Tom Boonen (born on October 15, 1980 in Mol, Belgium) is one of the world's best professional road bicycle racers 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-2000's.
This remarkable third place in his first ever Paris-Roubaix compelled Museeuw - his childhood hero - to publicly declare him his natural successor.
However, Tom was not completely happy at US Postal, claiming he did not get enough chances to ride for himself. Around October of that year, he announced he would leave the team, despite being under contract. This was a very unusual and brave decision for a young racer like him, one that was greatly criticized by the team, including the Boss himself, Lance Armstrong.
Quick.Step then offered him a place in their Belgian team starting in the 2003 season.
In his Tour of Flanders 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 * 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 was tipped as a possible winner of the green jersey. However, after several crashes, he retired from the race after stage 11, yielding the jersey to Norwegian Thor Hushovd, who became 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 currently rides for Quick.Step-Innergetic and lived in Balen (Belgium) before moving to Monaco (end 2005). This move, disguised as "an escape from intrusive fans" was probably in reality to profit from the favourable Monaco tax system.
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.
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 Gonchar.
Boonen pulled out of the Tour de France during the 15th stage over 187km from Gap to l'Alpe d'Huez.
1980 births | Living people | Belgian cyclists | Belgian people
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