Frédéric Moncassin
Personal information | |
---|---|
Nickname | Moncassecou |
Born | Saubens, France | 26 September 1968
Height | 1.82 m (6 ft 0 in) |
Weight | 73 kg (161 lb; 11 st 7 lb) |
Team information | |
Current team | Retired |
Discipline | Road |
Rider type | Sprinter |
Professional teams | |
1990–1992 | Castorama |
1993–1995 | WordPerfect–Colnago–Decca |
1996–1999 | GAN |
Major wins | |
Tour de France, 2 stages; 1995 Kuurne-Brussels-Kuurne |
Frédéric Moncassin (born 26 September 1968)[1] is a French former road racing cyclist. He turned professional in 1990 and retired in 1999. He competed in the men's individual road race at the 1996 Summer Olympics.[2]
Moncassin was a strong roadman-sprinter known for his tussles with other riders in the last metres of a race. He clashed with Tom Steels and Mario Cipollini among others.[3] He won 30 races and led the Tour de France for a day in 1996. He also came close to winning the Tour of Flanders and Paris–Roubaix. Procycling said when he retired: "It was the 1998 Tour that, in hindsight, probably spelt the end for Fred. Under intense pressure to come up with a stage win, he struggled through the first week, only to see the race collapse around him as the Festina Scandal took hold. His unfashionable criticism of Richard Virenque - "he's an asshole and you can quote me," he told the French paper 'La Dépêche' at the time - allied to his own poor form, and his increasingly public concern that all cyclists were now tarred with the same brush, left him as a fringe character."[4]
His name was on the list of doping tests published by the French Senate on 24 July 2013 that were collected during the 1998 Tour de France and found suspicious for EPO when retested in 2004.[5]
Retirement
[edit]Moncassin was selector for the French national road team from 2004 to 2008, when he was succeeded by Laurent Jalabert.
"I've got new shoes on today, so watch out!"
Frédéric Moncassin[6]
Major results
[edit]- 1990
- 1st Stages 2 & 4, Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré
- 1st Grand Prix d'Isbergues
- 1st Grand Prix de Denain
- 1991
- 1st Grand Prix de Denain
- 1st Stage 3 Tour d'Armorique
- 1992
- 1st Grand Prix du Nord-Pas-de-Calais
- 1st Stage 3 Étoile de Bessèges
- 1st Stage 5b Tour Méditerranéen
- 1993
- 1st Overall Tour de l'Oise
- 1st Stages 1 & 2
- 1st Points classification
- 1st Stage 3 Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré
- 1st Stage 1 Tour de l'Avenir
- 1994
- 1st Stage 2 Grand Prix du Midi Libre
- 1995
- 1st Kuurne–Brussels–Kuurne
- 1996
- 1st Stages 1 & 19 Tour de France
- 1st Stage 1 Paris–Nice
- 1st Stages 1 & 3 Grand Prix du Midi Libre
- 1st Stages 1 & 4, Route du Sud
- 1997
- 2nd Tour of Flanders
- 1998
- 3rd Milan–San Remo
- 2009
- 1st Red Bull Road Rage, France
References
[edit]- ^ Procycling, UK, December 1999, p53
- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Frédéric Moncassin Olympic Results". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
- ^ Procycling, UK, December 1999, p53
- ^ Procycling, UK, December 1999, p53
- ^ "French Senate releases positive EPO cases from 1998 Tour de France".
- ^ Frédéric Moncassin, quoted in The Quotable Cyclist (1997:pg. 284), Bill Strickland, ed., Breakaway Books: Halscottville, New York.