Egan Bernal

Cyclist

Birthday January 13, 1997

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Bogotá, Colombia

Age 27 years old

Nationality Colombia

Height 1.75m

Weight 60 kg

#24239 Most Popular

1997

Egan Arley Bernal Gómez (born 13 January 1997) is a Colombian professional cyclist who rides for UCI WorldTeam.

2014

He initially focused on and excelled at mountain biking, winning races in Brazil, Costa Rica, and the United States, and getting both silver (2014) and bronze (2015) in the UCI Mountain Bike World Championships junior cross country events.

2015

Alongside mountain biking, Bernal had begun to gain success in junior road racing both in Colombia and Italy, winning the Clasica Juventudes Cajica and the Sognando Il Giro delle Fiandre in 2015.

Bernal was signed by Gianni Savio to the team on a four year contract, partly on the evidence of a VO2 max reading of 88.8ml/kg/min provided by his agent, Paolo Alberati.

He began racing among seniors right away, bypassing the usual U23 career route.

2016

In 2016, he obtained top 20 results in the La Méditerranéenne, the GP Industria & Artigianato, Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali and Giro del Trentino, before winning the (then) lower level Tour of Bihor and coming fourth in both the Tour de Slovenie and the Tour de l'Avenir.

2017

2017 saw top ten finishes for Bernal in the Vuelta a San Juan and the Tour de Langkawi.

He later finished third overall in the Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali, second in the Giro dell'Appennino, and ninth in the Tour of the Alps.

His first professional wins came in the Sibiu Cycling Tour, with two stage victories as well as the overall.

He also won two stages and the overall title at the Tour de l'Avenir.

2018

Although he was still under contract to and a contract buyout payment reported to be €350,000 was necessary, Bernal signed a five year deal with from the 2018 season.

He completed his time in Savio's team with fifth in the Giro della Toscana and top twenty places in Giro dell'Emilia, Milano–Torino and his first monument, Il Lombardia.

Bernal made his debut for in the Tour Down Under as team co-leader, in which he won the young rider classification and finished sixth in the overall standings.

In February 2018, Bernal won the Colombian National Time Trial Championships.

He went on to win the first edition of the Tour Colombia (then called Colombia Oro y Paz), through an attack on the final 20 km climb on the last day.

Bernal's next race was the Volta a Catalunya, in which he was second on general classification when he fell on a wet descent in the final stage, fracturing his clavicle and scapula.

The following month, Bernal competed in the Tour de Romandie, winning stage three of the race, an individual time trial and finishing second overall behind Primož Roglič.

In May, Bernal achieved his first UCI World Tour win in the Tour of California, finishing over a minute ahead of Tejay van Garderen, and winning two stages.

In July, he rode the Tour de France as a domestique for team leaders Chris Froome and Geraint Thomas.

He was the youngest participant in the race, and was still able to drop many contenders in the mountains.

2019

In 2019 he won the Tour de France, becoming the first Latin American rider to do so, and the youngest winner since 1909.

At the 2021 Giro d'Italia, Bernal took his second Grand Tour win.

Bernal was born in Bogotá, Colombia, and raised in Zipaquirá.

He is the oldest child of Germán, an employee at the Salt Cathedral, and Flor, a flower factory worker.

His father had been a keen amateur cyclist, and he started riding on a second hand bicycle at age five.

At nine, against his father's wishes, he entered and easily won a race in his home town, the prize for which included a training scholarship.

He studied one semester at Universidad de la Sabana in Chia, Colombia.

Bernal started his 2019 season in Colombia.

He rode in the national championships and in his home stage race, the Tour Colombia.

Bernal, however, was unable to defend his title in the race, finishing fourth overall.

Bernal later went to Europe to compete in Paris–Nice.

The Colombian impressed in the crosswinds, the individual time trial, and in the mountains, claiming the overall victory ahead of Nairo Quintana.

Bernal next finished third in the Volta a Catalunya, and was scheduled to lead Team Ineos at the Giro d'Italia until he broke a collarbone in a training injury in Andorra.

He returned to racing for the Tour de Suisse, in which he won the overall classification and the queen stage.

Bernal was elevated to be co-leader of the team with defending champion Thomas for the Tour de France, because of the absence through injury of Froome.

After the stage 2 team time trial he had a top ten position in the general classification, which he retained, despite an unimpressive individual time trial performance, into the three decisive alpine stages.

An attack on the last climb of stage 18 saw him move into second place overall, ahead of Thomas, and he took the yellow jersey as race leader on stage 19 after an attack on the Col de l'Iseran.

The stage was shortened because of landslides and a severe hail storm with 38 km remaining.

Although the stage positions were considered null, times were taken at the top of the Iseran, putting Bernal in the lead with margins of forty five seconds over previous leader Julian Alaphilippe and one minute and eleven seconds over Thomas.

He defended his lead on stage 20, another mountain stage, and confirmed his victory with the largely ceremonial ride onto the Champs-Élysées in Paris.