Tsgabu Grmay became Ethopia’s first ever Grand Tour rider after setting off with Lampre-Merida at the 2015 Giro d’Italia
Tsgabu Grmay’s road to become the first Ethiopian in
Grmay made had his break riding with the UCI centre in Switzerland. It was his launch pad for spots in Pro Continental
“Ethiopia’s eyes are on me,” Grmay told Cycling Weekly.
“They’ve showed racing live in Ethiopia for years via Al Jazeera and other free-to-air television channels, but this is the first time my family and Ethiopia have a cyclist that they can cheer for.”
Grmay grew up near Mek’ele, a city that sits at 2400 metres. His family, he said, is a “sporting family” with cyclists, his dad and his brother rode bikes and gave Grmay his first bike.
“We had local races. My dad and brother rode those, but never made it this far, though,” Grmay added.
“We explored the countryside on bikes. I rode to the edge of every paved rode that my area has. Training now is limited when I go back, I can ride up to three hours on a loop that I have, but to do more, I need to repeat it.”
Lampre sends Grmay back to Ethiopia as much as possible from the Milan or Rome airport so that he feels at home and because it sits on a plain at altitude. He may be short of paved roads, but is able to ride up to 2800 or 3000 metres.
“My fist time in Europe in 2011, everything was hard,” Grmay said.
“Everything, the weather, the roads, riding in the peloton, the cold, the climbs, the downhill… Everything was hard and everything was new in cycling.”
Training and the support of South African team MTN and the UCI helped Grmay make the next step.
Lampre took him to
“We wanted to,” South African Brent Copeland said.
“I see him more as a Tour de France rider than a Giro rider, the way he climbs, the results he has. I saw him going in Catalunya and Romandie, those climbs suit him better.
“When we saw him in Romandie, we thought we should take him to the Giro, get him to work quickly in the deep end.”
Grmay is a first in Grand Tour history. Just like
“The Giro is already a dream come true, it’s a big step,” Grmay continued.
“That’s why I’m telling you the Tour de France will come soon, because I’m on the way.”
Lampre could not be happier for the rider some teammates call ‘Gmail’ because they have a hard time with his name. Grmay doesn’t mind, but tells them his name is pronounced ‘Grrr-may.’
Being in a team is nothing new for him, he has been in one all of his life. Having four brothers and five sisters – sharing a bed and room with four of them – conditioned him for life on the road in a Grand Tour cycling team.