Saturday 31 December 2011

Daily Cycling Facts 31.12.11

Mario Aerts
(image credit:  YellowMonkey/Binguyen CC BY-SA 3.0)
A happy birthday to Mario Aerts, the Belgian cyclist who has ridden with Omega Pharma-Lotto since 2005 and will enter his 15th year as a professional in 2012. Mario's best Grand Tour result to date was 15th in the 2005 Vuelta a Espana and his best placing in the Tour de France has been 21st in 1999. He has performed better in shorter races, including wins at the 1996 GP d'Isbergues and 2002 La Flèche Wallonne. He was born on this day in 1974.

Retired German track and road cyclist Gregor Braun was born on this day in 1955. Braun's greatest success came during his time as an amateur track rider, including two gold medals at the 1976 Olympics.

Belgian Heidi van de Vijver, who was born in Bornem on this day in 1969, became National Junior Road Race Champion in 1988. Her first National Road Race Champion title at Elite level came six years later in 1994 and she repeated the achievement in 1994. Van de Vijver has also been National Individual Time Trial Champion in 1999, 2000 and 2001.


Raymond Impanis
Raymond Impanis, who was born on the 19th of October in 1925 and went on to win the 1954 Paris-Roubaix, died at the age of 85 on this day in 2010. Impanis did well in the Tour, winning Stage 9 and 6th place overall in 1947 - said by some to have been the hardest Tour ever held, before and since, Stages 9 and 10 and 10th place overall in 1948 and 8th place overall in 1950. He enjoyed similar success in the other Grand Tours with 3rd place overall in the 1956 Vuelta a Espana and 7th in the 1957 Giro d'Italia.

Nicknamed "The Baker of Berg," he did even better in the Classics; winning the Dwars door Vlaanderen in 1949 and 1951, Gent-Wevelgem in 1952 and 1953 and the Tour of Flanders in the same year as his Paris-Roubaix victory (he also won Paris-Nice for the first time that year too, repeating it in 1960). All in all, he rolled across the Paris-Roubaix start line sixteen times - a record that was not equaled until Servais Knaven made his 16th appearance in the year Impanis died.


Cândido Barbosa
(image credit: Ciclo Povoãoco)
Portuguese rider Cândido Barbosa was born on this day in 1974. Early on in his career, he won several stages in the Volta ao Algarve, then also began to win stages in the Volta ao Portugal and continued to do so in the latter race until the end of his time as a professional; yet he never won either event outright. He did, however, win the Troféu Sergio Paulinho and Volta ao Distrito de Santarém. He was forced to retire after fifteen years in 2011 due to problems with both knees.

It's also retired American professional Ken Carpenter's birthday. An Olympian in 1988 and 1992 and winner of a gold medal at the 1987 Pan American Games, he was born in La Mesa, California in 1965.

More birthdays: Birger Andreassen (Norwegian cyclist in 1912 Olympics, born 1891, died 25.03.1961); John carlsen (Danish cyclist, born 1961); Christian Jourdain (French Olympian, 1954); Renato Piccolo, (Italian Olympian, 1962); Claus Rasmussen (Swedish time trial rider, 1957).

Friday 30 December 2011

GVA-Trofee Baal 01.01.12


It's hard to believe, but already we've reached the sixth installment of this season's Gazet van Antwerpen Trofee, one of the shining jewels of the cyclo cross crown (once the mud's been hosed off, anyway).

Baal is a demon in Christian mythology, which makes the name of this round's setting rather apt - a devilishly complicated parcours follows a twisted, convoluted route on tarmac, over bridges and ladders and into the forest with enough tight bends to keep even the hardest-to-please fans happy. If it rains - and it looks like it will with nearly 3mm predicted - expect the course to be extremely slippery; if it doesn't expect it to be slippery anyway because nearly 9mm is forecast for the 31st of December. Windspeeds of up to 30kph will also liven things up, and make conditions for spectators feel much colder than the expected 13C. British star Nikki Harris went to have a look at the parcours on the 31st of December and confirms via Twitter that the rain has done its work:

"Nikkiharris86 Nikki Harris
Just been to have a look at the course in baal for tomorrow (by look at I just mean I looked at it) one word......mud!!!!!! :-)"

Parcours (click for enlargement)
(image credit: Grote Prijs Sven Nys)
This race is named the GP Sven Nys in honour of the rider who has won all but two of the twelve editions organised to date. As a resident of Baal, he's likely to pull out all the stops to repeat that success - which will be much easier if his main opponents are still laid low by the virus that kept them away from the Fidea Leuven race on the 30th of December.

For the first time this year, there will also be a women's race. With the unstoppable current cyclo cross World Champion Marianne Vos sitting this one out, the women may prove to deliver the most exciting competition of the day as they fight it out for the top step on the podium that suddenly becomes available to the rest of the pack whenever Vos is away. With a field including Hanka Kupfernagel, Sanne van Paassen, Sanne Cant, Helen Wyman and Daphny van den Brand, just about anything could happen.

The Novices begin at 10:00, Juniors at 11:00, Under-23s at 12:00, Elite Women at 13:45 and the Elite Men at 15:00 (all times are CET, GMT is -1 hour).

Parcours details: The start line is located on the Moorsemsestraat and heads slightly uphill towards the west before reaching the first off road section, looping into a field before crossing Balenbergstraatje and heading into the main site and north, then west through a series of tight bends back to the road. A short section of tarmac precedes a right turn that leads past the pits and onto a track into the forest, then back onto grass before another track heading back to the Balenbergstraatje. A longer section on the road ends at a left turn back onto grass and through a second visit to the pits, then over a bridge crossing the route they've already taken and through a long forest section followed by more grass before the riders arrive back on the Moorsemsestraat for another lap.

