Danny Clark (cyclist)
Australian cyclist (born 1951)
Danny Clark Full name Daniel Clark Born (1951-08-30 ) 30 August 1951 (age 73) George Town, Tasmania , Australia Discipline Track Role Rider European championships:
Omnium 1978, 1979, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988 Derny 1985, 1986, 1990 Motor-paced 1988 Madison 1979, 1988
Daniel "Danny" Clark OAM [ 1] (born 30 August 1951[ 2] in George Town, Tasmania , Australia ) is a retired track cyclist and road bicycle racer from Australia , who was a professional rider from 1974 to 1997. He won five world championships and at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich , West Germany , came second in the 1,000m time trial.[ 3]
Clark was often fastest finishing rider in six-day races, especially as Patrick Sercu slowed after the mid-1970s. Clark and the British rider, Tony Doyle , won many six-day races. Clark enjoyed the party atmosphere of the races, and continued to work in them as a Derny pacer after retiring.
Biography
Clark began cycling on a bike borrowed from a local enthusiast, which he used for three months before acquiring his eldest brother's semi-racer.[ 4] He became one of the most successful riders in six-day racing in the 1970s and 1980s, winning 74 races, second to Patrick Sercu's 88. Most of these wins came after a crash in the 1983 Frankfurt six-day which broke his hip. Clark still carries a plate inserted to help the fracture heal and said that when sprinting or climbing, only his right leg delivered full power.[ 4]
Clark won the Australian one-mile penny-farthing championship in Evandale, Tasmania, in 1989, beating the Briton Doug Pinkerton and Matthew Driver.[ 5]
He lives in Surfers Paradise , near Brisbane .[ 5]
Major results
Olympic Games
World championships
Besançon 1980:
Brno 1981:
Keirin
Silver, points
Leicester 1982:
Silver, keirin
Zurich 1983:
Silver, keirin
Bassano del Grappa 1985:
Vienna 1987:
Silver, motor-paced
Ghent 1988:
Motor-paced
Maebashi 1990:
Bronze, motor-paced
Bronze, points
Stuttgart 1991:
Motor-paced
Six-days
Nouméa: 1972 with Malcom Hill
Sydney: 1974 with Frank Atkins
Ghent: 1976, 1979, 1982 with Don Allan , 1986 with Tony Doyle , 1987, 1994 with Etienne De Wilde , 1990 with Roland Günther
Münster: 1977, 1980 with Don Allan, 1988 with Tony Doyle
Rotterdam: 1977, 1978, 1985 with René Pijnen , 1981 with Don Allan, 1986 with Francesco Moser , 1987 with Pierangelo Bincoletto , 1988 with Tony Doyle
Antwerp: 1978 with Freddy Maertens , 1987 with Etienne De Wilde
London: 1978, 1980 with Don Allan
Copenhagen: 1978 with Don Allan, 1986, 1987 with Tony Doyle, 1989, 1992 with Urs Freuler, 1990, 1991 with Jens Veggerby , 1995 with Jimmi Madsen
Herning: 1978, 1982 with Don Allan
Bremen: 1979 with René Pijnen, 1987 with Dietrich Thurau , 1988 with Tony Doyle, 1990 with Roland Günther, 1994 with Andreas Kappes
Maastricht: 1979 with Don Allan, 1984 with René Pijnen, 1985, 1987 with Tony Doyle
Hannover: 1980 with Don Allan
Cologne: 1980 with René Pijnen, 1985 with Dietrich Thurau, 1989 with Tony Doyle
Munich: 1980, 1981 with Don Allan, 1986 with Dietrich Thurau, 1988, 1990 with Tony Doyle
Grenoble: 1980 with Bernard Thévenet , 1989 with Gilbert Duclos-Lassalle
Dortmund: 1982 with Henry Rinklin , 1983, 1986, 1988 with Tony Doyle, 1987 with Roman Hermann, 1991, 1995 with Rolf Aldag
Berlin: 1983, 1986, 1988 with Tony Doyle, 1984 with Horst Schütz , 1985 with Hans-Henrik Ørsted
Bassano del Grappa: 1986 with Roberto Amadio and Francesco Moser, 1988 with Francesco Moser, 1989 with Adriano Baffi
Launceston: 1986 with Tony Doyle
Paris: 1986 with Bernard Vallet , 1988 with Tony Doyle
Stuttgart: 1989 with Uwe Bolten , 1992 with Pierangelo Bincoletto, 1995 with Etienne De Wilde
Buenos Aires : 1993 with Marcelo Alexandre
Nouméa: 2000 with Graeme Brown
European championships
Omnium 1978, 1979, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988
Derny 1985, 1986, 1990
Motor-paced 1988
Madison 1979 with Don Allan, 1988 with Tony Doyle
Honours
Clark received a Medal of the Order of Australia in 1986[ 1] and was inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame in 1987.[ 6] He received an Australian Sports Medal and a Centenary Medal in 2001.[ 7] [ 8]
References
External links