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Thaddäus Robl

German cyclist (1877–1910) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thaddäus Robl
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Thaddäus "Thaddy" Robl (22 October 1877 – 18 June 1910) was a German professional cyclist who was active between 1894 and 1910, initially in road racing,[1] later predominantly in motor-paced racing. From 1895 to 1898 he obtained several podium finishes in long-distance road races, the most emblematic of which is his 3rd place in the 1898 Bordeaux - Paris.[2]

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Thaddäus Robl in 1902
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The 1903 Track Cycling World Championships at the Ordrup velodrome in Copenhagen. From left to right: Thaddäus Robl, Alfred Görnemann and Piet Dickentman.

In motor-paced racing he won five European titles (1901–1904, 1907) and the world championships in 1901 and 1902, he finished in third place in 1903.[3][4]

After retiring from cycling he became passionate with flying the early planes. In a flight demonstration on 18 June 1910 in Szczecin (then German Empire) he fell from a height of about 75 meters. This was the first death of a civil pilot on the German ground. In 1947, a street in Munich was named after him.[5]

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Palmares

1895
3rd, Wien - Salzburg[6]
3rd, Triest - Graz - Wien[7]
3rd, Straßburg - Basel - Straßburg[8]
5th, Rund um Mitteldeutschland[9]
1896
2nd, German Motor-paced Championship, Hamburg
1898
2nd, Bol d'Or - Paris[10]
3rd, Bordeaux - Paris
1900
2nd, Bol d'Or - Paris
1901
1st, Motor-paced World Championship, Friedenau
1st, Motor-paced European Championship, Leipzig
1902
1st, Motor-paced European Championship, Leipzig
1st, Motor-paced World Championship, Friedenau
1903
2nd, Motor-paced World Championship, Ordrup
1st, Motor-paced European Championship, Leipzig
1904
1st, Motor-paced European Championship, Leipzig
1905
2nd, Motor-paced European Championship, Leipzig
1906
3rd, Motor-paced European Championship, Dresden
1907
1st, German Motor-paced Championship, Breslau
1st, Motor-paced European Championship, Hannover
1908
1st, German Motor-paced Championship, Dresden
1909
3rd, Motor-paced European Championship, Berlin
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See also

References

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