Fausto Coppi facts for kids
Coppi at the 1952 Tour de France
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Personal information | |||
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Full name | Angelo Fausto Coppi | ||
Nickname | The Heron Il Campionissimo (Champion of Champions) |
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Born | Castellania, Italy |
15 September 1919||
Died | 2 January 1960 Tortona, Italy |
(aged 40)||
Height | 1.77 m (5 ft 9+1⁄2 in) | ||
Weight | 68 kg (150 lb; 10 st 10 lb) | ||
Team information | |||
Discipline | Road and track | ||
Role | Rider | ||
Rider type | All-rounder | ||
Major wins | |||
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Angelo Fausto Coppi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈfausto ˈkɔppi]; 15 September 1919 – 2 January 1960) was an Italian cyclist, the dominant international cyclist of the years after the Second World War. His successes earned him the title Il Campionissimo ("Champion of Champions"). He was an all-round racing cyclist: he excelled in both climbing and time trialing, and was also a great sprinter. He won the Giro d'Italia five times (1940, 1947, 1949, 1952, 1953), the Tour de France twice (1949 and 1952), and the World Championship in 1953. Other notable results include winning the Giro di Lombardia five times, the Milan–San Remo three times, as well as wins at Paris–Roubaix and La Flèche Wallonne and setting the hour record (45.798 km) in 1942.
Contents
Early life and amateur career
Coppi was born in Castellania (now known as Castellania Coppi), near Alessandria, one of five children born to Domenico Coppi and Angiolina Boveri, who married on 29 July 1914. Fausto was the fourth child, born at 5:00 pm on 15 September 1919. His mother wanted to call him Angelo, but his father preferred Fausto. He was named Angelo Fausto but was known most of his life as Fausto.
Coppi had poor health as a child and showed little interest in school. In 1927 he wrote "I ought to be at school, not riding my bicycle" after skipping lessons to spend the day riding a family bike which he had found in a cellar, rusty and without brake blocks. He left school at age 13 to work for Domenico Merlani, a butcher in Novi Ligure more widely known as Signor Ettore.
Cycling to and from the shop and meeting cyclists who came there interested him in racing. The money to buy a bike came from his uncle, also called Fausto Coppi, and his father.
Coppi rode his first race at age 15, among other boys not attached to cycling clubs, and won first prize: 20 lire and a salami sandwich. Coppi took a racing licence at the start of 1938 and won his first race, at Castelleto d'Orba, near the butcher's shop. He won alone, winning an alarm clock. A regular caller at the butcher's shop in Novi Ligure was a former boxer who had become a masseur, a job he could do after losing his sight, in 1938. Giuseppe Cavanna was known to friends as Biagio. Coppi met him that year, recommended by another of Cavanna's riders. Cavanna suggested in 1939 that Coppi should become an independent, a class of semi-professionals who could ride against both amateurs and professionals. He sent Coppi to the Tour of Tuscany that April with the advice: "Follow Gino Bartali!" He was forced to stop with a broken wheel. But at Varzi on 7 May 1939 he won one of the races counting to the season-long national independent championship. He finished seven minutes clear of the field and won his next race by six minutes.
Professional career
His first major success was in 1940, winning the Giro d'Italia at the age of 20. On 7 November 1942 he set a world hour record (45.798 km at the Velodromo Vigorelli in Milan). He rode a 93.6 inch (7.47 metre) gear and pedalled with an average cadence of 103.3rpm. The bike is on display in the chapel of Madonna del Ghisallo near Como, Italy. Coppi beat Maurice Archambaud's 45.767 km, set five years earlier on the same track. The record stood until it was beaten by Jacques Anquetil in 1956. His career was then interrupted by active service in the Second World War. In 1946 he resumed racing and achieved remarkable successes which would be exceeded only by Eddy Merckx. The veteran writer Pierre Chany said that from 1946 to 1954 Coppi was never once recaught once he had broken away from the rest.
Twice, 1949 and 1952, Coppi won the Giro d'Italia and the Tour de France in the same year, the first to do so. He won the Giro five times, a record shared with Alfredo Binda and Eddy Merckx. During the 1949 Giro he left Gino Bartali by 11 minutes between Cuneo and Pinerolo. Coppi won the 1949 Tour de France by almost half an hour over everyone except Bartali. From the start of the mountains in the Pyrenees to their end in the Alps, Coppi took back the 55 minutes by which Jacques Marinelli led him.
