- Source: Lauri Aus
- Ag2r-La Mondiale
- Poros engkol
- Renang pada Olimpiade Musim Panas 1976
- Eero Markkanen
- Tampereen Ilves
- 5000 meter
- Daftar pemain olahraga elektronik
- Daftar naskah Septuaginta (A-311)
- SMS Goeben
- Lauri Aus
- Decathlon–AG2R La Mondiale
- Lauri (given name)
- Aus (surname)
- List of racing cyclists and pacemakers with a cycling-related death
- Tartu
- List of people who died in traffic collisions
- Cycling at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's road time trial
- List of wins by Chazal and its successors
- List of Estonians
Lauri Aus (4 November 1970 – 20 July 2003) was an Estonian professional cyclist who represented his native country at three consecutive Summer Olympics, starting in 1992.
Early life and career
Aus was born in Tartu and grew up in the village of Luua in Jõgeva County. His professional cycling career began in 1995 with the French cycling team Mutuelle de Seine-et-Marne. After four wins in 1996, he was signed to Casino the following year alongside countryman Jaan Kirsipuu. He remained with this team until his death, which was renamed the AG2R Citroën Team in 2000. Aus won a Tour du Limousin (1997), a Tour Poitou-Charentes en Nouvelle-Aquitaine (1998), Classic Haribo (1998) and a Grand Prix d'Isbergues (1999). In 1999, he was fifth at Milan–San Remo. In 2000, he became Estonian road champion.
In 1992, 1996 and 2000, Aus represented his home country at the Summer Olympic Games. At the 1992 Summer Olympic Games in Barcelona, he finished fifth in the road race.
Death and legacy
On 20 July 2003, while cycling on the Aovere-Kallaste-Omedu road in Tartu County in preparation for a later race in Karksi-Nuia, he was struck from behind by an Opel Ascona. He died of his injuries en route to a hospital, aged thirty-two. He was buried at Raadi cemetery in Tartu. The driver of the vehicle was determined to have been drunk and later sentenced to three and a half years imprisonment.
Since 2004, the Lauri Aus GP memorial cycling race is held annually at the Pirita-Kloostrimetsa race circuit, next to the Pirita Velodrome, in Tallinn in honour of Aus.
In July 2019, a memorial bench commemorating Aus was opened to the public in Aus' hometown of Luua, by Aus' parents, children, widow, first coach Kalev Raudsepp, and politician Aivar Kokk.
Major results
References
External links
(in Estonian) http://www.cfc.ee/lauri-ausi-fond/lauri-aus
(in French) https://web.archive.org/web/20100612000928/http://memoire-du-cyclisme.net/palmares/aus_lauri.php