Official GP Sven Nys site
Official GVA Trofee site
Elite Men live stream available from Sports-Livez


Starters
Elite Men
1 - NYS, Sven
2 - ALBERT, Niels
3 - PAUWELS, Kevin
4 - STYBAR, Zdenek
5 - VANTORNOUT, Klaas
6 - AERNOUTS, Bart
7 - WALSLEBEN, Philipp
8 - WELLENS, Bart
9 - KNEGT, Gerben De
10 - MEEUSEN, Tom
11 - VANTHOURENHOUT, Dieter
12 - PEETERS, Rob
13 - GIL, Mariusz
14 - PAGE, Jonathan
15 - ADAMS, Joeri
16 - BAESTAENS, Vincent
17 - ZLAMALIK, Martin
18 - AMERONGEN, Thijs Van
19 - SIMUNEK, Radomir
20 - IJZENDOORN, Eddy Van
21 - FRANZOI, Enrico
22 - AERNOUTS, Jim
23 - BIANCO, Marco
24 - VANTHOURENHOUT, Sven
25 - COMPERNOLLE, Kenneth Van
26 - DENUWELAERE, Jan
27 - BOSCH, Tom Van Den
28 - CANT, Kevin
29 - HUYS, Stijn
30 - TIELENS, Jimmy
31 - GAUDY, Patrick
32 - MURGOITIO, Egoitz
33 - DERNIES, Tom
34 - SPRUIT, John
35 - PIROTTE, Jo
36 - MEDHURST, Darryn
37 - HOFMAN, Bart
Can Sven Nys win the race that is named in
his honour for an eleventh time?
(image credit: DarkSideX CC BY-SA 3.0)
Elite Women
1 - KUPFERNAGEL, Hanka
2 - PAASSEN, Sanne Van
3 - CANT, Sanne
4 - WYMAN, Helen
5 - BRAND, Daphny Van Den
6 - HAVLIKOVA, Pavla
7 - BOER, Sophie De
8 - HARRIS, Nikki
9 - RIJEN, Linda Van
10 - DAY, Gabriella
11 - DOMBROSKI, Amy
12 - ZWICK, Martina
13 - HORMES RAVENSTIJN, Reza
14 - VANDERBEKEN, Joyce
15 - BIE LEYTEN, Nicolle De
16 - VARDAROS, Christine
Registered
17 - GODART, Suzie
18 - KUIJPERS, Evy
19 - LOY, Ellen Van
20 - BOBER, Nancy
21 - FERRAND PREVOT, Pauline
22 - MICHIELS, Githa
23 - NOBUS, Anja
24 - HAYE, Caitlyn La
25 - QUINTENS, Hilde
Under-23/Promises
1 - HAAR, Lars Van Der
2 - BOSMANS, Wietse
3 - EISING, Tijmen
4 - TEUNISSEN, Mike
5 - BRAET, Vinnie
6 - HANSEN, Kenneth
7 - EMPEL, Micki Van
8 - POEL, David Van Der
9 - BODEN, Stef
10 - JOUFFROY, Arnaud
11 - TIER, Floris De
12 - KESSEL, Corne Van
13 - CLERCQ, Angelo De
14 - VERMEERSCH, Gianni
15 - PEIJFFERS, Ilja
16 - TURSI, Loris
17 - MELLEMANS, Jeffrey
18 - RISBOURG, Raf
19 - MAYER, Yannick
20 - WESTWOOD, Lee
21 - BARKHUIS, Bart
22 - DALTON, Bruce
23 - KOYEN, Niels
24 - VERBERNE, Douwe
25 - CANT, Jelle
26 - LASTRA, Jonathan
27 - RODRIGUEZ GUEDE, Pablo
28 - UYTDEWILLIGEN, Ingmar
29 - COBBAERT, Robby
30 - LACROIX, Dany
31 - REGOST, Elie
32 - AERTS, Toon
33 - CLAES, Jorn
34 - HOFMAN, Joeri
35 - MEURISSE, Xandro
36 - HAYE, Rutger La
Juniors
1 - PEETERS, Brent
2 - DUPONT, Kevin
3 - VANHERREWEGHEN, Jelle
4 - PROOST, Kyle De
5 - COOLEN, Yves
6 - SPRUYT, Joren
7 - TICHELT, Yorbin Van
8 - LENS, Glenn
9 - DRIES, Jelle Vanden
10 - VERHEYEN, Onno
11 - HUYGEN, Tijs
12 - BAKX, Marvin
13 - DESSEL, Kenneth Van
14 - JAEGER, Gilles De
15 - COUSSENS, Dieter
16 - TICHELEN, Stijn Van
17 - WIJKEL, Stan
18 - SCHEIRE, Nicolas
19 - COUCKUYT, Jens
20 - VEROFT, Jelto
21 - CELEN, Dennis
22 - WOUTERS, Toon
23 -  LEAERTS, Yelle
Novices
1 - DONINK, Gianni Van
2 - BEULLENS, Cedric
3 - JACOBS, Johan
4 - GOOSSENS, Kobe
5 - ANDERIES, Jordi
6 - EECKMAN, Bert
7 - BONE, Tommie
8 - GULICKX, Max
9 - KLOECK, Dario
10 - VERBEECK, Glenn
11 - CROLLET, Yari
12 - DEVOS, Han
13 - HASSELT, Lennert Van
14 - JACOBS, Sybren
15 - ABE, Jonas
16 - DIJKE, Koen Van
17 - LEONARD, Sylvain
18 - HAES, Jorden De
19 - ISERBYT, Eli
20 - CALUWE, Stijn
21 - VISSER, Thomas
22 - PALM, Eva
23 - PALM, Martin
24 - VERBRAKEN, Jorn
25 - BAKX, Kelvin
26 - TIBACKX, Lawrence
27 - AERTS, Thijs
28 - JOSEPH, Thomas
29 - TEIRLINCK, Jens
30 - SIEMONS, Stijn
31 - ROOSTHUYSE, Alex Van
32 - SCHUERMANS, Jelle
33 - RILLAER, Silke Van
34 - SMETS, Gert

Fidea Cyclo Cross Leuven 30.12.11 Results

With several of the top names among the Elite Men out of the race due to illness, this race was guaranteed to provide first-class competition as riders who don't usually get a look-in at the podium grabbed their chance to for a taste of glory, battling one another all the way around an absolutely fantastic parcours that offered tarmac, forest, grass, technical sections and plenty of very slippery mud.

There were no real surprises in the Elite Women's race with the unstoppable Marianne Vos once again proving her supremacy, making the technical sections seem like a gentle jaunt around the park while others slipped all over the place. Britain's best hope Helen Wyman was absent, still suffering from the virus she's been suffering for a few weeks now.

