Juho Jaakonaho
Finnish cyclist
Personal information | |
---|---|
Born | (1882-09-01)1 September 1882 Haapajärvi, Finland |
Died | 21 January 1964(1964-01-21) (aged 81) Haapajärvi, Finland |
Johannes "Juho" Jaakonaho (1 September 1882 – 21 January 1964) was a Finnish road racing cyclist who competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics.[1]
In 1912 he did not finish in the individual time trial event. Therefore, he was the weakest link of the Finnish cycling team which competed in the team time trial event and finished fifth.[2]
He won the Finnish national road race title in 1911, 1914, 1915 and 1921.[3]
Death
He was born and died in Haapajärvi.
References
External links
- Juho Jaakonaho at Cycling Archives
- v
- t
- e
- Juho Jaakonaho (1911)
- Antti Raita (1912–1913)
- Juho Jaakonaho (1914–1915)
- Juho Jaakonaho (1921)
- Raul Hellberg (1923–1929)
- Thor Porko (1930)
- Raul Hellberg (1931)
- Thor Porko (1936)
- Paul Backman (1946)
- Torvald Högström (1951)
- Nils Henriksson (1952)
- Anders Ruben Forsblom (1953–1954)
- Paul Nyman (1955–1956)
- Ole Wackström (1957)
- Paul Nyman (1958)
- Unto Hautalahti (1960–1961)
- Antero Lumme (1962–1965)
- Unto Hautalahti (1966)
- Kalevi Eskelinen (1969)
- Mauno Uusivirta (1970)
- Tapani Vuorenhela (1971)
- Harry Hannus (1972–1974)
- Kari Puisto (1975–1976)
- Harry Hannus (1978–1979)
- Patrick Wackström (1980–1981)
- Harry Hannus (1982)
- Kari Myyryläinen (1983)
- Harry Hannus (1984)
- Kari Myyryläinen (1985–1986)
- Jari Lähde (1988)
- Kimmo Karhu (1989)
- Esa Skyttä (1995)
- Joona Laukka (1996)
- Miika Hietanen (1997)
- Esa Skyttä (1998)
- Miika Hietanen (1999)
- Kjell Carlström (2000)
- Christian Selin (2001)
- Jukka Heinikainen (2002)
- Jussi Veikkanen (2003)
- Kjell Carlström (2004)
- Jussi Veikkanen (2005–2006)
- Matti Pajari (2007)
- Jussi Veikkanen (2008)
- Toni Liias (2009)
- Jussi Veikkanen (2010)
- Kjell Carlström (2011)
- Jarkko Niemi (2012)
- Jussi Veikkanen (2013–2014)
- Samuel Pökälä (2015)
- Jesse Kaislavuo (2016)
- Matti Manninen (2017)
- Anders Bäckman (2018)
- Arto Vainionpää (2019)
- Antti-Jussi Juntunen (2020)
- Joonas Henttala (2021)
- Anders Bäckman (2022)
- Antti-Jussi Juntunen (2023)
- Jaakko Hänninen (2024)
This biographical article relating to Finnish cycling is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e