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German cyclist (born 1976)
Jan van Eijden (born 10 August 1976 in
Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler,
Rhineland-Palatinate) is a German
track cyclist born in
Bad Neuenahr. He is a double
World Champion in sprint and team sprint. He also won one world cup classic and four German national titles.
He retired from active racing in 2006 and worked as a sprint coach for the
Great Britain Cycling Team until November 2021.
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Major results
- 1994: 1st in UCI Track World Championships - 1 km time trial (juniors)
- 1995: 1st in
UCI Track Cycling World Championships - team sprint
- 1996: 3rd in
UCI Track World Championships - 1 km time trial
- 1997: 3rd in German national track cycling championships - sprint
- 1997: 2nd in
UCI Track World Championships - team sprint
- 1999: 1st in German national track cycling championships - team sprint
- 1999: 3rd in German national track cycling championships - sprint
- 2000: 1st in
UCI Track World Championships - sprint
- 2000: 1st in German national track cycling championships - sprint
- 2000: 1st in German national track cycling championships - team sprint
- 2000: 2nd in German national track cycling championships - keirin
- 2002: 3rd in German national track cycling championships - keirin
- 2003: 2nd in World cup classic
Aguascalientes - keirin
- 2003: 3rd in World cup classic Cape Town - sprint
- 2003: 2nd in German national track cycling championships - team sprint
- 2003: 2nd in German national track cycling championships - sprint
- 2004: 2nd in World cup classic Aguascalientes - keirin
- 2004: 3rd in World cup classic Aguascalientes - team sprint
- 2004: 3rd in World cup classic Manchester - sprint
- 2004: 2nd in German national track cycling championships - keirin
- 2004: 1st in German national track cycling championships - sprint
- 2005: 1st in World cup classic Moscow - team sprint
- 2005: 2nd in German national track cycling championships - keirin
- 2005: 2nd in German national track cycling championships - team sprint
- 2006: 3rd in World cup classic Sydney - keirin
References
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1995: Germany (
Jens Fiedler,
Michael Hübner,
Jan van Eijden)
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1996: Australia (
Darryn Hill,
Shane Kelly,
Gary Neiwand)
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1997–
98: France (
Vincent Le Quellec,
Florian Rousseau,
Arnaud Tournant)
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1999–
2001: France (
Laurent Gané,
Florian Rousseau,
Arnaud Tournant)
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2002: Great Britain (
Chris Hoy,
Craig MacLean,
Jamie Staff)
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2003: Germany (
Carsten Bergemann,
Jens Fiedler,
René Wolff)
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2004: France (
Mickaël Bourgain,
Laurent Gané,
Arnaud Tournant)
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2005: Great Britain (
Chris Hoy,
Jamie Staff,
Jason Queally)
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2006–
07: France (
Grégory Baugé,
Mickaël Bourgain,
Arnaud Tournant)
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2008: France (
Grégory Baugé,
Kévin Sireau,
Arnaud Tournant)
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2009: France (
Grégory Baugé,
Mickaël Bourgain,
Kévin Sireau)
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2010: Germany (
Robert Förstemann,
Maximilian Levy,
Stefan Nimke)
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2011: Germany (
René Enders,
Maximilian Levy,
Stefan Nimke)
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2012: Australia (
Shane Perkins,
Scott Sunderland,
Matthew Glaetzer)
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2013: Germany (
René Enders,
Stefan Bötticher,
Maximilian Levy)
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2014: New Zealand (
Ethan Mitchell,
Sam Webster,
Edward Dawkins)
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2015: France (
Grégory Baugé,
Michaël D'Almeida,
Kévin Sireau)
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2016–
17: New Zealand (
Ethan Mitchell,
Sam Webster,
Edward Dawkins)
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2018: Netherlands (
Nils van 't Hoenderdaal,
Harrie Lavreysen,
Jeffrey Hoogland,
Matthijs Büchli)
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2019–
20: Netherlands (
Roy van den Berg,
Harrie Lavreysen,
Jeffrey Hoogland,
Matthijs Büchli)
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2021: Netherlands (
Roy van den Berg,
Harrie Lavreysen,
Jeffrey Hoogland)
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2022: Australia (
Leigh Hoffman,
Matthew Richardson,
Matthew Glaetzer)
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2023: Netherlands (
Roy van den Berg,
Harrie Lavreysen,
Jeffrey Hoogland)
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