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| Bob Mionske at Interbike 2007 | |
| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Full name | Robert Mionske |
| Date of birth | August 26, 1962 |
| Country | |
| Team information | |
| Professional team(s)1 | |
| 1993 | Saturn |
| Infobox last updated on: | |
| February 5, 2009
1 Team names given are those prevailing |
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Robert ("Bob") Charles Mionske (born August 26, 1962) is a two time U.S. Olympic racing cyclist (1988 and 1992) and U.S. National Champion (1990). In the 1988 Summer Olympics, held in Seoul, South Korea, he placed fourth in the Individual Road Race. He retired from professional cycling in 1993 and is now an attorney based in Portland, Oregon, with a practice in bicycle law. He wrote Legally Speaking, a national column on bicycle law, between 2002 and 2009, and has also written Bicycling & The Law: Your Rights As A Cyclist, a book on bicycle law published in August 2007. In February, 2009, Mionske began writing Road Rights, a new column on bicycle law for Bicycling Magazine.
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Bob Mionske was born August 26, 1962, in Evanston, Illinois. During Mionske's childhood, his family moved to Wisconsin. When Mionske was seventeen, he spent the summer working for his father; at the end of the summer, he bought a new touring bike with his earnings. Mionske subsequently spent countless hours in the saddle of his touring bike, exploring the forests and lakes of Wisconsin. After graduating from Wilmot high school, Mionske enrolled at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where he continued to ride a bike—an old cruiser—for transportation around campus.
Bob's entry into competitive sports began during his university years, with ski racing. Mionske reports that one day in his Latin class at the University, he noticed that one of his classmates had the shaved legs typical of a bicycle racer. Mionske struck up a conversation about bicycle racing with his classmate, who was an amateur bike racer and worked for Andy Muzi at Yellow Jersey, a bike shop in town. The classmate—Colin O'Brien, who later went on to set the national hour record in 1981, before joining the national team—gave Mionske advice about bicycles and racing.[1]
Mionske began bicycle racing as a means to improve his fitness training for ski racing. However, he soon discovered that he was better at bicycle racing, and directed his energies towards bike racing from that point on. He began racing for amateur teams beginning in 1986. By 1987, Mionske was racing for Andy Muzi's Yellow Jersey team. In 1988, he tried out for the U.S. Olympic cycling team; his third-place win in the road racing trials garnered Mionske a spot on the U.S. team. Racing for the United States in the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, Korea, Mionske came in a close 4th, achieving the same time as the 3rd place winner, but losing the bronze medal by a tire's length. His performance at the 1988 Olympics was the best performance by an American cyclist at a "full-participation" Olympics (that is, an Olympics that had not been subject to a boycott) since 1912. In recognition of his achievement, the United States Cycling Federation honored Mionske by designating him as the U.S. Amateur Cyclist of the Year.
Following the 1988 Olympics, Mionske continued to race as an amateur. In 1990, he was the National Road Race Champion, after winning the U.S. National Championships in Albany, New York. On the heels of that victory, Mionske competed as a member of the United States World Championship Team in the UCI Amateur Road World Championships in Utsonomiya, Japan. In 1991, Mionske competed in the Pan-American Games, held in Havana, Cuba, where he placed 6th in the Men's Individual Road Race as a member of the United States Pan-American Championship Team.
The following year, Mionske again tried out for the Olympic team, once more winning a spot on the U.S. Olympic Cycling Team. However, competing at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain, Mionske was unable to repeat his 1988 performance. Nevertheless, he and teammate Timm Peddie were able to assist their fellow teammate Lance Armstrong to a 14th-place finish.
In 1993, Mionske became a professional racer when the team he was riding for, Team Saturn, transitioned from an amateur to a professional team. Mionske won 8 races during the 1993 racing season; at the end of the 1993 season, Mionske retired from racing, but continued with Team Saturn as Team Director for the 1994 racing season. Mionske then left racing behind, entering law school at Willamette University College of Law.
In 1999, Mionske opened his own law practice, the first in the nation focused exclusively on representing cyclists. With his extensive background in bicycle racing, Mionske has represented professional racers David Zabriskie, Michael Barry, Dede Barry, Tom Danielson, and Kevin Livingston, as well as amateur racers, bicycle commuters, messengers, and recreational cyclists. In describing the cyclist-centered focus of his practice, Mionske coined the term "bicycle law".
In 2001, Mionske authored the legal analysis section in Bicycle Accident Reconstruction for the Forensic Engineer. The following year, Mionske began writing Legally Speaking for VeloNews—the first and only periodical column on bicycle law. In 2007, Mionske authored Bicycling & the Law, the first book on bicycle law written for cyclists since the publication of The Road Rights and Liabilities of Wheelmen in 1895. Mionske penned his final Legally Speaking column in February, 2009; he subsequently began writing Road Rights, a new column on bicycle law for Bicycling Magazine.
1986 - The Wood Spoke - Batavus
1987 - Yellow Jersey
1988 - Sunkyong-SKC
1989 - Celestial Seasonings
1990 - Yellow Jersey
1991 - Shaklee
1992 - Saturn
1993 - Saturn
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