CYCLIST

Fabiana Luperini

1974 - Today

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Fabiana Luperini (born 14 January 1974) is an Italian professional cyclist. She was born in Pontedera, Italy. Luperini has won the Giro d'Italia Femminile a record five times, with four consecutive victories in 1995–1998 and a fifth ten years later, in 2008. She has won the Grande Boucle Féminine Internationale three times consecutively, from 1995 to 1997. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 17 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 15 in 2024). Fabiana Luperini is the 870th most popular cyclist (up from 898th in 2024), the 4,807th most popular biography from Italy (down from 4,783rd in 2019) and the 126th most popular Italian Cyclist.

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Among CYCLISTS

Among cyclists, Fabiana Luperini ranks 870 out of 1,613Before her are Maarten Tjallingii, Simon Clarke, Marc Soler, Ben O'Connor, Bryan Steel, and David López. After her are Mauricio Soler, Raivis Belohvoščiks, David Etxebarria, Yoanka González, Martin Elmiger, and Pierrick Fédrigo.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1974, Fabiana Luperini ranks 890Before her are Michael Kolganov, Niklas Sundin, Mahesh Bhupathi, Christian Riganò, Joe Perry, and Sofia Ledarp. After her are Irina Spîrlea, Stipe Erceg, Percy Montgomery, Zoe McLellan, Carlos Baute, and Jaroslav Špaček.

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In Italy

Among people born in Italy, Fabiana Luperini ranks 4,808 out of 5,161Before her are Alberto Cirio (1972), Giuseppe Sculli (1981), Cesare Bovo (1983), Luca Marini (1997), Marco Andreolli (1986), and Roberto Gagliardini (1994). After her are Roberto Di Donna (1968), Marco Fabbri (1988), Lorenzo De Silvestri (1988), Davide Gualtieri (1971), Andrea Ferrigato (1969), and Alessandro Buongiorno (1999).

Among CYCLISTS In Italy

Among cyclists born in Italy, Fabiana Luperini ranks 126Before her are Andrea Noè (1969), Fabrizio Guidi (1972), Sergio Barbero (1969), Flavio Anastasia (1969), Giacomo Nizzolo (1989), and Giovanni Visconti (1983). After her are Andrea Ferrigato (1969), Manuel Quinziato (1979), Daniele Bennati (1980), Salvatore Commesso (1975), Alberto Bettiol (1993), and Danilo Napolitano (1981).