Armand Blanchonnet

Biographical information

RolesCompeted in Olympic Games
SexMale
Full nameArmand•Blanchonnet
Used nameArmand•Blanchonnet
Nick/petnamesLe phénomène / King-Kong
Born23 December 1903 in Gipcy, Allier (FRA)
Died17 September 1968 (aged 64 years 8 months 25 days) in Cernay-la-Ville, Yvelines (FRA)
Measurements182 cm / 78 kg
AffiliationsVélo Club de Levallois, Levallois-Perret (FRA)
NOC France
Medals OG
Gold 2
Silver 0
Bronze 0
Total 2

Biography

At his local sports club Armand Blanchonnet trained in running, swimming, and cycling, specialising in the latter. In 1924 Blanchonnet competed in the French national road race championships for amateurs and finished second behind René Hamel. The result earned both riders places at the Paris Olympics, with Blanchonnet going on to dominate in the road race, winning by almost 10 minutes, ahead of Rik Hoevenaers of Belgium in second and Hamel in third. The two other French riders, Georges Wambst and André Leducq, finished eighth and ninth, respectively, with the home riders also winning gold in the combined team event. A few weeks after the Olympics, Blanchonnet capped off the year by winning bronze in the amateur road race at the World Championships.

Despite his initial success Blanchonnet only went on to win a small number of races after the Olympics. He focused on six-day racing, both in France and across the Atlantic, finishing third in an event in Detroit in 1928. Back home he won six-day titles in Paris in 1930 and in Marseille in 1932. Sandwiched between these two wins Blanchonnet also became the French road race champion in 1931. He retired from the sport a few years later and worked in the insurance sector.

Results

Games Discipline (Sport) / Event NOC / Team Pos Medal As
1924 Summer Olympics Cycling Road (Cycling) FRA Armand Blanchonnet
Road Race, Individual, Men (Olympic) 1 Gold
Road Race, Team, Men (Olympic) France 1 Gold