Coppi won the Giro di Lombardia a record five times (1946, 1947, 1948, 1949 and 1954). He won Milan–San Remo three times (1946, 1948 and 1949). In the 1946 Milan–San Remo he attacked with nine others, five kilometres into a race of 292 km. He dropped the rest on the Turchino climb and won by 14 minutes. He also won Paris–Roubaix and La Flèche Wallonne (1950). He was also 1953 world road champion.
In the first years of his career, Coppi was unable to ride the Tour de France. When he turned professional in 1940, the Tour de France was not held because of the Second World War. The Tour restarted in 1947, but Italians were not welcome yet. In 1948, Italians were welcome, but Coppi was suspended by the Italian cycling union because he had abandoned the 1948 Giro d'Italia in protest against the small penalty given to Fiorenzo Magni. In 1949, Coppi was finally able to enter the Tour. After several stages, Coppi was more than half an hour behind in the general classification, but he gained time in the mountain stages, and ended the Tour winning the general classification and the mountains classification, both with his team mate Bartali in second place, also winning the team classification.
In 1950, Coppi did not defend his Tour title, because he refused to ride together with Bartali. In 1951, he joined (riding together with Bartali), but was still affected by the death of his brother Serse Coppi, and did not excel.
In 1952, Coppi started again in the Tour. He won on the Alpe d'Huez, which had been included for the first time that year. He attacked six kilometres from the summit to rid himself of the French rider, Jean Robic. Coppi said: "I knew he was no longer there when I couldn't hear his breathing any more or the sound of his tyres on the road behind me". He rode like "a Martian on a bicycle", said Raphaël Géminiani. "He asked my advice about the gears to use, I was in the French team and he in the Italian, but he was a friend and normally my captain in our everyday team, so I could hardly refuse him. I saw a phenomenal rider that day". Coppi won the Tour by 28m 27s and the organiser, Jacques Goddet, had to double the prizes for lower placings to keep other riders interested. It was his last Tour, having ridden three and won two. To conserve energy, he would have soigneurs carry him around his hotel during Grand Tours.
After 1955 Coppi's career declined. Coppi could never match his old successes. Criterium organisers frequently cut their races to 45 km to be certain that Coppi could finish.
Rivalry with Bartali
Coppi's racing days are generally referred to as the beginning of the golden years of cycle racing. A factor is the competition between Coppi and Gino Bartali. Italian tifosi (fans) divided into coppiani and bartaliani. Bartali's rivalry with Coppi divided Italy. Bartali, conservative, religious, was venerated in the rural, agrarian south, while Coppi, more worldly, secular, innovative in diet and training, was hero of the industrial north.
Their lives came together on 7 January 1940 when Eberardo Pavesi, head of the Legnano team, took on Coppi to ride for Bartali. Their rivalry started when Coppi, the helping hand, won the Giro and Bartali, the star, marshalled the team to chase. By the 1948 world championship at Valkenburg, Limburg in the Netherlands, both climbed off rather than help the other. The Italian cycling association said: "They have forgotten to honour the Italian prestige they represent. Thinking only of their personal rivalry, they abandoned the race, to the approbation of all sportsmen". They were suspended for three months.
The thaw partly broke when the pair shared a bottle on the Col d'Izoard in the 1952 Tour but the two fell out over who had offered it. "I did", Bartali insisted. "He never gave me anything". Their rivalry was the subject of intense coverage and resulted in epic races.
Life during World War II
Coppi joined the Italian Army when Italy entered World War II: the declaration of war on the Allied Powers was made on the day after the finish of the 1940 Giro d'Italia. Officers initially supported him continuing his riding career: track cycling and one-day racing continued during the war, and Coppi continued to enjoy success, winning the Giro di Toscana, the Giro dell'Emilia and Tre Valli Varesine on the road in 1941, along with the Italian national pursuit title on the track. He struggled at the beginning of the following year following the death of his father, but became national road champion after suffering a puncture and losing one and a half minutes to the bunch, forcing him into a solo chase to rejoin the peloton. The following week he broke his collarbone in a crash before he was due to defend his national pursuit championship in the final against Cino Cinelli: however, Cinelli refused to accept the title by default, and the final was delayed to October, which Coppi won. Shortly afterwards he made his successful bid for the hour record at Vigorelli Velodrome: the roof of the building still had large holes after Milan had been heavily bombed a few weeks earlier.
