Sid Barras
Personal information | |
---|---|
Full name | Sidney Barras |
Nickname | Super Sid[1] |
Born | (1948-04-03) 3 April 1948 (age 76) England Great Britain |
Team information | |
Discipline | Road |
Role | Rider |
Rider type | Sprinter |
Professional teams | |
1970 | Bantel - Raleigh |
1971–1973 | Bantel |
1974 | TI - Raleigh |
1975–1977 | Bantel |
1978 | Viking - Campagnolo |
1979 | Carlton - Weinmann |
1980 | Weinmann - Chicken |
1981 | Coventry Eagle - Campagnolo |
1982–1984 | Falcon - Campagnolo |
1985–1986 | Moducel |
1987 | Watertech - Dawes |
Major wins | |
British National Road Race Champion (1979) | |
Sid Barras (born 3 April 1948)[2][3] is an English former professional road racing cyclist from Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire.[4] He was a professional for 18 years. One of Britain's foremost racing cyclists in the 1970s and 1980s[citation needed] with 380 wins,[5] in 18 years as a professional. He was national champion three times and won a stage of the Tour of Majorca[citation needed] and in the 1973 Tour of Switzerland.[6]
In 1999, Barras was directeur sportif of the British UCI division 3 team, Men's Health.[7] He was manager of Recycling.co.uk in 2007.[8]
He won the national over-50 championship in 2008.[9] In 2009, he was inducted into the British Cycling Hall of Fame.[10]
Barras is father of former professional cyclist, Tom Barras.[1]
Palmarès
- 1970
- 4th British National Road Race Championships (Professional)
- 1st London – Holyhead
- 1971
- 2nd British National Road Race Championships (Professional)
- 2nd Tom Simpson Memorial (Harworth)
- 2nd British National Stayers Championships
- 1973
- 1st Stage 10, Tour de Suisse
- 1st Tom Simpson Memorial (Harworth)
- 1974
- 1st Tom Simpson Memorial (Harworth)
- 1976
- 2nd British National Road Race Championships (Professional)
- 1977
- 1st London – Holyhead
- 5th British National Road Race Championships (Professional)
- 1979
- 1st British National Road Race Championships (Professional)
- 1st British National Circuit Race Championships (Professional)
- 1980
- 1st Tom Simpson Memorial (Harworth)
- 2nd British National Road Race Championships (Professional)
- 1981
- 4th British National Road Race Championships (Professional)
References
- ^ a b "Sid Barras: Famous Last Words". Cycling Weekly. 5 December 2011. Retrieved 19 June 2014.
- ^ "Profile". cyclingwebsite.net. Archived from the original on 27 July 2011.
- ^ "Profile". cyclebase.nl.
- ^ "Register of Births, Deaths & Marriages". Tees Valley Indexes.
- ^ "Newport Nocturn". cyclingnews.com. 1 September 2007.
- ^ "Riders:B". Professional Cycling Palmarès Site. Archived from the original on 6 September 2008.
- ^ The Independent, UK, 29 April 1999
- ^ "Recycling.co.uk / MG-xPower / Litespeed". world-of-cycling.com. 2005. Archived from the original on 21 November 2007.
- ^ "Barras proved he's still a class act". The Telegraph and Argus. 9 September 2008.
- ^ "50 Cycling Heroes Named in British Cycling's Hall of Fame". British Cycling. 17 December 2009. Archived from the original on 20 December 2009.
