Jules Nempon
French cyclist
Personal information | |
---|---|
Full name | Jules Nempon |
Born | (1890-03-02)2 March 1890 Armbouts-Cappel, France |
Died | 7 June 1974(1974-06-07) (aged 84) Saint-Omer, France |
Team information | |
Discipline | Road |
Role | Rider |
Professional teams | |
1911 | Le Globe-Dunlop |
1912–1914 | JB Louvet |
1919, 1922 | Nempon Cycles |
1923 | Austral |
Jules Nempon was a French road racing cyclist. Nempon was born on 2 March 1890 in Armbouts-Cappel. Nempon first participated in the Tour de France in 1911, but did not finish. In total, he started in 10 Tours de France. His best result was the 1919 Tour de France, where he finished tenth.[1] Because there were only 10 finishers, he also receiving the Lanterne rouge for finishing in the last place.
Nempon died on 7 June 1974 in Saint-Omer.
References
- ^ "Official Tour de France results for Jules Nempon". Archived from the original on 2010-07-16. Retrieved 2010-09-30.
External links
- Jules Nempon at Cycling Archives
- v
- t
- e
Lanternes rouges of the Tour de France
- 1903: Arsène Millocheau
- 1904: Antoine Deflotrière
- 1905: Clovis Lacroix
- 1906: Georges Bronchard
- 1907: Albert Chartier
- 1908: Henri Anthoine
- 1909: Georges Devilly
- 1910: Constant Collet
- 1911: Lucien Roquebert
- 1912: Maurice Lartigue
- 1913: Henri Alavoine
- 1914: Henri Leclerc
- 1915–1918 World War I
- 1919: Jules Nempon
- 1920: Charles Raboisson
- 1921: Henri Catelan
- 1922–23: Daniel Masson
- 1924: Victor Lafosse
- 1925: Fernand Besnier
- 1926: André Drobecq
- 1927: Jacques Pfister
- 1928: Édouard Persin
- 1929: André Léger
- 1930: Marcel Ilpide
- 1931: Richard Lamb
- 1932: Rudolf Risch
- 1933: Ernest Neuhard
- 1934: Antonio Folco
- 1935: Willy Kutschbach
- 1936: Aldo Bertocco
- 1937: Aloyse Klensch
- 1938: Janus Hellemons
- 1939: Armand Le Moal
- 1940–1946 World War II
- 1947: Pietro Tarchini
- 1948: Vittorio Seghezzi
- 1949: Guido De Santi
- 1950: Fritz Zbinden
- 1951: Abdel-Kader Zaaf
- 1952: Henri Paret
- 1953: Claude Rouer
- 1954: Marcel Dierkens
- 1955: Tony Hoar
- 1956: Roger Chaussabel
- 1957: Guy Million
- 1958: Walter Favre
- 1959: Louis Bisilliat
- 1960: José Herrero Berrendero
- 1961: André Geneste
- 1962: Augusto Marcaletti
- 1963: Willy Derboven
- 1964: Anatole Novak
- 1965: Joseph Groussard
- 1966: Paolo Mannucci
- 1967: Jean-Pierre Genet
- 1968: John Clarey
- 1969: André Wilhelm
- 1970: Frits Hoogerheide
- 1971: Georges Chappe
- 1972: Alain Bellouis
- 1973: Jacques-André Hochart
- 1974: Lorenzo Alaimo
- 1975: Jacques Boulas
- 1976: Aad van den Hoek
- 1977: Roger Loysch
- 1978: Philippe Tesnière
- 1979–80: Gerhard Schönbacher
- 1981: Faustino Cueli
- 1982: Werner Devos
- 1983: Marcel Laurens
- 1984: Gilbert Glaus
- 1985: Manrico Ronchiato
- 1986: Ennio Salvador
- 1987: Mathieu Hermans
- 1988: Dirk Wayenberg
- 1989: Mathieu Hermans
- 1990: Rodolfo Massi
- 1991: Rob Harmeling
- 1992: Fernando Quevedo
- 1993: Edwig Van Hooydonck
- 1994: John Talen
- 1995: Bruno Cornillet
- 1996: Jean-Luc Masdupuy
- 1997: Philippe Gaumont
- 1998: Damien Nazon
- 1999: Jacky Durand
- 2000: Olivier Perraudeau
- 2001: Jimmy Casper
- 2002: Igor Flores
- 2003: Hans De Clercq
- 2004: Jimmy Casper
- 2005: Iker Flores
- 2006–2008: Wim Vansevenant
- 2009: Yauheni Hutarovich
- 2010: Adriano Malori
- 2011: Fabio Sabatini
- 2012: Jimmy Engoulvent
- 2013: Svein Tuft
- 2014: Ji Cheng
- 2015: Sébastien Chavanel
- 2016: Sam Bennett
- 2017: Luke Rowe
- 2018: Lawson Craddock
- 2019: Sebastian Langeveld
This biographical article related to a French cycling person born in the 1890s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e