Saturday 14 January 2012

Daily Cycling Facts 14.01.12

Gert-Jan Theunisse
Doping nearly killed the Tour de France,
but sometimes a doper can regain the
respect of fans and Theunisse is one of the
few. However, he can never, ever be
forgiven for that haircut.
Gert-Jan Theunisse, winner of the King of the Mountains classification at the 1989 Tour de France and came 4th overall, was born on this day in 1963 in Oss, Netherlands.

He had come to widespread attention in the Tour one year previously when he presented a very real challenge to Pedro Delgado (the two riders had been team mates until Delgado left PDM for Reynolds-Banesto the previous year), holding fourth place overall until he tested positive for testosterone, received a ten-minute penalty and dropped to 11th (Delgado, coincidentally, tested positive for probenicid, a diuretic widely used to mask traces of steroids in urine - however, it had not yet been banned by the UCI and as a result he was not punished). Two years later, having won the Alpe d'Huez stage in the process of winning his polka dot jersey, he again tested positive in the Flèche Wallonne and Bicicleta Vasca. Sanctions in those pre-Festina Affair and Operacion Puerto days were considerably less strict than they are today and he was not banned, but was forced to retire after being diagnosed with a heart condition in 1995.

He continued to race in a few small-scale mountain bike events and, having trained Bart Brentjens to a level where he occupied the very top rung of the sport, became manager of the Specialized Mountain Bike Team in 1996. Then, further disaster: in 1997 while on a training ride, he was hit by a car and sustained a spinal injury that left him a paraplegic. From this point begins one of the most inspiring stories in cycling, sufficient even to forgive him his early doping offences. Through a combination of good fortune and sheer willpower, he learned to walk again in just six months and returned to his duties with the team. In January 1999, he won another mountain bike race. Five months later, he suffered a heart attack, possibly as a result of the doping; but recovered to a state where he could continue as team coach until Specialized ended its mountain bike sponsorship programme in 2001, at which point he moved to Majorca and began riding his bike 150km every day; a regime that served as training for the 2002 Over-30s European MTB Championships and which he won. He remained in competitive mountain biking despite constant, severe pain and involuntary spastic attacks caused by the 1997 injury, right up until 2005 when his condition had degenerated to a state where it became impossible to continue. Theunisse now plans to compete in paralympic cycling events.


Happy birthday Gerben Karstens, 1966 Dutch Road Race Champion and winner of one stage in the Giro d'Italia, six stages in the Tour de France, fourteen stages in the Vuelta a Espana, Paris-Tours and an Olympic gold medal. he was born in 1942.

James Moore (right - on the left, 1869 Paris-
Rouen runner-up Jean-Eugene-Andre Castera)
James Moore
James Moore, the claimed winner of the world's first bike race, was born on this day in Bury St. Edmunds in 1849.

That first race took place - so far as we know - in St-Cloud, Paris, where Moore's family (his father may have been French, but there is no proof of this) had taken up residence when he was five and where he befriended the Michaux family, one of whom (either father Pierre or son Ernest) was (probably) the first person to think of fitting pedals and cranks to a hobby-horse and thus invented the velocioede, the forerunner of the modern bike. However, once again there is little evidence that he did in fact win the race - in no doubt, meanwhile, is his victory at the first Paris-Rouen one year later.

Moore died on the 17th of July in 1935, aged 86. Disappointingly, and perhaps inevitably considering the mystery that shrouds Moore's life, it is not known where he was buried - most researchers believe his grave is located somewhere near the Brent Reservoir in North London, fittingly the location of Britain's first cycle race which took place one day after Moore's race in St-Cloud. The bike he rode at St-Cloud is on display at Ely Museum in Cambridgeshire.