- v
- t
- e
- Jack Holmes (1938)
- Jack Fancourt (1939)
- Reg Braddick (1944)
- J. A. O'Driscoll (1945)
- Ernie Clements (1946)
- Alex Taylor (1947)
- Bob Maitland (1948)
- A D Newman (1949)
- Gordon Thomas (1950)
- Peter Procter (1951)
- Graham Vines (1952)
- Ted Gerrard (1953)
- B J Sandy (1954)
- Bernard King (1955)
- Alan Jackson (1956)
- Ron Coe (1957 Independent)
- Stan Brittain (1957 Amateur)
- Bill Seggar (1958)
- Ernie Clements (1943)
- Percy Stallard (1944)
- Ernie Clements (1945)
- George Edwards (1946)
- E I Upton (1947)
- R C Ashwin (1948)
- Dave Bedwell (1949)
- Ralph Parkin (1950)
- Charlie Bland (1951)
- Mike Howarth (1952)
- Derek Evans (1953)
- Reg Browne (1954)
- Des Robinson (1955)
- Mike England (1956)
- Charlie Mather (1957)
- Bill Baty (1958)
(1946–1958)
- A H Clarke (1946)
- Dennis Jaggard (1947)
- Harold Johnson (1948)
- Bob Thom (1949)
- Leonard West (1950)
- Dave Bedwell (1951)
- Ian Steel (1952)
- Bob Maitland (1953)
- Arthur Ilsley (1954)
- Graham Vines (1955)
- not held in 1956
- Ron Coe (1958–1957)
(1959–1995)
- Bill Baty (1959)
- Bill Bradley (1960–(1961)
- Keith Butler (1962)
- Bob Addy (1963)
- Pete Gordon (1964)
- Les West (1965)
- Arthur Metcalfe (1966)
- Les West (1967)
- Pete Matthews (1968)
- Brian Jolly (1969)
- Dave Rollinson (1970–1971)
- Doug Dailey (1972)
- Grant Thomas (1973)
- William Nickson (1974)
- Kevin Apter (1975)
- Doug Dailey (1976)
- Steve Lawrence (1977)
- Robert Millar (1978–1979)
- Steve Lawrence (1980)
- Mark Bell (1981)
- Jeff Williams (1982)
- John Cavanagh (1983)
- Neil Martin (1984)
- Paul Watson (1985)
- Deno Davie (1986)
- Paul Curran (1987)
- Neil Hoban (1988)
- David Cook (1989)
- Simeon Hempsall (1990)
- John Hughes (1991)
- Simon Bray (1992)
- Rob Harris (1993–1994)
- Simon Bray (1995)
(1959–1995)
- Ron Coe (1959)
- race was not held in 1960
- Dave Bedwell (1961)
- John Harvey (1962)
- Albert Hitchen (1963)
- Keith Butler (1964)
- Albert Hitchen (1965)
- Dick Goodman (1966)
- Colin Lewis (1967–1968)
- Bill Lawrie (1969)
- Les West (1970)
- Danny Horton (1971)
- Gary Crewe (1972)
- Brian Jolly (1973)
- Keith Lambert (1974)
- Les West (1975)
- Geoff Wiles (1976)
- Phil Edwards (1977)
- Phil Corley (1978)
- Sid Barras (1979)
- Keith Lambert (1980)
- William Nickson (1981)
- John Herety (1982)
- Phil Thomas (1983)
- Steve Joughin (1984)
- Ian Banbury (1985)
- Mark Bell (1986)
- Paul Sherwen (1987)
- Steve Joughin (1988)
- Tim Harris (1989)
- Colin Sturgess (1990)
- Brian Smith (1991)
- Sean Yates (1992)
- Malcolm Elliott (1993)
- Brian Smith (1994)
- Robert Millar (1995)
- Dave Rand (1996)
- Jeremy Hunt (1997)
- Matt Stephens (1998)
- John Tanner (1999–2000)
- Jeremy Hunt (2001)
- Julian Winn (2002)
- Roger Hammond (2003–2004)
- Russell Downing (2005)
- Hamish Haynes (2006)
- David Millar (2007)
- Rob Hayles (2008)
- Kristian House (2009)
- Geraint Thomas (2010)
- Bradley Wiggins (2011)
- Ian Stannard (2012)
- Mark Cavendish (2013)
- Peter Kennaugh (2014–2015)
- Adam Blythe (2016)
- Steve Cummings (2017)
- Connor Swift (2018)
- Ben Swift (2019)
- not held in 2020
- Ben Swift (2021)
- Mark Cavendish (2022)
- Fred Wright (2023)
This biographical article related to English cycling is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e