Rihs, who died on Wednesday and had been
suffering from cancer, was in the early 2000s the face of
Switzerland's Phonak Cycling Team, named after his hearing aid
brand.
He was also owner of Swiss bicycle maker BMC, which has a
professional team, and Bern's Young Boys soccer team.
With Phonak, Rihs experienced pro cycling's highs and lows, when
top U.S. rider Floyd Landis won the 2006 Tour de France before
testing positive for a banned substance. Another Phonak rider,
American Tyler Hamilton, was stripped of his 2004 Olympic gold
medal as a drug cheat.
"As a passionate cyclist, I am bitterly disappointed that the
sport of cycling apparently has become a synonym for doping,"
Rihs said in 2006 when he disbanded the Phonak team.
Still, Rihs, a hobby rider who himself climbed France's famed
1,912 meter Mont Ventoux, stuck to the sport, giving millions of
francs to build an 8,000-square-metre velodrome in Switzerland
that caters to Swiss Olympic athletes.
Australian Cadel Evans won the 2011 Tour de France riding for
Rihs' BMC team, a victory that still stands.
"A great supporter of sport has left us," the team said on
Thursday.
Rihs, born in 1942 in Stuttgart, Germany, took over his father's
Swiss hearing aid company in 1966 with a partner and later his
brother, helping grow sales to nearly 2.4 billion Swiss francs
($2.48 billion) in 2017. Rihs owned about 3.6 percent of Sonova
stock, but left its board several years ago.
"We have not only lost a great friend with tremendous foresight
and an extraordinarily creative spirit, but also a multitalented
and passionate entrepreneur," Sonova Chairman Robert Spoerry
said.
Rihs also loved soccer. His Young Boys team in the Swiss capital
of Bern this year leads the top division, ahead of perennial
favorite FC Basel by 11 points with just six games left.
"Andy, thanks for everything," the team said on Twitter. "You'll
be missed."
($1 = 0.9687 Swiss francs)
(Reporting by John Miller; Editing by Richard Balmforth)
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