Raimondas Rumšas was born on this day in Lithuania in 1972. Now retired, his best professional result was third place overall in the 2002 Tour de France, but he is better known for what happened afterwards when police discovered EPO, growth hormones, anabolic steroids, testosterone and corticoids in a car belonging to his wife, Edita. The couple claimed that the drugs were intended for Edita's mother but, as they should have been declared on entry into France, she spent some months in prison. Then, shortly after finishing the 2003 Giro d'Italia in 6th place overall, he tested positive for EPO and was banned from racing for one year, returning to the sport for a short while once the ban expired. While it was never proved one way or the other who had been the intended recipient of the drugs discovered in 2002, they were both handed four month suspended sentences while their Polish doctor, Krzysztof Ficek, got a twelve month suspended sentence in 2006; finally bringing another murky cycling career to an end.

Grimpeur Maxime Monfort, who rode with the Luxembourg-based Leopard Trek team in 2011 and will remain with team leaders Andy and Frank Schleck when the team merges with Johann Bruyneel's Radioshack for 2012, was born on this day in 1983. Monfort's best results to date have been 1st overall, 1st Youth category and a stage win at the 2003 Tour de Luxembourg, 11th overall in the 2007 Vuelta a Espana, the National Time Trial Champion title in 2009, 1st overall in the 2010 Bayern-Rundfahrt and 6th overall in the 2011 Vuelta a Espana.



Peter Post
Peter Post, 12.11.1933 - 14.01.2011
Though he had been a cyclist of considerable note in his own right - becoming Dutch National Road Race Champion in 1963, winning Paris-Roubaix in 1964 (the first Dutchman to do so and setting a record average speed that has yet to be beaten) and earning the nickname "The Emperor of the Six Days" due to his track prowess - it was as a team manager that Peter Post really made his mark, introducing cycling to the so-called "total football" techniques that he had observed in use at his local Ajax team during his time as manager of the Ti-Raleigh team in the mid 1970s to 1983 when he trained several riders who joined the ranks of the all-time greats, including Hennie Kuiper, Joop Zoetemelk and Jan Raas.

In 1980, when Zoetemelk and Kuiper came 1st and 2nd overall in the Tour, Post's team won 11 stages - a feat that has not been repeated since. He was a shrewd businessman, experiencing little trouble in bringing the enormous Panasonic electronics manufacturer in as a new sponsor after Raleigh pulled out in 1983 and drove the team on to still more success. He retired in 1995, but returned as an adviser to the Rabobank team in 2005 when their rider Michael Rasmussen won the King of the Mountains and is now ranked as the second most successful directeur sportif after the legendary Guillaume Driessens whose Molteni team won 663 races. Post was 77 when he died on this day in Amsterdam in 2011.

Other birthdays: Deirdre Murphy (Ireland, 1959); Raymonf van der Biezen (Netherlands, 1987); José Antonio Martiarena (Spain, 1968); Antonio Maspes (Italy, 1932, died 2000); Hiroshi Toyooka (Japan, 1969); An U-Hyeok (South Korea, 1964); Sergey Lagutin (Uzbekistan, 1981); Erich Welt (Austria, 1928); Bill Holmes (Great Britain, 1936); Micheal Watson (Hong Kong, 1938); Benoît Joachim (Luxembourg, 1976); István Lang (Hungary, 1933); Herman van Loo (Netherlands, 1945); Ron Keeble (Great Britain, 1946);

Friday 13 January 2012

Van Paassen victim to CX virus

Sanne van Paassen
(image credit: Hans905 CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)
Dutch off-road star Sanne van Paassen is the latest rider to fall victim to the virus that has plagued the North European cyclo cross scene since before Christmas, forcing her to stay away from the Liévin round of the World Cup this weekend.

Several other riders, including five time British champion Helen Wyman have come down with the chest infection in recent weeks. In Wyman's case, it took longer than fans anticipated for recovery to take place and had a notable effect on her results which dropped drastically from her usual podium finishes.

23-year-old Brainwash rider van Paassen, who finished third at the 2011 National Championships, hopes to be able to return to competition in time for the next round at Hoogerheide on the 22nd of January and for the World Championships in Koksijde on the 28th and 29th.