Videos Highlights: Women Men Sven Nys


Elite Men

11 Kevin Cant
12 Patrick Gaudy
13 Vincent Baestaens
14 Matthieu Boulo
15 Lars Boom
16 Jim Aernouts
17 Dieter Vanthourenhout
18 Florian Vogel
19 Dave De Cleyn
20 Corné Van Kessel
21 Arnaud Grand
22 Martin Gujan
23 Tomas Paprstka
24 Jo Pirotte
25 Jaroslav Kulhavy
26 Tom Van Den Bosch
27 Bart Verschueren
28 Yannick Mayer
29 Ingmar Uytdewilligen
30 Bart De Vocht
31 Stijn Mortelmans
32 Jonathan Lastra Martinez
33 Christophe Balannec
34 Dries Pauwels
35 Jens Vandekinderen
36 Kristof Zegers
37 Pablo Rodriguez Guede
38 Quentin Bertholet
39 Bart Barkhuis
40 Yoann Corbihan
41 Jake Wells
42 Alexis Caresmel
43 Élie Regost
44 Michael Cotty
45 Felix Coté Bouvette
46 Kiernan Orange
47 Bruce Dalton



Elite Women
1 Marianne Vos
2 Daphny Van Den Brand
3 Sophie De Boer
4 Pavla Havlikova
5 Sanne Cant
6 Gabriella Day
7 Arenda Grimberg
8 Ellen Van Loy
9 Anne Arnouts
10 Hilde Quintens
11 Julie Krasniak
12 Christine Vardaros
13 Kim Van De Steene
14 Iris Ockeloen
15 Katrien Thijs
16 Githa Michiels
17 Nicole De Bie-Leyten
18 Margriet Helena Kloppenburg
19 Monique Van De Ree
20 Anja Nobus
21 Suzie Godart
22 Caren Commissaris
23 Madara Furmane
24 Janice Geyskens
25 Katleen Fraeye
26 Keshia Verbeeck
27 Caitlyn La Haye


Juniors

1 Wout Van Aert
2 Daan Soete
3 Quentin Jauregui
4 Quinten Hermans
5 Nicolas Cleppe
6 Stan Wijkel
7 Curtis White
8 Jonas Degroote
9 Dylan Kowalski
10 Ben Boets
11 Onno Verheyen
12 Gertjan Bervoets
13 Jelle Vanden Dries
14 Arne Poelvoorde
15 Bryan Vispoel
16 Tobin Ortenblad
17 Massimo Vanderaerden
18 Bram Van Weymeersch
19 Yohan Patry
20 Gianni Quintelier
21 Jake Womersley
22 Dieter Claus
23 Brent Van Den Bosch
24 Arno Brocatus
25 Michiel Van Dyck
26 Jens Dierckx
27 Spencer Downing
28 Jorne Kockaerts
29 Glenn Lens
30 Dieter Jacobs
31 Alexander Hanquet
32 Dennis Celen
33 Lander Jespers

Novices

1 Jens Berckmans
2 Elias Van Hecke
3 Johan Jacobs
4 Dario Kloeck
5 Jelle Schuermans
6 Cedric Beullens
7 Niels De Koster
8 Nick Verheyen
9 Miqélé Brulez
10 Robbe Commissaris
11 Dieter Jans
12 Tim Janssen
13 Senne De Meyer
14 Jorn Verbraken
15 Jonas Abe
16 Thomas Verheyen
17 Liam Helshocht
18 Loic Hennaux
19 Jelle Vansnick
20 Gianni Van Havermaet
21 Lawrence Tibackx
22 Koen Hendrickx
23 Gert Smets
24 Jordy Verlinden
25 Gianni Vermeiren
26 Laurens De Jonghe
27 Pelle van Den Bulck
28 Lara Defour
29 Lander Loockx
30 Michiel Ceulemans
31 Meg De Bruyne

CONFIRMED: AA-Drink sign Cervélo women

Emma Pooley has confirmed that she will ride for  AA-Drink Leontien.nl in 2012, also stating that the team has signed five other riders from the troubled Garmin-Cervélo whose manager Jonathan Vaughters announced recently that sponsorship issues had forced the women's team budget to be slashed by an unspecified amount rumoured to be as much as 50%.

There have been rumours that Pooley
would go to AA-Drink for some time. If
accompanied by her six team mates, the
Dutch team will be one of the strongest
for many years.
(image credit: Fanny Schertzer CC BY-SA 3.0)
Cervélo has for many years been one of the most respected women's teams, with creator Gerard Vroomen being one of the few managers to pay equal attention to his female roster as to the men's team. Crucially, that also meant equal pay in a sport where women very often receive salaries far lower than their male counterparts due to women's races often being seen as little more than side show entertainment to keep the crowds amused before the "real" race (ie, the men's) starts. However, there have been hints that not all riders have been so happy since Vaughters took the helm: Vaughters, meanwhile, argues that he has been prevented from developing the team as he would have liked due to the limited sponsorship in women's cycling - teams frequently have to survive on budgets that equal just a few per cent or less of what top men's teams receive.

Wielerland.nl says the riders switching to AA-Drink are Emma Pooley, Sharon Laws, Carla Ryan, Lucy Martin, Elizabeth Armitstead and Jessie Daams. Pooley's move to the team has been subject to rumour for some time now. Now that she will be joined by five of her team mates - including two of the strongest - AA-Drink will be fielding one of the most effective teams in women's cycling for many years.

Iris Slappendel has gone to Rabobank, as was confirmed when she was spotted on a training ride with the team earlier this winter, while Alex Rhodes has gone to the new GreenEdge team.

Daily Cycling Facts 30.12.11

Lars Boom
(image credit: tetedelacourse CC BY-SA 2.0)
Happy birthday to the retired American professional road and track cyclist Karen Dunne, winner of no fewer than 16 National titles in assorted disciplines, two stages and the overall General Classification at the 2000 Sea Otter Classic, a gold medal at the Pan American Games and two 4th place finishes in the 1996 Tour de France Féminin, among many others. She was born on this day in 1967.

Rabobank's Lars Boom, multiple Dutch National Cyclo Cross Champion, stage winner at the Vuelta a Epana (Stage 15, 2009) and winner of two stages and the overal General Classification at the 2011 Tour of Britain, was born on this day in 1985.

A happy birthday to Desmond Robinson, the British cyclist who competed in Individual and Team Road Races at the 1952 Olympics. He is the brother of Brian, who became the first British rider to complete a Tour de France and win a stage and the uncle of Louise, who represented Great Britain in Mountain Bike XC in the 2000 Olympics. He was born in 1927.

Retired professional cyclo crosser and mountain biker David Baker was born on this day in 1965 in Drayton, Yorkshire. He became National Champion in 1992 and won every round of the National Points Series in the same year, going on to retain his title for another two years. He also won the BCCA Cyclo Cross Championship in 1997, having retired from professional racing due to a heart defect. In 2009, he was inducted into the British Cycling Hall of fame.

Thomas "Tiny" Johnson, winner of 32 races in 1911 and multiple Olympic medals for Great Britain during his career, was born in 1886. He died on the 12th of August 1966.

