CYCLIST

Giampaolo Caruso

1980 - Today

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Giampaolo Caruso (born 15 August 1980) is an Italian former professional road bicycle racer, who rode professionally between 2002 and 2015 for the Würth, Lampre–Fondital, LPR Brakes–Ballan, Ceramica Flaminia and Team Katusha squads. During his professional career, Caruso took five victories – all coming in Italy – with three stage wins and the general classification at the 2009 Brixia Tour, and a one-day race success at the 2014 Milano–Torino. He was also twice suspended for doping violations – in 2003, he was given a six-month ban for the use of nandrolone at the 2003 Tour Down Under, and in 2015, he was banned for two years after a positive drugs test for erythropoietin (EPO) recorded three years earlier. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 17 different languages on Wikipedia. Giampaolo Caruso is the 1,054th most popular cyclist (down from 942nd in 2024), the 4,932nd most popular biography from Italy (down from 4,808th in 2019) and the 141st most popular Italian Cyclist.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1980, Giampaolo Caruso ranks 965Before him are Darius Vassell, Marika Domińczyk, Tyson Kidd, Marnette Patterson, Anne Spiegel, and Ricardo Mello. After him are Stéphane Robert, Israel Castro, Jang Yoon-jeong, Sergio Bernardo Almirón, Caron Butler, and Dewi Sandra.

Others Born in 1980

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In Italy

Among people born in Italy, Giampaolo Caruso ranks 4,939 out of 5,161Before him are Lucia Bronzetti (1998), Mattia Cassani (1983), Mirko Bortolotti (1990), Andrea Consigli (1987), Massimiliano Rosolino (1978), Giuseppe Maddaloni (1976), Marash Kumbulla (2000), Sebastiano Esposito (2002), Diego Occhiuzzi (1981), Oscar Gatto (1985), Giuseppe Mascara (1979), and Arianna Errigo (1988).

Among CYCLISTS In Italy

Among cyclists born in Italy, Giampaolo Caruso ranks 143Before him are Cristian Moreni (1972), Matteo Carrara (1979), Edoardo Affini (1996), Dario Cataldo (1985), Pavel Sivakov (1997), Marco Marcato (1984), Giampaolo Cheula (1979), and Oscar Gatto (1985). After him are Roberto Petito (1971), Francesco Gavazzi (1984), Gianni Moscon (1994), and Manuel Belletti (1985).