Steffen Kjærgaard

Steffen Kjærgaard
Personal information
Born (1973-05-24) 24 May 1973
Tønsberg, Norway
Team information
Current team Retired
Discipline Road
Role Rider
Professional team(s)
1996–1997 TVM–Farm Frites
1998–1999 Team Chicky World
2000–2003 U.S. Postal Service

Steffen Kjærgaard (born 24 May 1973 in Tønsberg) is a former Norwegian professional cyclist. Kjærgaard cycled for US Postal Service (2000–2003). He twice participated in the Tour de France, taking 89th place in 2000 and 101st place in 2001; in both years team captain Lance Armstrong initially won overall but was later disqualified due to doping. Known as a strong time-trial cyclist, Kjærgaard won the overall World Cup in track cycling in 1993. He won the Norwegian National Road Race Championship in 1994.[1]

Kjærgaard has won 12 Nordic Championship (Nordiska mesterskap) gold medals and three King's Cups (kongepokaler). He was director of sport for the Norwegian Cycling Federation until he had to resign in 2012 due to admitting the use of performance-enhancing drugs in his active career.[2] Kjærgaard is married and has two children.

Doping

After the doping allegations against Lance Armstrong, Kjærsgaard admitted use of performance-enhancing drugs on 23 October 2012.[3]

Participation

Major achievements

References

External links


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