Shane Perkins
Shane Perkins, the Australian track sprinter and winner of a Commonwealth gold medal, is 25 today. Perkins has had a bit of a chequered career, having been banned from racing and fined $1000 by the Australian cycling federation after a drunken altercation outside a nightclub in Adelaide.

He was later involved in a crash with Ryan Bayley in February 2008, both riders later being found guilty of improper riding by event judges - Perkins and Bayley had become rivals due to an argument over which rider should be selected for the Beijing Olympics later that year. Bayley was eventually selected as Perkins had not competed in a sufficient number of races.

It was later discovered that he had been involved in a third incident during April that may well have discouraged the selection committee from choosing him, but this news was not made public until August after the selection. Perkins became a father a short while later in October and has said that parental responsibility has calmed him down and forced him to grow up: thus far, it appears he is telling the truth and his gold medals at the 2010 Commonwealth Games and 2011 World Track Championships were well-deserved.

Nikki Harris
(image credit: Joolzed)
Nikki Harris
A very happy birthday to Derby-born Nikki Louise Harris who was born on this day in 1986. Harris has been cycling since she was five years old and decided to pursue a professional career when she was 16. She started in cyclo cross, then began to also race mountain bikes and within two years was representing Great Britain at the Commonwealth Games and both the European and World Championships.

In 2005, when she was 18, Harris was given an opportunity to ride with Team GB at the World Track Championships - only the second time she'd ever rode on track, and she came fifth overall. That excellent result encouraged her and during the following four years with the team her riding went from strength to strength. In 2008, she relocated to Belgium to concentrate on her cyclo cross riding and, she says, "it went better than I could have ever hoped." Just a few months after her return to cross, she was selected to compete in the 2009 World Championships and came 14th. She lists future World Championship victory as her main aim in her future career.

Harris is a regular Tweeter and will often take the time to reply to fans, so send your birthday wishes to @Nikkiharris86.


More birthdaysJoseph Paré, sometimes spelled Pare (overall winner 1967 Circuit de Lorraine, born 1943); Dubán Ramírez (Columbian retired professional, winner of several General Classifications and stages in South American races and twice an Olympian, born 1965) and finally to the owner of what must surely be the best name in professional cycling Yolande Speedy, the South African cross country mountain biker (1976).

Thursday 29 December 2011

What's with... Evelyn Hamilton?

Left-right: Jesse Aitchison, Ethel Jermeat, Evelyn Hamilton
The history of cycling is populated by numerous larger-than-life characters from the early days (Maurice Garin, Henri Desgrange, Marshall Taylor) to the present (Jens Voigt, David Zabriskie, Fabian Cancellara, Marianne Vos) and with so many in between (Louison Bobet, Missy Giove, Tom Simpson, Charly Gaul, Coppi, Anquetil, Hinault, Armstrong, Merckx, Jason McRoy, Firmin Lambot, Pantani and thousands of others) that it's practically impossible for any book to tell all the stories. Colourful lives, all of them - but few people ever lived a life quite like that of the British endurance rider Evelyn Hamilton.

Today, when women's professional cycling is almost entirely ignored by the media, it's so difficult for female cyclists to make their name as professionals that some of those who have done so warn others hoping to do the same that if it's fame they seek, they'll be better off looking elsewhere. If this is true in the 21st Century, is must have been all but impossible for a woman to get her achievements noticed in the first third of the 20th. Hamilton, born Eveline Alice Alexandra Bayliss on the 3rd of April 1906 in Westminster, London, was one who did.

Summarising Evelyn's life is a challenge to any historian because she was one of those people who seems to have believed that her past should be multiple choice, frequently recounting stories that cannot possibly have been true or are highly suspect - however, one fact that is in no doubt is that she won both the National Half-Mile Handicap and the Sporting Life Trophy at the Stamford Track in 1931. That success won her sufficient fame to be approached by the producers of the 1934 musical Sing As We Go, in which she can be seen acting as body double for Gracie Fields in a scene in which Fields' character Gracie Platt rides a bicycle. Around the same time, she appears to have befriended Claud Butler, head of the manufacturer that in those days built some of the finest bikes in the world. A photograph taken at the Paddington Track in 1932 depicts Hamilton astride her bike, dressed in a sleeveless Claud Butler jersey.

The Miss Modern Model of 1934 (the bike
shown is fitted with a Constrictor Osgear)
Butler sponsored Hamilton in 1934 when she set off on one of his bikes to become the first British woman to ride 1000 miles (1609km) in seven days - a feat she completed after 84 hours of riding. The bike was fitted with the brand new Constrictor Osgear, developed by the legendary Oscar Egg and manufactured under licence by Constrictor, a tyre company based in North London who would also introduce the first lightweight alloy wheel rims. The system featured either three, four or five cogs on the rear wheel with the chain moved between them by a cable-operated arm bolted onto the chain stay, while a jockey wheel fitted to the end of a sprung arm mounted to the bottom bracket maintained chain tension. Media attention was so great that Butler produced a commemorative bike named the Miss Modern Model, a high-end machine that sold well, notable for having a shortened top tube so as to be suitable for women (whose arms tend to be shorter in comparison to height than men's) and tweaked frame angles so as to maintain correct geometry - one of the very first female-specific bikes in history.

One year later, Hamilton was so famous that when she set off to ride from Land's End to John O'Groats (which she did in four days), she was presented to her fans by Ben Tillet who, before retirement a few years previously, had enjoyed enormous popularity as a Labour Member of Parliament and trade unionist. The event was filmed by Pathe News, and the recording still exists. In the coming years, her fame grew as she set more and more records, including riding 10,000 miles (16,093km) in 100 days aboard a Granby bike (fitted with the new Cyclo-Star gears that resemble a modern derailleur. This was the first time Hamilton used a non-Claud Butler bike for one of her long-distance journeys, but the reason for this is not known - had they fallen out or had Granby offered a tempting pay-cheque? We'll probably never know. She finished the ride - having embarked upon it to prove that women were capable of equalling men in terms of athletic achievement - on the 14th of August 1938. Another Pathe newsreel features Hamilton offering cycling safety and style tips.

That same year, Evelyn and husband Jack set up a bike shop under her name at 416a Streatham High Road, London - it would move briefly to 402a and then 398a (reason unknown, but the area suffered heavy bombing during the Second World War). The building still exists (51°25'21.21"N  0° 7'46.58"W) and is now occupied by a large homewares and furniture store, the shop front altered beyond all recognition. The Hamiltons ran the shop until circa 1968, but it continued as E. Hamilton under different ownership right up until 1984; by which time it also sold motorbikes.

