biografía de Richard carapaz traducida en inglés
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Richard Carapaz is a cyclist from Carchen, born on May 29, 1993 in the La Playa Alta community, El Carmelo parish, Tulcán canton (known as the capital of Ecuadorian cycling). He began to practice cycling at the age of 15, thanks to the fact that former Ecuadorian cyclist Juan Carlos Rosero dedicated himself to hunting future cycling talents, especially in the rural areas of the provinces of Carchi and Sucumbios. With the help of his first coach and other former glories of Ecuadorian cycling, he managed to profile himself as one of the best cyclists and in 2013 he won the Pan American Road Championship in the sub-23 category. In 2015 he emigrated to Colombia where he stayed for a year and then made the leap to Europe.
Trajectory
2008 to 2014: Early years
He began his professional career at the age of 15, in the amateur team Panavial Coraje Carchense (today Coraje Carchense), in his beginnings he trained with ex-glories of Carchense and Ecuadorian cycling such as Juan Carlos Rosero (+) and Paulo Caicedo. In 2013 he ran for the Ecuadorian RPM Team where he won the Vuelta a Guatemala in the sub-23 category and the Pan American Road Championship sub-23.1 2015: Explosion in the Vuelta a la Juventud de Colombia
In the 2015 season he moved to Colombia where he ran for the
Colombian Strongman-Campagnolo team; became the first foreigner
win the lap of the Youth of Colombia and a stage of the traditional Clásico RCN.
2016 to 2017: Jump to Europe, Movistar and first participation in Vuelta a
spain
After a successful season in Colombia, he had offers of fixed contracts in Colombian teams, but his sports performance also caught the attention of European teams, one of the offers was to go on a three-month trial to the Spanish team Lizarte, with which he would get his title in 2016. first notable victory in European lands by winning the Vuelta a Navarra.
In 2017 he started in the test team of his current Movistar Team, where he reached second place in the traditional Route du Sud. He also had the opportunity to be the first Ecuadorian to compete in the Vuelta a España where he participated in an attempt escape in a mountain stage. Expulsion in the Bolivarian Games 2017
He was expelled from the Ecuadorian cycling team during the 2017 Bolivarian Games for getting drunk on the opening day of the tournament, in addition to committing several disciplinary offenses related to alcohol.234 After the event, the three cyclists involved publicly apologized.5 2018: First stage in one of the Grand Tours[edit]
In the 2018 season he began by winning the Vuelta a Asturias, to later become the first Ecuadorian to win a stage and wear the best youngster's white jersey for 8 stages in the Giro d'Italia; Already in that year he showed his level by placing fourth in the general classification, 47 seconds from the podium. The same year