| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Full name | William Cecil Yates | 
| Born | May 18, 1912 Thurber, Texas  | 
| Died | March 1987 (aged 74) Buckeye, Arizona  | 
| Team information | |
| Discipline | Track | 
| Role | Rider | 
| Rider type | Sprinter | 
William Cecil Yates (May 18, 1912 – March 1987) was an American professional track cyclist. He is best known for his success in six-day racing, having 16 victories in his career and was described as being a strong sprinter.[1]
During World War II, Yates served the Army Air Force for 34 months, being promoted up to a Sergeant. He retired from cycling in 1950, winning 16 of 56 total six-day races he entered.[1] He was inducted into the United States Bicycling Hall of Fame in 2007.[2]
Six-day wins
- 1934
 - Six Days of Vancouver (with Eddie Testa)
 - 1935
 - Six Days of Detroit (with Robert Vermeersch)
 - Six Days of Louisville (with Jack Gabell)
 - 1936
 - Six Days of San Francisco (with Henry O'Brien)
 - Six Days of Des Moines (with Freddy Zach)
 - 1937
 - Six Days of San Francisco (with Jerry Rodman)
 - Six Days of Oakland (with George Dempsey)
 - 1939
 - Six Days of Buffalo (with Gustav Kilian)
 - Six Days of New York (with Cesare Moretti Jr.)
 - Six Days of Buffalo (with Heinz Vopel)
 - 1940
 - Six Days of Chicago (with William Peden)
 - 1941
 - Six Days of Montreal (with Angelo de Bacco)
 - 1942
 - Six Days of Milwaukee (with Jules Audy)
 - Six Days of Chicago (with William Peden)
 - 1948
 - Six Days of Winnipeg (with Charles Bergna)
 - 1949
 - Six Days of Cleveland (with Charles Bergna)
 
References
- 1 2 Arnold Devlin. "Biography of Cecil Yates". www.6dayracing.ca.
 - ↑ "Biography of William "Cecil" Yates". www.usbhof.org.
 
External links
- Cecil Yates at Cycling Archives
 
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