Félix Sellier

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Félix Sellier
Aangereden door een auto - Hit by a car.jpg
Personal information
Full nameFélix Sellier
Nicknamele minneur
Born(1893-01-02)2 January 1893
Spy, Belgium
Died16 April 1965(1965-04-16) (aged 72)
Gembloux, Belgium
Team information
DisciplineRoad
RoleRider
Major wins
Paris–Brussels (1922, 1923, 1924)
Paris–Roubaix (1925)
Belgian National Road Race Champion
3 stages Tour de France

Félix Sellier (Spy, 2 January 1893 – Gembloux, 16 April 1965) was a Belgian professional road bicycle racer.

Stage victory in 1921 Tour de France[]

In the 1921 Tour de France, the cyclists were separated in two classes, the sponsored riders and the unsponsored riders. For the thirteenth stage, these classes started separated, partly because the Tour organisers wanted to punish the sponsored riders for not attacking the leader Léon Scieur,[1] and partly because the leader in the second class was helped by cyclists in the first class.[2] Sellier was one of the riders in the second class, and therefore could start two hours earlier than the favourites. Some of the second class cyclists including Sellier stayed ahead, and Sellier managed to win the stage.[3] Sellier would finish 8th overall of the second class cyclists, and 16th in the overall combined classification.

In the next year, Sellier started the Tour de France as sponsored cyclist. He again won a stage, but this time he had started at the same time as everybody else. He finished the race in third place.

Major results[]

1912
Binche-Tournai-Binche
1919
Tour of Belgium (independents)
1920
Marchienne-au-Pont
Mellet
Moustier
1921
Jemeppe-Bastogne-Jemeppe
Tour de France:
Winner stage 13
1922
Tour de France:
Winner stage 14
3rd overall classification
Paris–Brussels
Arlon-Oostende
1923
Criterium du midi
Belgium Belgian National Road Race Championships
Paris–Brussels
1924
Gembloux
Oupeye
Tour of Belgium
Paris–Brussels
1925
Gembloux
GP de soissons
Paris–Roubaix
1926
Belgium Belgian National Road Race Championships
Tour de France:
Winner stage 4
1927
Gembloux
1928
Six days of Brussels (with )
St. Servais

References[]

  1. ^ "15ème Tour de France 1921" (in French). Memoire du cyclisme. Retrieved 18 June 2009.
  2. ^ Henk Leenaers (2003). "Vergeten Tour-winnaar uit Tongeren" (in Dutch). Fiets. Retrieved 17 June 2009.
  3. ^ "15ème Tour de France 1921 – 13ème étape" (in French). Memoire du cyclisme. Retrieved 18 June 2009.

External links[]

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