Daily Cycling Facts 13.01.12

Marco Pantani, 1970-2004
(image credit: Aldo Bolzan CC BY-SA 3.0
Marco Pantani
On this day in 1970 in Cesena, Italy, Fernando and Tonina Pantani became the parents of a son they named Marco. Eleven years later, Marco joined the Fausto Coppi CC and was immediately singled out as a rider with promise. By the time he reached adulthood, he was still of small stature; standing 172cm tall and weighing 57kg - the classic and optimum dimensions of a grimpeur, as was confirmed when he came 3rd in his first amateur Giro d'Italia (the Girobio), 2nd a year later and then won the following year.

That same year, 1992, he became a professional and began to reveal himself as not just a talented climber but one of the finest the world had yet seen. Pantani didn't finish his first Giro but came second in the overall General Classification when he entered again in 1994, managing a third place overall finish at his first Tour de France later in the year. He then stayed away from the Giro for two years, did not finish again in 1997 and won in 1998. He came 13th in the 1995 Tour, didn't enter the next year, came third again in 1997 and won in 1998 - two Grand Tours in the same year, a feat that very few have achieved.

Sadly, that great year was the beginning of the end for Pantani - the next year, a haematocrit reading (the rather pointless stop-gap effort to prevent EPO use before an effective test was developed) returned a result of 52%, in excess of the legal 50% limit, and he was disqualified despite the fact that he was never once proved to have doped in any race (however, it was later revealed that after a crash in 1995 his haematocrit reading had been 60.1% - an extremely suspicious figure if correct). It appears that it was at this point that be began his slow downward spiral, failing to finish the Giro in 1999, 2001 and 2002 and coming 28th in 2000 and 14th in 2003. He entered the Tour for the last time in 2000 and didn't finish. Whether or not Pantani used drugs while racing may never be known, but his drug use outside the sport is in no doubt: on Valentine's Day in 2004, his body was found in a Rimini hotel room. An autopsy revealed that he had died of a combination of heart failure and a cerebral oedema brought on by a cocaine overdose. 20,000 people attended his funeral. He was 34 years old.

Alfred Le Bars
Alfred Célestin Le Bars was born on the 14th of March 1888 and died on this day in 1984, aged 95 years. Le Bars is one of the small numbers who guaranteed his Tour de France immortality without achieving great  results (which, while respectable, were nothing to write home about - he came 26th  in 1907, then missed a year before improving to 19th in 1909). He did it simply by how he got there - soon after he began in 1907, other riders discovered that the bike on which he was racing had also carried him to the race, all the way from his home in Morlaix, Finistère, 500km away and almost as far west as you can go in France without ending up in the Atlantic Ocean.

"There was no way of getting to the start in Paris other than by bike, so I rode it in eighteen and a half hours," he told them.

Happy birthday to Liquigas rider Daniel Oss, born today in 1987. Oss became Junior Italian Pursuit Champion in 2004 and has gone on to achieve good results in several races including a win at the Giro del Veneto and a stage at the USA Pro Cycling Challenge in 2010, the same year that he completed the Tour de France in 124th place.

Katusha's Alexandre Pliuschin was also born in 1987 and, like Oss, came to widespread attention in 2004 when he won bronze at the World U19 Scratch Championship. He has been Moldovan Road Race Champion every year since 2008.

Professional Continental rider Giovanni Visconti was born today in 1983. He became Italian Under-23 Road Race Champion in 2003, then took the Elite title in 2007, 2010 and 2011. Along the way, he has won  the Grand Prix de Fourmies, the Coppa Sabatini (twuce), the Trofeo Melinda, the UCI Europe Tour (twice), the Tour of Turkey and the Gran Premio dell'Insubria-Lugano along with various other races and numerous stages.

John Keen
John "Happy Jack" Keen, one of the most famous cyclists and frame builders of the late 19th and (very) early 20th Century, died on this day in 1902. While there is no reliable documentary evidence in support, Keen is believed to have started racing in 1869. There are, however, surviving records from 1872 when he covered 10 miles (16.1km) in 36 minutes - equating to an average of 16.67mph (26.8kph), a fantastic speed on the bikes of the day and, when he went to New York in the later years of the decade, he was billed as the fastest cyclist in the world. Keen had been producing bikes since the early 1870s and introduced the first "big wheel" penny-farthings - with front wheels as large as 51" (130cm) - in 1873, and invented a type of hanging pedal (where the platform is position below the axle) that revolved in a single ball bearing. He was born on the 25th of February 1849 in Worcester, moving to Surbiton where he spent most of the rest of the rest of his life and was 52 when he died of tuberculosis.

