Georges Senfftleben
Senfftleben in 1948.
Personal information
Full nameGeorges Senfftleben
NicknameSneff
Born(1922-12-19)19 December 1922
Clamart, France
Died24 August 1998(1998-08-24) (aged 75)
Èze, France
Team information
DisciplineTrack
RoleRider
Rider typeSprinter

Georges Senfftleben (19 December 1922 in Clamart – 24 August 1998 in Èze) was a French track cyclist.[1]

Major results

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1944
1st National Sprint Championships
1st Grand Prix de Paris
1946
2nd World Sprint Championships
1947
1st National Sprint Championships
3rd World Sprint Championships
1948
1st National Sprint Championships
3rd World Sprint Championships
1951
1st National Sprint Championships
1952
1st Six Says of Hanover (with Émile Carrara)
1st Six Days of Saint-Étienne (with Émile Carrara)
2nd World Sprint Championships
1953
2nd European Madison Championships
1954
1st Six Days of Paris (with Roger Godeau)
1st Six Days of Aarhus (with Roger Godeau)
1st Six Days of Brussels (with Dominique Forlini)
1955
1st Six Days of Frankfurt (with Dominique Forlini)
1st European Madison Championships (with Dominique Forlini)
1st Prix Dupré-Lapize
1956
1st Six Days of Copenhagen (with Dominique Forlini)
1958
2nd European Madison Championships

References

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  1. ^ "Georges Senfftleben". Cycling Archives. Retrieved 10 June 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)


📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Six Days of Brussels

Ollivier Gerard Buyl 1952 Lucien Acou Achiel Bruneel Lucien Gillen Georges Senfftleben Émile Carrara Dominique Forlini 1953 Hugo Koblet Armin von Büren

Émile Carrara

Hanover (with Georges Senfftleben) 1st Six Days of Dortmund (with Guy Lapébie) 1st Six Days of Saint-Étienne (with Georges Senfftleben) 1st Six Days of

Dominique Forlini

Brussels (with Georges Senfftleben) Tour de France: Winner stages 6 and 15 1955 European championship track madison (with Georges Senfftleben) Six days of

Deaths in August 1998

Levan Sanadze, 70, Georgian athlete and Olympic medalist (1952). Georges Senfftleben, 75, French track cyclist. Jack Richard Williams, 88, American radio

Six Days of Berlin

 Gerrit Peters (NED)  Gerrit Schulte (NED)  Roger Godeau (FRA)  Georges Senfftleben (FRA)  Jean Roth (SUI)  Walter Bucher (SUI) 1954 (II)  Dominique

French National Track Championships

Gerardin 1943 Louis Gerardin 1946 Louis Gerardin 1947 Georges Senfftleben 1948 Georges Senfftleben 1949 Louis Gerardin 1953 Jacques Bellenger 1954 Jacques

Six Days of Aarhus

First edition 1954 (1954) Editions 9 Final edition 1961 First winner  Georges Senfftleben (FRA)  Roger Godeau (FRA) Most wins  Kay Werner Nielsen (DEN) (3

Jef Scherens

were held again in Zurich in 1946. Scherens lost to the Frenchman Georges Senfftleben. The following year, he managed to win a seventh and final title