Amateur cycling years Born in
Rheden, Breukink was born in a cycling family, as his father Willem Breukink was director of the
Gazelle bicycle factory. Despite this, he chose to be a footballer. In 1980 he changed to pursue a cycling career. In 1982, this appeared to be a good choice, when he won the Dutch national pursuit championship for juniors. At the
1984 Olympic Games, Erik Breukink competed with
Gert Jakobs,
Maarten Ducrot and
Jos Alberts in the 100 km Team Pursuit and finish fourth place. In 1985, Breukink won 2 time trial stages in
Olympia's Tour, and finished 3rd place overall. He decided to switch to a professional career.
Professional cycling years at the
1993 Tour de France Breukink made his debut as a pro in 1986 for the Skala-Gazelle team. He turned out to be a time trial specialist and was a good climber. In his
Tour de France debut in
1987, he won one stage and finished second in the
young rider classification. His real breakthrough in the major courses was the 1988
Giro d'Italia, where he debuted with a 2nd place, winning the
Gavia Pass stage in a snowstorm. In the
1988 Tour de France he won the
young rider classification and finished 13th place. In the
1989 Tour de France, he showed his time trial skills by winning the prologue, and wearing the
yellow jersey for one day. In that year's Giro d'Italia, he almost won, but lost the lead in the
Dolomites due to hunger. In 1990, Breukink wanted to focus on the Tour de France, so he switched to the PDM team, that allowed him to do so. In the
1990 Tour de France, the result was good, winning two stages and finishing 3rd overall. The result could even have been better, but Breukink suffered from some bad luck: in the climb to the
Tourmalet Breukink had to switch bicycles three times. In 1991, Breukink together with the entire PDM-team had to leave the tour ranked 3rd, officially due to food poisoning, but it was later exposed that it was due to
Intralipid. In 1992, he appeared weak, especially in his favourite time trials. In 1993, Breukink switched to the team, where his performance improved again. Bad luck followed him however, as just before the start of the
1993 Tour de France, he was hit by a car test riding the new
Lotus 110. The damage to his left knee caused him to give up during the Tour. Breukink rode the Tour de France four times afterwards, but never reached his old level. In 1997 he ended his professional cycling career, having ridden 11 Tours de France and won 4 stages. He garnered 61 career victories in total.
Sports commentator After one year as a Public Relations officer for the Rabobank-team, Breukink started as co-commentator for the
NOS, covering the Tour de France. In 2002 and 2003, the GP Erik Breukink, a UCI level 2.3 course, was run, with
Erik Dekker and
Fabian Cancellara as winners, but it was discontinued in 2004 due to financial problems.
Team manager On 13 January 2004, it was announced that Erik Breukink started as a team manager for the team. Thanks to his ONCE-years, Erik Breukink speaks Spanish fluently, which is helpful to communicate with the Spanish cyclists in the Rabobank team and cyclist
Denis Menchov, who also speaks Spanish better than English. Since Breukink became team manager, the Rabobank cycling team's successes have included
Paris–Tours,
Milan–San Remo, the
Brabantse Pijl (3×), the
Tirreno–Adriatico (2×), the
Tour de Romandie, the final classification and three stages in the
Vuelta a España, 6 stages in the Tour de France and the
mountains classification (2×) in the Tour de France. On, 20 July 2006, Breukink received the "médaille de la fidélité" from the Tour de France organisation, because he had been present in the Tour de France for 20 years. (11 times as rider, 1 time as PR-officer, 5 times as sports commentator and 3 times as team manager). ==Career achievements==