Erik Hoffmann
Namibian cyclist (born 1981)
Personal information | |
---|---|
Full name | Erik Hoffmann |
Born | (1981-08-22) 22 August 1981 (age 43) Windhoek, Namibia |
Team information | |
Discipline | Road |
Role | Rider |
Professional teams | |
2006–2007 | 3C-Gruppe Lamonta |
2008 | Giant Asia Racing Team |
Erik Hoffmann (born 22 August 1981) is a Namibian professional road bicycle racer. He was born in Windhoek. He moved to University of Stuttgart, Germany in 2001 to study Electrical Engineering. During 2002 - 2004, he was part of Team Stuttgardia Stuttgart and ever since has been active in professional bicycle racing.
Palmarès
- 2003
- Silver All African Games, Road, Abuja, Nigeria
- 2004
- 1st, Nedbank Cycle Classic (NAM)
- 2005
- 3rd, Overall, Stuttgart-Strassburg
- 2006
- 1st, Günzach Allgäu
- 1st, Donnersbergkreis
- 1st, GP Baden-Baden
- 1st, Ludwigsburg-Eglosheim
- 2007
- Gold National Road Championships
- Circuito Montañés
- 1st, Stage 1, El Astillero
- 3rd, Stage 6, Santo Toribio
- Silver, B World Championships, Cape Town
- 2008
- 2nd, Stage 3, Tour de Taiwan, Baguashan
- Tour of East Java
- 3rd, Stage 3, Batu
- 2nd, Stage 5, Surabaya
- 1st, Backnang-Waldrems
- 2nd, Overall, Tour de Korea
- 2nd, Stage 1, Yamaga circuit
- 3rd, Stage 8, Yangyang
- 21st Olympic Games Beijing
- 2009
- Bronze, African Championships, Road Race, Namibia
- Bronze, African Championships, Individual Time Trial, Namibia
External links
- Erik Hoffmann at Cycling Archives
- Erik Hoffmann at ProCyclingStats
- Erik Hoffmann at Cycling Quotient
- Erik Hoffmann at Olympedia
- Erik Hoffmann at the Commonwealth Games Federation (archived)
- Erik Hoffmann at the Commonwealth Games Federation (archived)
- Erik Hoffmann at Cycling Archives
- http://www.erik-hoffmann.com/
- v
- t
- e
- Dan Craven (2005–2006)
- Erik Hoffmann (2007)
- Dan Craven (2008)
- Tjipee Murangi (2009)
- Joris Harteveld (2010)
- Lotto Petrus (2011–2012)
- Till Drobisch (2013)
- Raul Costa Seibeb (2014)
- Dan Craven (2015–2016)
- Till Drobisch (2017)
- Martin Freyer (2018)
- Alex Miller (2019)
- Dan Craven (2020)
- Drikus Coetzee (2021–2022)
- Tristan de Lange (2023)
- Alex Miller (2024)
This biographical article relating to Namibian cycling is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e