preceded by
Flag of Belgium Stefan Everts
Belgian Sportsman of the Year
2007
Incumbent
Preceded by
Flag of the United States Lance Armstrong
Vélo d'Or
2005
Succeeded by
Flag of Italy Paolo Bettini



Persondata
NAME Boonen, Tom
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION Road bicycle racer
DATE OF BIRTH 1980-10-15
PLACE OF BIRTH Mol, Belgium, Belgium
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH
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