Erik Weispfennig|  Weispfennig in 2017 | 
|
| Born | (1969-08-13) 13 August 1969 Iserlohn, Germany
 | 
|---|
|
| Discipline | Track | 
|---|
| Role | Rider | 
|---|
|
Erik Weispfennig (born 13 August 1969 in Iserlohn) is a German former track cyclist. He won the madison at the 2000 UCI Track Cycling World Championships with Stefan Steinweg.
After retiring, Weispfennig worked as a directeur sportif for Team Nutrixxion–Sparkasse from 2006 until 2010. In April 2019, he became the vice president of the German Cycling Federation.[1]
References
External links
|  | 
|---|
| 
1995–96: Italy (Silvio Martinello, Marco Villa)1997: Spain (Joan Llaneras, Miguel Alzamora)1998: Belgium (Etienne De Wilde, Matthew Gilmore)1999: Spain (Joan Llaneras, Isaac Gálvez)2000: Germany (Stefan Steinweg, )2001: France (Robert Sassone, Jérôme Neuville)2002: France (Jérôme Neuville, Franck Perque)2003: Switzerland (Franco Marvulli, Bruno Risi)2004: Argentina (Walter Pérez, Juan Curuchet)2005: Great Britain (Mark Cavendish, Rob Hayles)2006: Spain (Isaac Gálvez, Joan Llaneras)2007: Switzerland (Bruno Risi, Franco Marvulli)2008: Great Britain (Mark Cavendish, Bradley Wiggins)2009: Denmark (Michael Mørkøv, Alex Rasmussen)2010–11: Australia (Leigh Howard, Cameron Meyer)2012: Belgium (Kenny De Ketele, Gijs Van Hoecke)2013: France (Vivien Brisse, Morgan Kneisky)2014: Spain (David Muntaner, Albert Torres)2015: France (Bryan Coquard, Morgan Kneisky)2016: Great Britain (Mark Cavendish, Bradley Wiggins)2017: France (Morgan Kneisky, Benjamin Thomas)2018–19: Germany (Roger Kluge, Theo Reinhardt)2020–21: Denmark (Michael Mørkøv, Lasse Norman Hansen)2022: France (Donavan Grondin, Benjamin Thomas)2023: Netherlands (Jan-Willem van Schip, Yoeri Havik)2024: Germany (Roger Kluge, Tim Torn Teutenberg)
 |