Other birthdays: José Lovito (Argentina, 1970); Murugayan Kumaresan (Malaysia, 1967); Wilfried Wesemael (Belgium, 1950); Giacomo Bazzan (Italy, 1950); Willem Ooms (Netherlands, 1897, died 1972); Jesús Sarabia (Mexico, 1946); Radcliffe Lawrence (Jamaica, 1949); Roberto Buitrago (Columbia, 1938); Flavio Martini (Italy, 1945).

Tomorrow: Gert-Jan Theunisse, Peter Post and James Moore - the winner of the world's first bike race

Thursday 12 January 2012

Ladies' Tour of Qatar starters



Stage 1, 1.02.12
Camel Race Track - Al Khor Corniche (97km)
Stage 2: 2.02.12
Al Zubara Fort - Madinat Al Shamal (114.5km)
Stage 3:  3.02.12
Katara Cultural Village - Katara Cultural Village (92.5km)
Total: 304km


1: China Chongming - Giant Pro Cycling
  1    CHEN, Li
  2    HUANG, Dong Yan
  3    LIU, Xin
  4    LUO, Xiao Ling
  5    SHENG, Yongyan
  6    YUAN, Yunyun
2: Diadora-Pasta Zara
  11    ANDRUK, Alona
  12    BATAGELJ, Polona
  13    BRONZINI, Giorgia
  14    CILVINAITE, Inga
  15    DONATO, Giulia
  16    JANELIUNAITE, Edita
3: France
  21    AUDE, Biannic
  22    CORDON, Audrey
  23    JEULAND, Nathalie
  24    JEULAND, Pascale
  25    LESUEUR, Mélodie
  26    VERHOEVEN, Aurore
4: Germany
  31    BUBNER, Janine
  32    GEBHARDT, Elke
  33    KASPER, Romy
  34    POHL, Stephanie
  35    SANDIG, Madeleine
  36    SCHNITZMEIER, Anna-Bianca
5: GreenEdge-AIS
  41    ARNDT, Judith
  42    GUNNEWIJK, Loes
  43    HOSKINS, Melissa
  44    MACLEAN, Jessie
  45    RHODES, Alexis
  46    SPRATT, Amanda
6: Team Hitec Products UCK
  51    BERGSETH, Johanne
  52    HATTELAND, Tone
  53    LONGO BORGHINI, Elisa
  54    MUSTONEN, Sara
  55    NØSTVOLD, Lise
  56    WAERSTAD, Froydis
7: Italy
  61    DONADONI, Alice
  62    CANTELE, Noemi
  63    CONFALONIERI, Maria Giulia
  64    PATUZZO, Eleonora
  65    SCANDOLARA, Valentina
  66    VANNUCCI, Chiara
8: Lotto Belisol Ladies
  71    DUYCK, Ann-sophie
  72    HANNES, Kaat
  73    HENRION, Ludivine
  74    SCHOONBAERT, Kim
  75    TAYLOR, Cherise
  76    LOOY, Katrien Van
9: MCipollini - Giambenini - Gauss
  81    BACCAILE, Monia
  82    BASTIANELLI, Marta
  83    BORCHI, Alessandra
  84    CECCHINI, Elena
  85    GUDERZO, Tatiana
  86    TAGLIAFERRO, Marta
10: Dolmans - Boels Cycling Team
  91    BRAS, Martine
  92    LAVRIJSSEN, Birgit
  93    SPOOR, Winanda
  94    BREGGEN, Anna Van Der
  95    KAMP, Laura Van Der
  96    WILD, Kirsten
11: Skil - 1t4i
  101    BRUINS, Regina
  102    KANIS, Janneke
  103    PIETERS, Amy
  104    TROMP, Esra
  105    RIJEN, Linda Van
  106    VISSER, Adrie
12: Rabobank Ladies Team
  111    VOCHT, Liesbet De
  112    DÜSTER, Sarah
  113    KITCHEN, Lauren
  114    KNETEMANN, Roxane
  115    SLAPPENDEL, Iris
  116    TALEN, Rebecca
13: Team Specialized- Lululemon
  121    BECKER, Charlotte
  122    BRENNAUER, Lisa
  123    COLCLOUGH, Katie
  124    HOSKING, Chloe
  125    DIJK, Ellen Van
  126    WORRACK, Trixi
14: Topsport Vlaanderen - Ridley 2012
  131    BEYEN, Ine
  132    BRULEE, Latoya
  133    CROKET, Gilke
  134    POLSPOEL, Maaike
  135    BRANDE, Edith Vanden
  136    VEKEMANS, Anisha
15: Exergy Twenty12
  141    CROWELL, Jacquelyn
  142    OLDS, Shelley
  143    RIVERA, Coryn
  144    RYAN, Kendall
  145    SCHNEIDER, Samantha
  146    WILES, Taylor

