During the second stage of the Paris - Nice Andrei Kivilev sustained a heavy crash, sending him into a coma and to his death the following morning.
Andrei was a talented climber, a huge talent and a lovely man well liked among fans and the peloton.
A renowned joker and ever happy face who will be sorely missed.
R.I.P Andrei Kivilev!!
A huge loss to the cycling world.
Follows 2 articles from BBC sport:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kivilev dies after crash
Kivilev was left in a coma after a crash in Tuesday's stage
Andrei Kivilev has died from head injuries suffered in a crash during the second stage of the Paris-Nice race.
The Kazakh rider's Cofidis team made the announcement on Wednesday, one day after a horrific crash near the French town of St Etienne put him in a coma.
Kivilev, who had not been wearing a helmet at the time of the accident, underwent surgery at a St-Etienne hospital, but his condition worsened overnight.
The 29-year-old is the first elite cyclist to be killed since Spainiard Manuel Sanroma, who crashed in the 1999 Tour of Catalonia.
Andrei Kivilev fact file
Born: 21/09/73 in Kazakhstan
Teams: Festina (98/99), AG2R (00), Cofidis (01/03)
Highlights: Won 2001 Route du Sud, 4th in 2001 Tour de France, 4th in 2002 Paris-Nice
World ranking: 50
Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong was among those who paid tribute to Kivilev.
"I came to know Andrei quite well over the years and really admired him and his style," said the American.
"I loved to race with him because you knew when he was in the race, and when the road went uphill, he would lay it all out.
"He helped me more then he or anyone will ever know -- and now he's gone."
A strong climber, Kivilev turned professional in 1998 and finished fourth in the 2001 Tour de France.
His priority this year was to help British team-mate David Millar in Le Tour.
Cofidis will continue to compete in the Paris-Nice race which finishes on Sunday.
But team director Francis Van Londerseele expressed his deep shock at the tragedy on Tuesday night.
"We're all shocked. Our thoughts have now turned towards his wife Natalie and their young son Leonard.
HAVE YOUR SAY
What a great talent Andrei was proving to be, a fourth place in the Tour spoke volumes for his potential
Feargal, UK
Join the debate
"This accident reminds us just how dangerous this sport is. We all regret the fact that Andrei was not wearing a helmet at the time of this fall."
The fact that Kivilev was not wearing a helmet looks set to spark safety debates.
Cofidis team doctor Jean-Jacques Menuet confirmed that a helmet would probably have saved Kivilev's life and called for the authorities to bring in stiffer safety measures.
"The injury Andrei sustained on his skull is located at a point that would have been protected by a helmet," said Meunet.
"Riders are free to wear a helmet or not, even though as doctors we would all like to see it become obligatory."
Cycling's ruling body, the International Cycling Union, tried to make helmets obligatory in 1991, but cyclists staged an angry protest and a compromise was reached forcing riders to wear helmets in certain conditions.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paris-Nice racers pay tribute
Cofidis riders mourn their team-mate on Wednesday
Riders in the Paris-Nice cycle race called off the third stage on Wednesday as a mark of respect to Andrei Kivilev.
The Cofidis team member from Khazakstan died after a crash in St Etienne on Tuesday.
Kivilev's team-mates crossed the finish line together at Pont du Gard, a dozen metres ahead of the peloton who had refused to race.
The cyclists held a minute's silence before the start and cruised at a slow pace on the roads between Le Puy-en-Velay and Pont du Gard.
Former Tour de France winner Richard Virenque, one of the circuit's senior riders, took the initiative to cancel the stage.
Virenque, accompanied by team mate Frank Vandebroucke, who was in tears, went to the Cofidis team bus before the start.
He told the Cofidis riders: "We are going to go to the line but there will not be any race today.
Head injuries
"We will ride to the Pont du Gard all together and you guys will cross the line in front. Everybody is okay with this."
The 29-year-old Kivilev, leader of the Cofidis team, sustained serious head injuries in a fall following a collision with another rider around 40 km from the finish of Tuesday's stage.
He had not been wearing a helmet and went into a coma. Kivilev underwent surgery overnight but died in the early hours of Wednesday.
After uncertainty over whether the Cofidis team would stay in the race, prologue winner Nico Mattan met race manager Jean-Marie Leblanc to tell him they had decided to continue.
Kivilev, who finished fourth in the Tour de France in 2001, was the first cyclist to die in competition since Spanish sprinter Manuel San Roma in the Tour de Catalunya in 1999.