However, in March 1943 Coppi was sent to North Africa to participate in the Tunisian campaign, fighting against British forces. According to Coppi's identification paper, he was captured on 13 May 1943 in Enfidha, 100 km south of Tunis, although he may have been caught the previous month by the British Eighth Army which was in and around the city at that time. He was kept in the nearby prisoner of war camp at Ksar Saïd. In the camp he met other cyclists, including Silvio Pedroni, who had previously given Coppi a tyre after the latter had suffered a puncture in a race in 1939, and Ilio Simoni, who would later become a team-mate of Coppi's at Bianchi. He also shared plates with the father of Claudio Chiappucci, who rode the Tour in the 1990s. He was given odd jobs to do. The British cyclist Len Levesley said he was astonished to find Coppi giving him a haircut.
In April 1944, Coppi fell ill with malaria, however this was quickly diagnosed and treated. In November of that year he returned to Italy, arriving at a POW camp in Naples to work as a driver for the Royal Air Force. The British moved Coppi to an RAF base at Caserta in Italy, based in the city's royal palace, in 1945. There he worked as a truck driver and as a personal assistant and handyman for an officer, Lieutenant Ronald Smith Towell, who had never heard of him. Despite this, the two struck up a mutually beneficial relationship: Coppi's popularity in Italy was helpful to Towell in achieving his goals as an administrator, whilst Towell was able, via S.S.C. Napoli footballer Umberto Busani, to help Coppi make contact with local sports journalist Gino Palumbo, who would later become editor of La Gazzetta dello Sport. Coppi wrote to Palumbo asking if he could assist with obtaining a racing bicycle for him as he only had an army bicycle with heavy tyres which was causing him pain. Palumbo wrote a newspaper article appealing for help: Coppi then received a Legnano racing bike from a Somma Vesuviana carpenter.
The war being as good as over, Coppi was released in 1945. In addition he had distanced himself from Mussolini's government during his time in British custody, which often resulted in beneficial treatment compared to those who had continued to profess their loyalty to the Fascist regime. On release he cycled and hitched lifts home. On Sunday 8 July 1945 he won the Circuit of the Aces in Milan after four years away from racing. The following season he won Milan–San Remo.
Personal life
Coppi's beloved, "The Woman in White" was Giulia Occhini, described by the French broadcaster Jean-Paul Ollivier as "strikingly beautiful with thick chestnut hair divided into enormous plaits". She was married to an army captain, Enrico Locatelli. Coppi was married to Bruna Ciampolini. Locatelli was a cycling fan. His wife wasn't but she joined him on 8 August 1948 to see the Tre Valli Varesine race. Their car was caught beside Coppi's in a traffic jam. That evening Occhini went to Coppi's hotel and asked for a photograph. He wrote "With friendship to ...", asked her name and then added it. From then on the two spent more and more time together.
Occhini and Coppi moved in together but so great was the scandal that the landlord of their apartment in Tortona demanded they move out. Reporters pursued them to a hotel in Castelletto d'Orba and again they moved, buying the Villa Carla, a house near Novi Ligure. There police raided them at night. Pope Pius XII asked Coppi to return to his wife. He refused to bless the Giro d'Italia when Coppi rode it.
Bruna Ciampolini refused a divorce. To end a marriage was shameful and still illegal in the country. Coppi was shunned and spectators spat at him. He and Giulia Occhini had a son, Faustino.
Death
In December 1959, the president of Burkina Faso, Maurice Yaméogo, invited Coppi, Raphaël Géminiani, Jacques Anquetil, Louison Bobet, Roger Hassenforder and Henry Anglade to ride against local riders and then go hunting.
Both caught malaria and fell ill when they got home.
Géminiani was diagnosed as being infected with plasmodium falciparum, one of the more lethal strains of malaria. Géminiani recovered but Coppi died, his doctors convinced he had a bronchial complaint. La Gazzetta dello Sport, the Italian daily sports paper, published a Coppi supplement. The editor wrote that he prayed that God would soon send another Coppi. Coppi was an atheist.
Legacy
The Giro remembers Coppi as it goes through the mountain stages. A mountain bonus, called the Cima Coppi, is awarded to the first rider who reaches the Giro's highest summit. In 1999, Coppi placed second in balloting for greatest Italian athlete of the 20th century.
Coppi's life story was depicted in the 1995 TV movie, Il Grande Fausto, written and directed by Alberto Sironi. Coppi was played by Sergio Castellitto and Giulia la 'Dama Bianca' (The Woman in White) was played by Ornella Muti.