Precisely what Hamilton was doing during the war is a mystery - all that is known is that she wasn't seen at the shop for the entire duration. One rumour suggests she had one to France to become a wall of death rider for a circus and was trapped in Paris when it fell to the Nazis - there is some evidence to support claims that she spent the war in France, but the truth about what she was doing there is rather clouded by her own mythologising. During interviews later in her life, she seems to have amused herself by inventing contradictory stories - she told one reporter that she had pretended to be French and found work in a cafe popular with members of the Gestapo and another that she had taken the identity of a dead woman and lived - and possibly bigamously wed - a local named Fernand Helsen. Once, she claimed that she had worked for the Resistance, using a tandem to surreptitiously transport wanted people in heavy disguise across the city until she was captured by the Gestapo - but was able to escape when she pulled a miniature gun from her hair, shot her captor and fled, later managing to get herself back to England. Whether the story is true is as good as up to one's own personal opinion, but the way she told it it was most certainly convincing - she was awarded the Cross of Lorraine by President De Gaulle after the war.

In fact, the truth about where Hamilton was and what she was doing during the War may be far stranger than even her tallest stories. According to some, the Hamilton shop operated as a front organisation for the Free French Forces (a partisan army that fought hard against the Nazis long after the country was occupied) and the British Special Operations Executive, the top secret intelligence and guerilla warfare organisation. Lending credence to the story is the fact that Helsen did exist but, far from living in France during the war, was an employee of the French Embassy in London - according to gossip, Hamilton was known to had affairs with a number of men other than her husband (one of whom may have been the father of her son John who died when he was ten months old and seems was not the child of either Jack or Helsen and, until proof of his existence was uncovered in 2011 was generally supposed to have been another of Hamilton's invented stories - she had been known to claim that the baby was taken by the Nazis when she was in France and never seen again) and it's just within the boundaries of possibility that the tale of a bigamous marriage (a crime for which she seems to have never been investigated) and the other stories were invented to cover up a more professional relationship and official, covert activities. Whether they married or not, she took Helsen's name and retained it for more than half a century after his death in 1950. Oddly, nobody knows what became of Jack - had they divorced, in which case her claimed marriage to Helsen was not bigamous? Did he die in the War? Did he even exist?

Evelyn Hamilton, 1935. Left - Ben Tillet, right - Claud Butler
While she was away during the War, Hamilton's shop was run by three Frenchmen and, as befits a woman who lived such a remarkable and strange life, their identity is unknown. However, at least one of them may have been one of the famous Pélissier brothers: Hamilton had been known to mention a distant cousin of hers who had won the Tour de France - as Henri Pélissier had done in 1929. Henri was shot dead by his lover Camille Tharault in 1935 and an older brother was killed during the First World War, leaving Francis and Charles who survived until 1959.

After relinquishing control of her shop, Hamilton moved to the Norfolk town of Swaffham where she lived for the rest of her life and served as president of the Breckland Cycling Club (and, according to locals, had more affairs). She died there on the 29th of May 2005 and is buried in the town, her gravestone bearing the name Evelyn Alice Helsen.

Fidea Cyclo Cross Leuven 30.12.11


This round of the Fidea Cyclo Cross has traditionally been held at Tervuren, but issues at the old site have led to a relocation to Leuven - and it looks like a superb course with a good mix of roads, forest, grassy fields and - by the looks of things - plenty of mud. Those lucky enough to be able to spectate at the event can look forward to a good day out - rain is forecast in the morning and evening, but late morning to late afternoon should be fine with even a possibility of some sunshine.

The 3.01km course begins on the hard surfaced Hertogstraat (50°51'18.81"N 4°42'24.71"E), ensuring a fast start before the riders turn left into the military training ground and complete a short section of the athletics track. They then turn left again and pass the pits, making their way to the edge of the woods and turning right over a road. A 206m track through the trees with some tight corners leads over another road and then back into the woods before a right turn and a 423m forest track looping to the south. Having crossed a road, they turn right and head west through the trees until they reach the same point where they first entered the woods and turn left to head back across the military training ground. Having crossed the athletics track, they head into a short woodland stretch and soon come to a road, following it for 249m. It ends with a tight turn likely to become very slippery if conditions are wet, followed by a 241m technical section through more woodland and a short section through heathland to the first of two fields. They make their way along the northern edge of the first, cross a road and then travel straight across the second before turning left towards a road junction - the finish line will be situated at the southern edge of the second field (50°51'11.90"N  4°42'36.37"E). After turning 180 degrees, they start a 349m stretch on a surfaced road ending at a right turn back into the military training ground to begin the next lap.

It's also worth noting that several of the top-name male riders won't be in attendance, which means that second-class riders who don't usually get much opportunity to take the best places will be battling one another as they attempt to grab a slice of podium glory. Bring it on!

Novices 11:00; Juniors 12:00; Elite Women 13:15; Elite Men 15:00. Spectators permitted onto venue from 08:30 (all times CET, GMT is -1)

Elite Men live stream available from Sports-Livez.


Starters:


Elite Men
1 Zdenek Stybar
2 Sven Nys
3 Niels Albert
4 Kevin Pauwels
5 Bart Aernouts
6 Bart Wellens
7 Klaas Vantornout
8 Gerben De Knegt
9 Tom Meeusen
10 Dieter Vanthourenhout
11 Radomir Simunek
12 Philipp Walsleben
13 Rob Peeters
14 Vincent Baestaens
15 Enrico Franzoi
16 Thijs Van Amerongen
17 Eddy Van Ijzendoorn
18 Jonathan Page
19 Egoitz Murgoitio Rekalde
20 Sven Vanthourenhout
21 Marco Bianco
22 Wietse Bosmans
23 Joeri Adams
24 Jim Aernouts
25 Thijs Al
26 Brian Matter
27 Robert Gavenda
28 Tom Van den Bosch
29 Mark Lalonde
30 Daniel Ruiz
31 Bart Verschueren
32 Matteo Trentin
33 Arnaud Jouffroy
34 Sean Babcock
35 Ben Berden
36 Steven De Decker
37 Yu Takenouchi
38 Kevin Cant
39 Kenneth Van Compernolle
40 Ryan Iddings
41 Xabier Garcia Irazola
42 Sean De Bie
43 Tim Vannuffel
44 Mitchell Hoke
45 Quentin Bertholet
46 Jempy Drucker
47  Jan Verstraeten
48 Tom Vannoppen
49 Mike Thielemans
50 Jo Pirotte
51 Geert Wellens
52 Patrick Gaudy
53 Sven Van Eyndt
54 Ramon Sinkeldam
55 Bart Barkhuis
56 Loris Tursi
57 David Andrew Quist
58 Bram Schmitz
59 Daan Bongers
Elite Women
1 Marianne Vos
2 Sanne Van Paassen
3 Daphny Van den Brand
4 Helen Wyman
5 Pavla Havlikova
6 Sanne Cant
7 Hanka Kupfernagel
8 Sophie De Boer
9 Linda Van Rijen
10 Nikki Harris
11 Arenda Grimberg
12 Sabrina Stultiens
13 Maureen Bruno Roy
14 Amy Dombroski
15 Ellen Van Loy
16 Reza Hormes Ravenstijn
17 Gabriella Day
18 Nancy Bober
19 Joyce Vanderbeken
20 Martina Zwick
21 Gertie Willems
22 Nicolle De Bie-Leijten
23 Tessa Van Nieuwpoort
24 Christine Vardaros
25 Ayako Toyooka
26 Nathalie Nijns
27 Vicki Thomas
28 Katrien Thijs
29 Lana Verberne
30 Anja Nobus
31 Iris Ockeloen
32 Lisa Bogaert
33 Ilse Vandekinderen
34 Lucy Cash
35 Maaike Lanssens
Juniors
1 Jens Vandekinderen
2 Twan Brusselmans
3 Toon Aerts
4  Douwe Verberne
5 Michael Dhondt
6 Jeroen Eyskens
7 Lorenzo Pepermans
8 Niels Ooms
9 Arno Brocatus
10 Jellen Schiettecatte
11 Yolan Brems
12 Rob Leemans
13 Niels Verdijck
14 Bavo Haemels
15 Stijn Versteven
16 Jens Schuermans
17 Wout Van Aert
18 Nicholas De Laet
19 Michiel Van Echelpoel
20 Nick Van Huffelen
Novices
1 Gianni Van Doninck
2 Kevin Dupont
3 Dieter Jacobs
4 Jelle Schuermans
5 Jochen De Vocht
6 Thijs Aerts
7 Dieter Braet
8 Martijn Budding
9 Jory Degheldere
10 Rob Vanden Haesevelde
11 Laurens De Jonghe
12 Senne De Meyer
13 Fabio Jakobsen
14 Gilles De Jaeger
15 Shana Maes
16 Jens Dierckx
17 Yorick Verberne

Daily Cycling Facts 29.12.11

Peter Bissell, 1986-2007
Today marks the anniversary of the death of Peter Bissell in 2007. Bissell was 2004 British Hill Climb Champion and, in 2006, became Under-23 Road Race Champion. He was born on the 11th of March 1986 in Stevenage, Hertfordshire and died after suffering a fit, aged 21.

Jeroen Johannes Hendrikus Blijlevens, born in Rijen, Netherlands on this day in 1971, rose to prominence as one of the most devastatingly effective sprinters of the 1990s, a skill that saw him win a total of four stages at the Tour de France (Stage 5, 1995; Stage 5, 1996; Stage 6, 1997; Stage 4, 1998), five at the Vuelta a Espana(Stage 10, 1995; Stage 5, 1996; Stages 2 and 5, 1998; Stage 21, 1999) and two at the Giro d'Italia (Stages 3 and 7, 1999). Today, he is best known as directeur sportif of the Rabobank women's team where he has worked with the world's top-rated rider Marianne Vos.

Happy birthday to German track rider Thomas Huschke, born in 1947, winner of silver and bronze at the 1972 and 1976 Games. Huschke comes from a cycling dynasty: he's the grandson of Adolf, German Road Champion in 1921 and son of Gerhard, 4th in the 1934 World Road Championships.

Christophe Rinero at the Tour de Romandie in 2007
(image credit: Ludovic Péron CC BY-SA 3.0)
French rider Christophe Rinero was born in Moissac on this day in 1973. Rinero didn't win many races over his 13 year career, but what he did was impressive: the overall General Classification and Stages 7 and 9 at the 1998 Tour de l'Avenir; 1st place King of the Mountains, 2nd place Youth and 4th place General Classification at the 1998 Tour de France; Stage 2 and the Mountains Classification at the 2002 Tour du Limousin.

Other cyclists born on this day: Marielle Guichard (France, 1963); Georgios Khimonetos (Greece, 1972); Joseph Kono (Cameroon, 1950); Juan Merhab (Puerto Rico, 1970); Edwin Torres (Puerto Rico, 1946); Besnik Musaj (Albania, 1973); Kyrylo Pospieiev (USSR, 1975); Walter Reiser (Switzerland, 1925); Philip Sawyer (Australia, 1951); Clayton Stevenson (Australia, 1967); Guillaume Van Tongerloo (Belgium, 1933); Roger Whitfield (Great Britain, 1943); Dennis McCoy (USA, 1966).

Wednesday 28 December 2011

Azencross results

Elite men, GVA Azencross Loenhout 28.12.11

Elite Women: 

1. Marianne Vos (Ned) Nederland Bloeit, 0:43:06
2. Daphny van den Brand (Ned) AA Drink-Leontien.nl, + 01:17
3. Sanne Cant (Bel) BOXX Veldritacademie, + 01:26
4. Nikki Harris (GB) Young Telenet-Fidea, + 01:30
5. Sophie de Boer (Ned) Young Telenet-Fidea, + 01:37
6. Gabby Day (GB) Renner Custom CX Team, + 01:41
7. Sanne van Paassen (Ned) Brainwash Wielerploeg, + 02:40
8. Pauline Ferrand-Prévot (Fra) Lapierre International, s.t.
9. Paval Havlikova (Cze) Young Telenet-Fidea, + 02:45
10. Reza Hormes Ravenstijn (Ned) 03:33

Under-23

1 Wietse Bosmans
2 David van der Poel
3 Tijmen Eising
4 Gianni Vermeersch
5 Micki van Empel
6 Emiel Dolfsma
7 Corne van Kessel
8 Laurens Sweeck
9 Jens Adams
10 Vinnie Braert

Cyclo Cross on the Net

Cyclo cross: we'd watch it legally on TV,
except we can't because it's not shown
(image credit: Anwol CC BY-SA 3.0)
We'd love to be able to tell you which British TV channels are showing the big cyclo cross races so that you could watch them punctuated by adverts, thus generating advertising revenue for the stations and - ultimately - supporting the sport, but unfortunately cross is even more ignored by British broadcasters than road cycling is. So we'll have to provide you to links to sites that provide online streams of more enlightened Belgian and Dutch channels instead.