Andrei was a talented climber, a huge talent and a lovely man well liked among fans and the peloton.
A renowned joker and ever happy face who will be sorely missed.
R.I.P Andrei Kivilev!!
A huge loss to the cycling world.
Follows 2 articles from BBC sport:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kivilev dies after crash
Kivilev was left in a coma after a crash in Tuesday's stage
Andrei Kivilev has died from head injuries suffered in a crash during the second stage of the Paris-Nice race.
The Kazakh rider's Cofidis team made the announcement on Wednesday, one day after a horrific crash near the French town of St Etienne put him in a coma.
Kivilev, who had not been wearing a helmet at the time of the accident, underwent surgery at a St-Etienne hospital, but his condition worsened overnight.
The 29-year-old is the first elite cyclist to be killed since Spainiard Manuel Sanroma, who crashed in the 1999 Tour of Catalonia.
Andrei Kivilev fact file
Born: 21/09/73 in Kazakhstan
Teams: Festina (98/99), AG2R (00), Cofidis (01/03)
Highlights: Won 2001 Route du Sud, 4th in 2001 Tour de France, 4th in 2002 Paris-Nice
World ranking: 50
Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong was among those who paid tribute to Kivilev.
"I came to know Andrei quite well over the years and really admired him and his style," said the American.
"I loved to race with him because you knew when he was in the race, and when the road went uphill, he would lay it all out.
"He helped me more then he or anyone will ever know -- and now he's gone."
A strong climber, Kivilev turned professional in 1998 and finished fourth in the 2001 Tour de France.
His priority this year was to help British team-mate David Millar in Le Tour.
Cofidis will continue to compete in the Paris-Nice race which finishes on Sunday.
But team director Francis Van Londerseele expressed his deep shock at the tragedy on Tuesday night.
"We're all shocked. Our thoughts have now turned towards his wife Natalie and their young son Leonard.
HAVE YOUR SAY
What a great talent Andrei was proving to be, a fourth place in the Tour spoke volumes for his potential
Feargal, UK
Join the debate
"This accident reminds us just how dangerous this sport is. We all regret the fact that Andrei was not wearing a helmet at the time of this fall."
The fact that Kivilev was not wearing a helmet looks set to spark safety debates.
Cofidis team doctor Jean-Jacques Menuet confirmed that a helmet would probably have saved Kivilev's life and called for the authorities to bring in stiffer safety measures.
"The injury Andrei sustained on his skull is located at a point that would have been protected by a helmet," said Meunet.
"Riders are free to wear a helmet or not, even though as doctors we would all like to see it become obligatory."
Cycling's ruling body, the International Cycling Union, tried to make helmets obligatory in 1991, but cyclists staged an angry protest and a compromise was reached forcing riders to wear helmets in certain conditions.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paris-Nice racers pay tribute
Cofidis riders mourn their team-mate on Wednesday
Riders in the Paris-Nice cycle race called off the third stage on Wednesday as a mark of respect to Andrei Kivilev.
The Cofidis team member from Khazakstan died after a crash in St Etienne on Tuesday.
Kivilev's team-mates crossed the finish line together at Pont du Gard, a dozen metres ahead of the peloton who had refused to race.
The cyclists held a minute's silence before the start and cruised at a slow pace on the roads between Le Puy-en-Velay and Pont du Gard.
Former Tour de France winner Richard Virenque, one of the circuit's senior riders, took the initiative to cancel the stage.
Virenque, accompanied by team mate Frank Vandebroucke, who was in tears, went to the Cofidis team bus before the start.
He told the Cofidis riders: "We are going to go to the line but there will not be any race today.
Head injuries
"We will ride to the Pont du Gard all together and you guys will cross the line in front. Everybody is okay with this."
The 29-year-old Kivilev, leader of the Cofidis team, sustained serious head injuries in a fall following a collision with another rider around 40 km from the finish of Tuesday's stage.
He had not been wearing a helmet and went into a coma. Kivilev underwent surgery overnight but died in the early hours of Wednesday.
After uncertainty over whether the Cofidis team would stay in the race, prologue winner Nico Mattan met race manager Jean-Marie Leblanc to tell him they had decided to continue.
Kivilev, who finished fourth in the Tour de France in 2001, was the first cyclist to die in competition since Spanish sprinter Manuel San Roma in the Tour de Catalunya in 1999.
Buy on AliExpress.com