Dutch start for 2015 Vuelta?

Dutch race organiser Jos Vaessen and the organisers of the Vuelta a Espana will discuss the prospect of the 2015 event starting in the Netherlands, says Wielerland.nl.

If it goes ahead, the first weekend would be spent in Groningen, Friesland and Drenthe, the heartlands of Dutch cycling where the sport enjoys enormous popularity.

Arndt back on track

Germany's Judith Arndt, current Time Trial world champion, has revealed she may compete in track events at the 2012 Olympics should a member of her nation's track team - Lisa Brennauer, Charlotte Becker and Madeleine Sandig - become unable to do so.

Judith Arndt
(image credit: Heidas CC BY-SA 3.0)
"In the event that a rider is ill, injured or out of shape, I would hopefully be able to act as a substitute [and will be] in very good physical condition," the 35-year-old told the German Sport.de news service. She will, however, focus primarily on the road races - "I think I have a good chance to win a medal in the Individual Time Trial," she says. The road race takes place on the 28th of July and the Time Trial on the 2nd of August, followed by qualifications for the track races a day later.

Arndt, who joins the new Australian GreenEDGE team for 2012 after four years with HTC-Highroad is not a newcomer to the track - she was World Individual Pursuit Champion in 1997 and won several National Championships between 1996 and 2001. She also has an excellent mentor - her partner, Petra Rossner, won the 1991 World Track Championships and a gold medal for the 3km Pursuit at the 1992 Olympics.

Rodriguez backs Contador for the Vuelta

Joaquim Rodriguez
(image credit: Haggisnl
CC BY 3.0)
Katusha's Spanish climber Joaquim Rodriguez - a man who knows a thing or two about mountains - says that if  cleared by the Court for Arbitration in Sport, Alberto Contador will be the man to watch in this year's extremely hilly Vuelta a Espana.

With no fewer than nine stages ending with challenging climbs and six featuring steep sections en route, sprinters are down to jut six stages in which they'll have any real chance of success this year. It's a strength-sapping, difficult parcours where a rider such a Contador, who can keep going long after others have run out of energy, can do well. However, Rodriguez believes that he too ha the chance to perform well.

"If he's there, Alberto Contador will be the favorite by far. There are beautiful and difficult uphill finishes, which suit me. The individual time trial - a nightmare for me - is limited," he says, referring to the much-reduced 40km ITT that in addition to the lack of sprinters' stages makes the race very much one for the grimpeurs alone.

Sammy Sanchez of Euskaltel-Euskadi also sounds optimistic, telling L'Equip that while there are many summit finishes, "these are short... not endless."

Movistar's Juan José Cobo, who won the event last year when he rode on a wildcard entry with Geox-TMC after an amazing ride in which he made the dreaded Alto de l'Angliru with its gradients approaching 24% look easy, says that the three stages in Sanchez's homeland the Asturias Mountains will be key to winning the race. "This is super demanding Vuelta. Maybe even too much for me," he adds, "This course is perhaps too pointed for me."

Copenhagen earns €31 million from Worlds

The World Championships, which were held in Copenhagen last September, generated around €31.2 million of income for the city, it has been announced - around €26 for every resident of the Danish city.