Sport-Livez tends to be one of the best, in our experience: clear, reliable and, on some channels, accompanied by a chat facility. Very, very occasionally, a stream breaks down - and when it does so, it'll be right at the most crucial moment in the race. However, this is due to the malevolence of inanimate objects rather than any failure on Sports-Livez's account - and in any case, flicking to another one of their channels (they frequently have between four and six) will allow you to see the remainder of the race. Sadly, it' very rare that they show the women's races, but this is again not the fault of Sports-Livez as they're merely streaming, rather than creating, footage and can't show us what isn't filmed.
Sports-Livez todayGVA Trofee Azencross Loenhout 14:30 CET (13:30 GMT) Channels: 123456 (6 is geo-restricted)
In the unlikely event of Sports-Livez not working, try Procycling Live. They'll generally have four channels on offer - the first three will link to Sports-Livez channels, but the fourth is frequently a Belgian channel apparently available only to viewers in Belgium. However, it can often also be seen in Britain if the viewer reloads the page several times (there's also the possibility that it might work through a Belgium-based proxy server, of course - we haven't tried).

Cycling Fans offers high-quality, reliable streams of the Sport.be and Sporza channels, warning that Sporza may be geo-restricted on some channels. We've not had problems in that direction, but with three options from which to choose viewers should be able to see whatever's being shown - or give up and try Sport.be instead.

We should mention at this point that viewing streams of this type - ie; re-broadcast footage - is of questionable legality. Some of the sites providing streams take advantage of loopholes or local laws (Swedish law is especially fortuitous to those who wish to provide this service, apparently), but the law in the viewer's nation may be very different and therefore you should absolutely never, on any account whatsoever, watch streams if they're illegal where you live because doing so is very naughty and if you get caught Santa won't come. As ever, Cyclopunk strongly encourages readers not to do anything that might get them in trouble with their mum.

Stybar signs off

Zdenek Stybar
(image credit: Thomas Ducroquet CC BY-SA 3.0)
The Belgian Gazet van Antwerpen reports that the current cyclo cross season will be the last that present World Champion Zdenek Stybar rides in full. The 26-year-old Czech rider won't be waving goodbye to cross altogether, though - he will remain with Quick Step following its merger with Omega Pharma for 2012 and says he'll follow the example set by Lars Boom by using off-road races as part of his off-season training for road races.

"This could be my only chance to ride with a World Tour team," he told the newspaper which, with the famous GVA racing series is as tied up in cyclo cross as L'Equip is in road racing. "So I'm grabbing that chance and dedicating myself to it."

Boom won numerous cross titles before turning his attention to road racing and has since won National Road and Time Trial Championships and, in 2011, the increasingly-prestigious Tour of Britain - just one of many riders for whom cross success translated into road glory. Stybar's excellent results to date suggest he'll do the same.

Daily Cycling Facts 28.12.11

Dave Marsh
Dave Marsh, born on this day in 1894, competed in the 1920 and 1924 Olympics and won the World Amateur Road Race in 1922 when the event was held in Liverpool - British riders also took the silver and bronze medals, thus making it perhaps Britain's most successful day in the history of the competition with the possible exception of 1967 when Graham Webb won the men's competition on the same day that the legendary Beryl Burton won the women's.

Around 1929, the famous Ariel bike manufacturer (inventors of the wire-spoked wheel in 1870, the company was established by William Hillman and James Starley - whose nephew John Kemp Starley invented the Rover Safety Bicycle, a bike with two equal-sized wheels and chain drive that is the ancestor of almost all modern bikes) decided it needed to move into the competition market and approached Marsh for help. Under his direction, the Marsh Model was produced in time for the annual Cycle and Motor Cycle Show with the company using Marsh's fame to advertise the new bike - using one of the bikes, Marsh had beaten the Birmingham-Bristol-Birmingham record by a full 30 minutes and 38 seconds. The bike's spec - 20" frame, lightened fork crown, Bluemel mudguards, lightened lugs, brazed-on fittings, Pelissier brakes, butted tubes, "D to round" forks, grease-gun nipples, Endrick chromium-plated rims, Marsh handlebars on adjustable stem - still sounds impressive to modern ears. The price? £8 and 8 shillings, now £8.40 (€10.03/US$13.40).


Retired Belgian cyclist and 1974 National Road Race Champion Roger Swerts was born in Heusden-Zolder on this day in 1942. In 1972 alone, Swerts won Gent–Wevelgem, Grand Prix de Forli, Grand Prix des Nations, the Trofeo Baracchi and the Tour of Belgium (which he won again in 1974). He also won stages in the Tour de l'Avenir (Stage 10, 1964), Giro d'Italia (Stage 14, 1972) and Vuelta a Espana (Stage 6a, 1973; Prologue, Stages 8 and 12, 1974; Prologue, 1975).

Tomasz Stankiewicz (1st left),
born 1902, murdered by the
Nazis 1940
Tomasz Stankiewicz was born on this day in 1902 in Poland, then part of the Russian Empire, and won a silver medal in the 1924 Olympics Team Pursuit. He was murdered by the Nazis on June the 21st, 1940 in Palmiry - part of the notorious "AB Action" that saw the mass execution of Jews and Polish intellectuals, athletes and politicians in the village and surrounding forest between 1939 and 1943. 2,115 victims have been exhumed and reburied correctly, but it is considered likely that many more skeletons lie undiscovered.

Willy Kemp, 1949 Luxembourg Road Race Champion and winner of Stage 4 in the 1955 Tour de France (60th overall), was born in Kopstal on this day in 1925.

Trevor Bull, British pursuit and sprint rider and a bronze medalist in the 1966 Commonwealth Games, was born on this day in 1944. After retiring, he teamed up with Mick Bennett, a fellow Olympian who won bronze in the 1972 and 1976 Games, to run a successful bike company. Bull died on the 4th of April 2009.

Welsh rider Craig Cooke, who came 2nd in the 2004 Welsh National Cyclo Cross Championships and is the younger brother of multiple World and National Champion Nicole, was born on this day in 1984.

Hernán Llerena, often called the greatest ever Peruvian cyclist, was born today in 1928. He was National Champion three times, won four gold medals in the 1947 Bolivarian Games and came third in the 1951 Pan American Games. He died on the 14th of March 2010, aged 81.

