His first major success was in 1940, winning the
Giro d'Italia at the age of 20. On 7 November 1942 he set a world
hour record (45.798 km at the
Velodromo Vigorelli in
Milan). He rode a 93 inch gear and pedalled with an average cadence of 103.3 rpm. The bike is on display in the chapel of
Madonna del Ghisallo near
Como, Italy. Coppi beat
Maurice Archambaud's 45.767 km, set five years earlier on the same track. The record stood until it was beaten by
Jacques Anquetil in 1956. Twice, 1949 and 1952, Coppi won the Giro d'Italia and the Tour de France in the same year, the first to do so. He won the Giro five times, a record shared with
Alfredo Binda and Eddy Merckx. During the 1949 Giro he left
Gino Bartali by 11 minutes between
Cuneo and
Pinerolo. Coppi won the 1949 Tour de France by almost half an hour over everyone except Bartali. From the start of the mountains in the
Pyrenees to their end in the
Alps, Coppi took back the 55 minutes by which
Jacques Marinelli led him. Coppi won the
Giro di Lombardia a record five times (1946, 1947, 1948, 1949 and 1954). He won
Milan–San Remo three times (1946, 1948 and 1949). In the 1946 Milan–San Remo he attacked with nine others, five kilometres into a race of 292 km. He dropped the rest on the Turchino climb and won by 14 minutes. He also won
Paris–Roubaix and
La Flèche Wallonne (1950). He was also 1953
world road champion. In the first years of his career, Coppi was unable to ride the Tour de France. When he turned professional in 1940, the Tour de France was not held because of the Second World War. The Tour restarted in 1947, but Italians were not welcome yet. In 1948, Italians were welcome, but Coppi was suspended by the Italian cycling union because he had abandoned the
1948 Giro d'Italia in protest against the small penalty given to
Fiorenzo Magni. In 1949, Coppi was finally able to enter the Tour. After several stages, Coppi was more than half an hour behind in the general classification, but he gained time in the mountain stages, and ended the Tour winning the general classification and the mountains classification, both with his teammate Bartali in second place, also winning the team classification. In 1950, Coppi did not defend his Tour title, because he refused to ride together with Bartali. In 1951, he joined (riding together with Bartali), but was still affected by the death of his brother
Serse Coppi, and did not excel. In 1952, Coppi started again in the Tour. He won on the
Alpe d'Huez, which had been included for the first time that year. He attacked six kilometres from the summit to rid himself of the French rider,
Jean Robic. Coppi said: "I knew he was no longer there when I couldn't hear his breathing any more or the sound of his tyres on the road behind me". He rode like "a Martian on a bicycle", said Raphaël Géminiani. "He asked my advice about the gears to use, I was in the French team and he in the Italian, but he was a friend and normally my captain in our everyday team, so I could hardly refuse him. I saw a phenomenal rider that day". Coppi won the Tour by 28m 27s and the organiser,
Jacques Goddet, had to double the prizes for lower placings to keep other riders interested. It was his last Tour, having ridden three and won two. To conserve energy, he would have
soigneurs carry him around his hotel during Grand Tours. Bill McGann wrote: Comparing riders from different eras is a risky business subject to the prejudices of the judge. But if Coppi isn't the greatest rider of all time, then he is second only to Eddy Merckx. One can't judge his accomplishments by his list of wins because
World War II interrupted his career just as
World War I interrupted that of
Philippe Thys. Coppi won it all: the world hour record, the world championships, the
grands tours, classics as well as time trials. The great French cycling journalist, Pierre Chany says that between 1946 and 1954, once Coppi had broken away from the peloton, the peloton never saw him again. Can this be said of any other racer? Informed observers who saw both ride agree that Coppi was the more elegant rider who won by dint of his physical gifts as opposed to Merckx who drove himself and hammered his competition relentlessly by being the very embodiment of pure will. In 1955 Coppi and his lover
Giulia Occhini were put on trial for adultery, then illegal in Italy, and got suspended sentences. The scandal rocked conservative ultra-Catholic Italy and Coppi was disgraced. Coppi's career declined after the scandal. He had already been hit in 1951 by the death of his younger brother,
Serse Coppi, who crashed in a sprint in the
Giro del Piemonte and died of a
cerebral haemorrhage. Coppi could never match his old successes. Pierre Chany said he was first to be dropped each day in the
Vuelta a España in 1959.
Criterium organisers frequently cut their races to 45 km to be certain that Coppi could finish, he said. "Physically, he wouldn't have been able to ride even 10km further. He charged himself [took drugs] before every race". Coppi, said Chany, was "a magnificent and grotesque washout of a man, ironical towards himself; nothing except the warmth of simple friendship could penetrate his melancholia. But I'm talking of the end of his career. The last year! In 1959! I'm not talking about the great era. In 1959, he wasn't a racing cyclist any more. He was just clinging on [
il tentait de sauver les meubles]." Jacques Goddet wrote in an appreciation of Coppi's career in ''
L'Équipe: "We would like to have cried out to him 'Stop''!' And as nobody dared to, destiny took care of it."
Raphaël Géminiani said of Coppi's domination: When Fausto won and you wanted to check the time gap to the man in second place, you didn't need a Swiss stopwatch. The bell of the church clock tower would do the job just as well. Paris–Roubaix? Milan–San Remo? Lombardy? We're talking 10 minutes to a quarter of an hour. That's how Fausto Coppi was. ==Rivalry with Bartali==