75% of that is believed to have come from overseas, either from tourists visiting the event as part of a holiday to the Scandinavian nation or there specifically for the event. Approximately 118,000 hotel rooms were booked for the weekend throughout Denmark and tourists reported many campsites were so packed full of motorhomes, caravans and tents that they were forced to turn people away.

Daily Cycling Facts 12.01.12

Happy Birthday to... the Bicycle
On this day in 1818, Baron Karl von Drais was granted a patent for a machine he'd invented as a means of transport during a period of famine when many horses died of starvation. The machine featured a wooden wheel at either end, connected by a wooden beam upon which the user sat and used his feet to push the device along the ground. Soon becoming known as a draisine or draisienne, it was the earliest known bicycle. Drais' patent applied only in the Baden region of Germany and as such his invention was widely copied throughout the rest of the country, France and - once news spread - the rest of Europe.

Von Drais called his device a Laufmaschine or running machine, but others called it a velocipede or a dandyhorse. Curiously, we owe thanks for the invention to a volcano - Mount Tambora in Indonesia. When Tambora erupted in 1815, following a series of smaller eruptions, it ejected so much dust into the atmosphere that global temperatures dropped by an average of as much as 0.7C and harvests failed throughout the Northern Hemisphere in what became known as The Year Without A Summer. In 1848, Drais publicly renounced his nobility, stating that he wished to be known as Citizen Karl Drais in support of the French Revolution. The Prussian government viciously suppressed a revolution of their own the following year and, viewing Drais as an enemy of the establishment, seized his pension and belongings to assist in covering the costs of preventing unrest. He died destitute two years later.

David Zabriskie
Happy birthday to David Zabriskie, cyclist with Garmin-Cervélo and the first vegan in the Tour de France (well, almost - he revealed that he would eat small amounts of salmon during the 2011 Tour). Zabriskie is known for his eccentric sense of humour and unconventional ways, frequently interviewing other riders in the peloton and later posting the results on his website. He also collects Marvel action figures, his collection being stolen along with thousands of dollars of cycling equipment and Olympic memorabilia from his home in 2009 when he and wife Randi Reich were away at the Tour of California.

He won a stage in the Tour de France in 2005, beating Lance Armstrong and becoming the first American to have won stages in all three of the Grand Tours. David's career has been held back by misfortune with several crashes ending his races early - the most recent was Stage 9 in the 2011 Tour when he injured his wrist in the crash on a descent that also put Jurgen van den Broeck, Frederik Willems and Alexander Vinokourov (Vino announced his retirement afterwards but has since returned) out of the race. However (or perhaps as a result of this) he is a favourite among fans and journalists. As might be expected, he has a range of nicknames: The Green Hornet, DZ, DZNuts, Dizzy, Captain America and Zup.

Peter Mitchell, team mate of Victoria Pendleton and Chris Hoy at the Team Sky Track Team, was born on this day in 1990.

Polish Olympian Ryszard Szurkowski was born today in 1946. He won silver medals in the 1972 and 1976 Games, adding three gold and one silver at the World Cycling Amateur Championships in 1973, 1974 and 1975. He won the Peace Race four times (1970, 1971, 1973 and 1975) and the Dookoła Mazowsza, now part of the UCI Europe Tour, in 1977 and 1978.

Other birthdays: Jan van Houwelingen (Netherlands, 1955); Gabriele Aynat (Spain, 1972); Guido Bontempi (Italy, 1960); Honson Chin (Jamaica, 1956); David Cook (Great Britain, 1969); Michel Coulon (Belgium, 1947); Miguel Espinós (Spain, 1947, died 2006); Hans Flückiger (Switzerland, 1926); Guo Longchen (China, 1968); Hans-Joachim Hartnick (East Germany, 1955); Karl Klöckner (Germany, 1915); Adolf Kofler (Austria, 1892); Hideo Madarame (Japan, 1944); Ed Nestor (Australia, 1920); Gema Pascual (Spain, 1979); Sergey Pesteryev (Russia, 1888); Louise Robinson (Great Britain, 1965); Ralph Therrio (USA, 1954); Zdzisław Wrona (Poland, 1962); Lars Zebroski (USA, 1941); Vasyl Zhdanov (USSR, 1963).