Arthur Eddington, astrophysicist and scientific philosopher, was born on this day in 1882. Whilst not known as a cyclist himself, Eddington invented the Eddington Number which provides a means of quantifying a cyclist's long distance ride achievement usually expressed as a figure for E. As an example, a cyclist whose E Number is 85 will have ridden more than 85 miles on 85 occasions. Raising the value of E becomes increasingly more difficult the higher the value climbs, because whereas a cyclist for whom E=25 will need to only ride more than 25 miles to increase it, a rider for whom E=85 will need to ride more than 85 miles to increase her E Number. He also has a crater on the moon and an asteroid named after him - there aren't many people who can claim that.

Other cyclists born on this day: Stefano Baudino (Italy, 1963), Hans Ledermann (Switzerland, 1957), Inocente Lizano (Cuba, 1940), Dieudonné Ntep (Cameroon, 1959), Jean Patou (Belgium, 1878), Virginio Pizzali (Italy, 1934).

Tuesday 27 December 2011

Cyclopunk's most wanted

Our most-read articles of 2011...

10: Jens Voigt abandons Tour of Britain

9: Fireworks to come from Lizzie Armitstead?

8: Vuelta a Espana - 2011 Preview

7: Review: Carrera Virtuoso

6: Dane Searls dead at 23

5: Wouter Weylandt memorial vandalised

4: Vuelta a Espana - Stage 15 Preview

3: LeopardTrek deny Radioshack merger rumours

2: What's with... Marianne Vos?

1: Bike Porn - Specialized McLaren Venge

Our readers come from - 10: Denmark; 9: Canada; 8: Spain; 7: France; 6: Russia; 5: Netherlands; 4: Australia; 3: Germany; 2: United Kingdom; 1: USA.

Readers since June

Let's get more bikes on the box!

Following Mark Cavendish's victory in the BBC Sports Person of the Year award - which he won with almost as many votes as all the other candidates combined - it seemed to us that perhaps cycling isn't quite as much a niche sport here in dear old Blighty as we're so often told. In fact, with that and the huge crowds drawn to the Tour of Britain, Sky Rides and other events there really is no reason to doubt that Britain has fallen well and truly in love with cycling.

So, we decided to get in contact with ITV, the channel that shows footage from the Grand Tours and - when we're lucky - highlights from the various other ASO cycle races to which they have British broadcasting rights and see if perhaps they might now be considering showing a bit more.

We wrote:

Dear Sir or Madam,
Many of out here are already extremely thankful to ITV for showing the Tour de France, Giro d'Italia, Vuelta a Espana and Tour of Britain, not least of all because that's just about the only chance we get to see cycling on British television. So thanks for that and keep up the good work.
Last night, when the BBC declared their Sports Personality of the Year Awards, Mark Cavendish - Britain's most successful Tour de France rider ever and the first British World Road Race Champion in nearly 50 years - scored no less that 49.47% of the total votes, beating runner-up Darren Clarke (a golfer) by 169,152 to 42,188 - in other words, by 126,964 votes.
Cycling's a niche sport in Britain, right? Yet the combined total of the votes received by the nine runners-up came to 172,807 - just 3,655 (0.53%) more than Cav won alone.
So I learned recently that you guys also have the rights to broadcast several other Amaury Sports events, including some of the most famous races in the world such as the legendary Paris-Roubaix, for which you showed highlights in 2011. Now that cycling is so obviously becoming a hugely popular sport in Britain, do you have any plans to show more complete race coverage - even more races - in the future?
Britain loves cycling - there's no longer any doubt
(image credit: Emperley3 CC BY-SA 2.0)
ITV have replied. They said:
 Thank you for your email regarding Cycling on ITV


I can confirm that your comments have been noted here at ITV Viewer Services.


We have no plans in our current schedule however all our schedules are subject to change


Many thanks for taking the time to contact us here at ITV as we always welcome viewers feedback


If we can be of any further assistance please do not hesitate to contact us


Kind Regards


Ann
ITV VIEWER SERVICES  
So it seems that even though cycling's popularity has now been improving in Britain for many years and a British rider is World Champion, we're still not going to see any more of our beloved sport on the box. However, they do say comments are noted - we doubt they are in any meaningful way, but if enough people take the time to contact the broadcaster and ask the same thing, who knows what might happen? You can email them at viewerservices@itv.com (other contact details here). Feel free to copy and paste our original email if you're short on time.

ITV already have the rights - we just need to persuade them they'll also have an audience.

Probably the best CX photos you've seen this year

Daily Cycling Facts 27.12.11

Today is the anniversary of the birth of Maurice de Waele, winner of the 1929 Tour de France - a victory that in the eyes of Henri Desgrange, who said "My Tour has been won by a corpse," was down to trickery (which certainly did occur, but large numbers of punctures and illnesses certainly had an influence) and resulted in his decision to adopt national teams rather than trade teams in an attempt to prevent team tactics. He died on the 14th of February 1952, aged 55.

Happy birthday to José Pérez Francés, third place winner in the 1963 Tour de France behind Jacques Anquetil and Federico Bahamontes. He was twice Spanish Road Champion (1960 and 1963), won three stages in the Vuelta a Espana and came 2nd overall in 1968, came 5th overall in the 1968 Giro d'Italia and 2nd in the 1963 Dauphiné Libéré where he won Stage 3.  Francés was born in Peñacastillo, Spain on this day in 1936.

Happy birthday to Pascal Simon who won the maillot jaune following Stage 10 of the 1983 Tour de France. The next day, he crashed and broke his shoulder - yet remained in the race for another six days. They don't make 'em like that anymore. Well, except Jens Voigt perhaps. Simon also won the Tour de l'Avenir in 1981.

Sabine Spitz
(image credit: Graham Dean CC BY 2.0)
Sabine Spitz, the German mountain biker who became World Cross Country Champion in 2003 and won a gold medal in the cross country event at the 2008 Olympics (and a bronze in the same event in 2004), was born on this day 1971 in Herrischried.

More birthdays: Klaas Balk (Dutch Olympian track cyclist, 63), Dennis Brooks (Cayman Isles road cyclist, 37), William Clay (Japan-born American track cyclist, 38), Dashjamtsyn Mönkhbat (Mongolian road and TT cyclist, 50), Péter Kusztor (Hungarian road cyclist, 27), Václav Machek (Czech track cyclist, 1956 Olympic silver medalist, born 1925), Englebert Opdebeeck (Dutch road and TT cyclist, 65), Dimo Angelov Tonchev (Bulgarian track cyclist, 59), John Vande Velde (American ex-professional cyclist and father of Christian, 63), Marian Turowski (Polish track cyclist, 47), Charles Westerholm (Finnish-born American cyclist, born 1897, died 1977).