A commonly repeated trope is that when Coppi was asked how to be a champion, his reply was: "Just ride. Just ride. Just ride." An Italian Restaurant in Belfast, designed with road bike parts and pictures, is named Coppi. Asteroid 214820 Faustocoppi was named in his memory in December 2017.
The village of his birth, previously known as 'Castellania', was renamed Castellania Coppi by the Piemont regional council in 2019, in preparation for the centenary of his birth.
Doping
Coppi was often said to have introduced "modern" methods to cycling, particularly his diet. Gino Bartali established that some of those methods included taking perfomance-enhancing drugs, which were not then against the rules.
Career achievements
Major results
Source:
- 1939
- 2nd Coppa Bernocchi
- 3rd Giro dell'Appennino
- 3rd Giro del Piemonte
- 1940
- 1st Overall Giro d'Italia
- 1st Stage 11
- 3rd Giro del Lazio
- 3rd Tre Valli Varesine
- 9th Giro dell'Emilia
- 9th Giro di Campania
- 1941
- 1st Giro di Toscana
- 1st Giro dell'Emilia
- 1st Giro del Veneto
- 1st Tre Valli Varesine
- 4th Giro di Lazio
- 5th Giro di Lombardia
- 10th Milan–San Remo
- 10th Coppa Bernocchi
- 1942
- 1st National Road Race Championship
- 4th Giro del Lazio
- 5th Giro di Toscana
- 5th Giro dell'Emilia
- 7th Giro di Lombardia
- 10th Giro di Campania
- 1945
- 5th Milano–Torino
- 1946
- 1st Milan–San Remo
- 1st Giro di Lombardia
- 1st Grand Prix des Nations
- 1st Giro della Romagna
- 2nd Overall Giro d'Italia
- 1st stages 4, 13 & 14
- 2nd Mountains classification
- 2nd Giro del Lazio
- 2nd Züri-Metzgete
- 1947
- 1st Overall Giro d'Italia
- 1st Stages 4, 8 & 16
- 2nd Mountains classification
- 1st Giro di Lombardia
- 1st Grand Prix des Nations
- 1st National Road Race Championship
- 1st Giro dell'Emilia
- 1st Giro della Romagna
- 1st Giro del Veneto
- 1st Individual pursuit, Road World Championships
- 5th Overall Tour de Suisse
- 1st Stage 5b
- 1948
- Giro d'Italia
- 1st Mountains classification
- 1st Stages 16 & 17
- 1st Milan–San Remo
- 1st Giro dell'Emilia
- 1st Tre Valli Varesine
- 1st Giro di Lombardia
- 2nd Het Volk
- 2nd Individual pursuit, Road World Championships
- 5th Giro di Toscana
- 1949
- 1st Overall Giro d'Italia
- 1st Mountains classification
- 1st Stages 4, 11 & 17
- 1st Overall Tour de France
- 1st Mountains classification
- 1st Stages 7, 17 & 20
- 1st Milan–San Remo
- 1st Giro di Lombardia
- 1st National Road Race Championship
- 1st Giro della Romagna
- 1st Giro del Veneto
- 1st Individual pursuit, Road World Championships
- 2nd Critérium des As
- 2nd Giro del Piemonte
- 3rd La Flèche Wallonne
- 3rd Road race, Road World Championships
- 1950
- 1st Paris–Roubaix
- 1st La Flèche Wallonne
- 1st Giro della Provincia di Reggio Calabria
- 2nd Trofeo Baracchi (with Serse Coppi)
- 3rd Giro di Lombardia
- 5th Giro del Piemonte
- 9th Milan–San Remo
- 1951
- 1st Gran Premio di Lugano
- 3rd Giro di Lombardia
- 4th Overall Giro d'Italia
- 1st Stages 6 & 18
- 2nd Mountains classification
- 4th Critérium des As
- 4th Trofeo Baracchi (with Wim Van Est)
- 10th Overall Tour de France
- 1st Stage 20
- 3rd Mountains classification
- 1952
- 1st Overall Giro d'Italia
- 1st Stages 5, 11 & 14
- 2nd Mountains classification
- 1st Overall Tour de France
- 1st Mountains classification
- 1st Stages 7, 10, 11, 18 & 21
- 1st Gran Premio di Lugano
- 2nd Paris–Roubaix
- 3rd Giro dell'Emilia
- 3rd Trofeo Baracchi (with Michele Gismondi)
- 4th Overall Tour de Romandie
- 1953
- 1st Overall Giro d'Italia
- 1st Stages 4, 11 (TTT), 19 & 20
- 2nd Mountains classification
- 1st Trofeo Baracchi (with Riccardo Filippi)
- 1st Road race, Road World Championships
- 9th Milan–San Remo
- 1954
- 1st Giro di Lombardia
- 1st Coppa Bernocchi
- 1st Giro di Campania
