Jack Bobridge
Jack Bobridge (born 13 July 1989) is an Australian professional racing cyclist who rides for Trek–Segafredo.
Career
In May 2009, Bobridge signed with Garmin–Slipstream, with his contract starting on 1 January 2010 and had been contracted to race with the team until 2012. He left the team at the end of 2011, and joined GreenEDGE for the 2012 season.[2] Bobridge left Orica–GreenEDGE at the end of the 2012 season, and joined Blanco Pro Cycling on a two-year contract from the 2013 season onwards.[3]
In September 2009 he won the under-23 time trial at the UCI Road World Championships.[4] In January 2011 he became the Australian National Road Race Champion with a daring solo breakaway. On 2 February 2011, he set a new world record for the track 4k individual pursuit.[5] Bobridge was an Australian Institute of Sport scholarship holder.[6]
In November 2014 Bobridge was announced as part of the Team Budget Forklifts line-up for 2015 alongside fellow members of the Australian endurance track squad Luke Davison, Glenn O'Shea, Scott Sunderland and Mitchel Mulhearn, riding a domestic programme with a focus on achieving success on the track at the 2016 Summer Olympics.[7]
Bobridge won the opening stage of the 2015 Tour Down Under. He lost the overall lead on stage three but finished the race with the King of the Mountains jersey. On 31 January 2015 Bobridge attempted to break the world hour record in Melbourne. He rode 51.3 kilometres falling short of the record of 51.852 kilometres. However he did break Brad McGee's Australian national hour record of 50.3 kilometres which had stood since 2000.[8] In September 2015 it was announced that Bobridge would return to the UCI WorldTour peloton in 2016, signing a one-year contract with Trek Factory Racing.[9] Bobridge is the current Australian Elite Men's Road Race champion.
Palmares
Track
Road
Grand Tour General Classification results timeline
WD = Withdrew; IP = In Progress
References
External links
|
---|
|
- 1993: Australia (Brett Aitken, Stuart O'Grady, Billy Shearsby, Tim O'Shannessy)
- 1994: Germany (Guido Fulst, Andreas Bach, Jens Lehmann, Danilo Hondo)
- 1995: Australia (Bradley McGee, Stuart O'Grady, Rodney McGee, Tim O'Shannessy)
- 1996: Italy (Adler Capelli, Cristiano Citton, Andrea Collinelli, Mauro Trentini)
- 1997: Italy (Cristiano Citton, Mario Benetton, Adler Capelli, Andrea Collinelli)
- 1998: Ukraine (Alexander Symonenko, Sergiy Matveyev, Oleksandr Fedenko, Olexandr Klimenko)
- 1999: Germany (Robert Bartko, Jens Lehmann, Daniel Becke, Guido Fulst)
- 2000: Germany (Guido Fulst, Sebastian Siedler, Daniel Becke, Jens Lehmann)
- 2001: Ukraine (Alexander Symonenko, Sergeï Tscherniowsky, Lyubomyr Polatayko, Oleksandr Fedenko)
- 2002: Australia (Peter Dawson, Brett Lancaster, Stephen Wooldridge, Luke Roberts)
- 2003: Australia (Graeme Brown, Peter Dawson, Brett Lancaster, Luke Roberts)
- 2004: Australia (Ashley Hutchinson, Luke Roberts, Peter Dawson, Stephen Wooldridge)
- 2005: Great Britain (Steve Cummings, Rob Hayles, Paul Manning, Chris Newton)
- 2006: Australia (Peter Dawson, Matthew Goss, Mark Jamieson, Stephen Wooldridge)
- 2007: Great Britain (Geraint Thomas, Ed Clancy, Paul Manning, Bradley Wiggins)
- 2008: Great Britain (Ed Clancy, Geraint Thomas, Paul Manning, Bradley Wiggins)
- 2009: Denmark (Casper Jørgensen, Jens-Erik Madsen, Michael Færk Christensen, Alex Rasmussen, Michael Mørkøv (qualifying round only))
- 2010: Australia (Jack Bobridge, Rohan Dennis, Michael Hepburn, Cameron Meyer)
- 2011: Australia (Jack Bobridge, Rohan Dennis, Michael Hepburn, Luke Durbridge)
- 2012: Great Britain (Ed Clancy, Peter Kennaugh, Steven Burke, Geraint Thomas, Andy Tennant (qualifying round only))
- 2013: Australia (Glenn O'Shea, Alexander Edmondson, Mitchell Mulhern, Alexander Morgan)
- 2014: Australia (Glenn O'Shea, Alexander Edmondson, Luke Davison, Miles Scotson (qualifying round only))
- 2015: New Zealand (Pieter Bulling, Dylan Kennett, Alex Frame, Marc Ryan)
- 2016: Australia (Sam Welsford, Michael Hepburn, Callum Scotson, Miles Scotson Alexander Porter, Luke Davison (qualifying round only))
|
|
|
---|
| 1900–1919 | |
---|
| 1920–1939 | |
---|
| 1940–1959 | |
---|
| 1960–1979 | |
---|
| 1980–1999 | |
---|
| 2000–2019 | |
---|
|