Dgamolidin Abdoujaparov, 1985 Giro d’Italia Dilettanti Points Jersey (3x Tour de France Green Jersey Winner)

$680.00

An Authentic 1985 Girobio Points Jersey

Djamolidine Abdoujaparov was a sprinting powerhouse who started his amateur career off right by winning three stages of the 1985 Giro d’Italia Dilettanti and the points jersey. He went on to win the Points Classification three times at the Tour de France (1991,1993, and 1994), once at the Giro d’Italia in 1994, and at the Vuelta a España in 1992.

The Giro d’Italia Dilettanti (aka Baby Giro, Girobio, or Giro Ciclistico d’Italia) is an Italian amateur stage race that was founded in 1970. The Girobio is an important race in the Italian amateur calendar and is considered an amateur version of the Giro d’Italia. Past winners include such racing legends as Francisco Moser, Marco Pantani, Gilberto Simoni, and Danilo Di Luca.

This jersey was acquired directly from the Augusto Gotti family and was part of the collection in the legendary Bar Augusto in Villa d’Alme, Italy. Bar Augusto was a key host to professional and amateur cycling teams from the 1960s through the 1980s.

This jersey includes the original label from Bar Augusto.

All jerseys are sold unframed. Framed images are display ideas only.

Size: 4

Chest: 18 inches / 45.5 cm  (36 inches / 91 cm measured armpit to armpit)

Length: 28.5 in / 72.5 cm

Maker: Santini, Made in Italy

80% Wool – 20% Acrylic

Each jersey is one of a kind; please look carefully at the photos to determine the condition.

 

In stock

Description

Djamolidine Abdoujaparov

Djamolidine Mirgarifanovich Abdoujaparov (born 28 February 1964) is a former professional road racing cyclist from Uzbekistan. Abdoujaparov was a sprinter, nicknamed “The Tashkent Terror” as he was so ferocious in the sprints. His unorthodox and often erratic sprinting caused a number of crashes. He competed in the individual road race at the Olympic Games on two occasions: in 1988 for the Soviet Union and in 1996 for Uzbekistan; he placed fifth in 1988.

Career

Abdoujaparov was born in Tashkent to a Crimean Tatar family that was forcibly deported to Uzbekistan during Soviet rule. A graduate of the Soviet sports program, he came into his prime just as his country gained independence; after initial difficulties (including Uzbekistan’s not being affiliated to the UCI, which caused problems with the Cycling World Championship) he signed for a Western professional team and became one of the world’s top sprinters.

Abdoujaparov had numerous tussles with Laurent Jalabert in the Tour de France’s green sprinters jersey competition in the early 1990s. In 1991, Abdoujaparov won the competition despite a spectacular crash during the final stage on the Champs-Élysées in Paris, where he collided with the barriers 100 m before the finish and somersaulted into the air. Despite still holding enough points to win the sprinters’ jersey, he had to cross the line unaided. Members of his team picked him up, put him back on the bike, and he rode slowly over the last few meters, medical staff walking alongside him.

In his last complete tour in 1996, Abdoujaparov achieved a mountain breakaway for his last stage win, unusual for a sprinter. By this stage, though, results were not as good, and after failing seven separate anti-doping tests during the 1997 season, including twice at the 1997 Tour de France, he retired from cycling. He failed the tests screening for the presence in his body of, among others, the anti-asthma drug clenbuterol.

Abdoujaparov, a British rock band formed by former Carter USM guitarist Les “Fruitbat” Carter, is named after him.

Excerpt from Wikipedia

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Bar Augusto

Bar Augusto, located in Alme (Bergamo), Italy, was renowned for its support of cycling teams and its world-class bicycle racing collection that focused on trophies and race-worn jerseys. A family-owned business, the bar and its attached inn flourished in the 1970s and 1980s. Augusto Gotti, the enterprise’s face, welcomed amateur national teams to stay at Bar Augusto while the riders trained and raced in the region. Many Western and Eastern Bloc national teams embraced the Gotti family’s welcoming spirit and were among the most ardent supporters.

 

Bar Augusto 1966
Augusto Gotti (Center) with Edy Schütz (Left), Luxembourg National Champion and winner of the 1966 Tour of Luxembourg,  and an unknown third person pictured in the interior of the famous watering hole.

Augusto was a devoted cycling fan and astute collector of jerseys. Active and retired professional and amateur riders gave the bar hundreds of jerseys, and all hung with pride on the walls of the storied bar. The jersey collection read like a venerable who’s who of the cycling world from the 1950s through the 1980s. Coppi, Gimondi, Motta, Merckx, Anquetil, Van Looy, Altig, and hundreds more professional jerseys hung alongside the best of the best Eastern Bloc riders. Given its incredible diversity, depth, and breadth, it would be challenging, if not impossible, to build the same collection today.

With time, Augusto decided to retire, close the bar, and enjoy a more relaxed pace of life in his autumn years. A year or so before Augusto passed away, and with the help of former Polish and US National Team Coach Eddie Borysewicz, we were honored to acquire the Gotti Collection. Augusto’s and our collection combined beautifully, and between the two, there were only two overlapping items: an Eddy Merckx maillot jaune and a Bernard Hinault Renault team jersey. To this day, our collection is what it is thanks in no small measure to a quaint bar and inn tucked into a picturesque valley in Northern Italy.

By Brett Horton, Jan 2021

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Each jersey is one of a kind; please look carefully at the photos to determine the condition.

Additional information

Weight 2 lbs

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