- 1st Trofeo Baracchi (with Riccardo Filippi)
- 4th Overall Giro d'Italia
- 1st Mountains classification
- 1st Stage 20
- 4th Milan–San Remo
- 5th Overall Tour de Suisse
- 1st Stages 2 & 4
- 6th Road race, Road World Championships
- 1955
- 1st Giro dell'Appennino
- 1st Tre Valli Varesine
- 1st National Road Race Championship
- 1st Trofeo Baracchi (with Riccardo Filippi)
- 1st Giro di Campania
- 2nd Overall Giro d'Italia
- 1st Stage 20
- 2nd Paris–Roubaix
- 3rd Overall Roma–Napoli–Roma
- 1st Stage 5
- 4th Milano–Torino
- 5th Giro della Provincia di Reggio Calabria
- 1956
- 1st Gran Premio di Lugano
- 2nd Trofeo Baracchi (with Riccardo Filippi)
- 2nd Coppa Bernocchi
- 2nd Giro di Lombardia
- 9th Milano–Vignola
- 1957
- 1st Trofeo Baracchi (with Ercole Baldini)
- 1958
- 7th Tre Valli Varesine
- 9th Giro del Piemonte
- 1959
- 5th Trofeo Baracchi (with Louison Bobet)
Grand Tour results timeline
Source:
1940 | 1941 | 1942 | 1943 | 1944 | 1945 | 1946 | 1947 | 1948 | 1949 | 1950 | 1951 | 1952 | 1953 | 1954 | 1955 | 1956 | 1957 | 1958 | 1959 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Giro d'Italia | 1 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | 2 | 1 | DNF | 1 | DNF | 4 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 2 | DNF | DNE | 32 | DNE |
Stages won | 1 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 0 | — | 0 | — | |||||
Mountains classification | NR | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | NR | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | — | NR | — | NR | — | |||||
Points classification | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | NR | — | NR | — | |||||
Tour de France | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | DNE | DNE | 1 | DNE | 10 | 1 | DNE | DNE | DNE | DNE | DNE | DNE | DNE |
Stages won | — | — | 3 | — | 1 | 5 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||
Mountains classification | — | — | 1 | — | 3 | 1 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||
Points classification | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | — | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||
Vuelta a España | N/A | DNE | DNE | N/A | N/A | DNE | DNE | DNE | DNE | N/A | DNE | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | DNE | DNE | DNE | DNE | DNF |
Stages won | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | 0 | ||||||||
Mountains classification | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | NR | ||||||||
Points classification | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | — | — | — | — | NR |
1 | Winner |
2–3 | Top three-finish |
4–10 | Top ten-finish |
11– | Other finish |
DNE | Did Not Enter |
DNF-x | Did Not Finish (retired on stage x) |
DNS-x | Did Not Start (no started on stage x) |
HD | Finished outside time limit (occurred on stage x) |
DSQ | Disqualified |
N/A | Race/classification not held |
NR | Not Ranked in this classification |
Monuments results timeline
Source:
Monument | 1940 | 1941 | 1942 | 1943 | 1944 | 1945 | 1946 | 1947 | 1948 | 1949 | 1950 | 1951 | 1952 | 1953 | 1954 | 1955 | 1956 | 1957 | 1958 | 1959 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Milan–San Remo | 17 | 10 | 21 | — | N/A | N/A | 1 | — | 1 | 1 | 9 | — | 37 | 9 | 4 | 63 | — | — | — | — |
Tour of Flanders | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
Paris–Roubaix | N/A | N/A | N/A | — | — | — | — | — | — | 12 | 1 | — | 2 | — | — | 2 | — | — | — | 44 |
Liège–Bastogne–Liège | N/A | N/A | N/A | — | N/A | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
Giro di Lombardia | 16 | 5 | 7 | N/A | N/A | — | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 3 | 35 | — | 1 | 11 | 2 | — | — | — |
— | Did not compete |
---|---|
N/A | Race not held |
See also
In Spanish: Fausto Coppi para niños