Tomorrow: Marco Pantani

Wednesday 11 January 2012

Downing down but not out

Downing, 36
(image credit: Adambro CC BY-SA 3.0
Rapha-Condor-Sharp's Dean Downing suffered a crash at 60kph during training today but escaped serious injury, says manager John Herety.

Herety, who represented Great Britain at the 1980 Olympic Games and won the National Road Race Championship two years later, says he thought he was seeing the end of a career when the rider crashed and expected broken bones - but thankfully Downing, who will turn 37 on the 24th of this month, sustained only grazes. Herety described his initial reaction as "one of those bottom of the stomach sick feelings today, visions of a rider's career ending, thankfully not the case."

"Down but not out, the leg end!" Herety told us. "[He] continues his training camp with a sore ar$%!"

Vuelta heads for the hills

Los Ancares is just one of the aspects of the 2012 Vuelta
that make it very much a race for the climbers
(image credit: FCPB CC BY-SA 3.0)
The 2012 Tour de France bowed out of the mountains arms race that has seen the three Grand Tours adding longer, steeper and ever more challenging climbs as the battled to lay claim to the toughest Queen Stage over the last few years, finally deciding that enough is enough and organising an event that a non-grimpeur might have a chance of winning rather than searching out some topography to outdo the Mortirolo, Zoncolan and Angliru; but the Vuelta a Espana has apparently reminded itself that a far a many fans are concerned, the mountains maketh the tour and gone in the other direction entirely, introducing more and tougher climbs for this year.

Last year's race, which ventured into the Basque Country for the first time in a generation, proved that there are some beautiful mountain roads in the north of Spain and this year the race has a very northern flavour - there are no stages south of Madrid, seemingly a strange choice since the sport ha a large fan base in the lower latitudes of the country. Coll de la Gallina, Los Ancares, Bola del Mundo, Valdezcaray, Lagos de Covadonga, Cuitu Negro, the Coll de la Gallina and Arrate will all test the peloton to the limit - last year, Mark Cavendish abandoned the race; explaining that he's a sprinter and the race had no sprints left. This year, the sprinters have their chances reduced to Stages 10, 12, 13, 17, 19, and 21, with 2 and 18 not out of reach for those who suffer less than others on the climbs. That's six sprint stages of which 13, 19 and 21 will by no means be easy wins - so who knows how many will even bother showing up?

It's not going to be a race for the time trial specialists either, with organisers reducing the individual TT to a mere 40km, so expect teams to send their finest climbers to compete on some stunning and very hard stages.

Stages 1-21 altimetry (click to enlarge):











Rabo Women Number 1 in the world

Vos has had a perfect CX season - and now her team is
ranked the best in the world as the start of the road season
draws nearer
(image credit: Rabosport)
Hot on the heels of the Vos to race men story is news that the new Stichting-Rabobank Women team, which was constructed around her, is at the top of the UCI rankings in the run-up to the start of the 2012 season and with the Tour of Qatar, which will be the team's first race, beginning on the 1st of February and the Ronde van Drenthe - the first round of the Women's World Cup - less than two months away.

Specialized-Lululemon are in second place, followed by AA Drink-Leontien.nl in third - but with AA Drink recently confirming it has signed Emma Pooley and other riders from the ill-fated Garmin-Cervelo, there's every likelihood that the team will move up and possibly even challenge the mighty Rabobank.

The UCI say that the 35 women's teams signed up to race internationally in the coming year is a record - by our calculations, there were 37 in 2008 but the number then decreased over the coming years to 2010 when there were 27, then a slight increase to 28 in 2011. Seven extra teams is fantastic news, hopefully an indication that women's cycling is not in straits quite as dire as we had feared, and a sure sign that 2012 is going to be a vintage year for fans of the sport.

Marianne Vos to race men?

Marianne Vos has been winning so
many races she's getting bored
(© Eddy Fever CC2.0)
As we all know, Marianne Vos won just about everything she entered in 2011; which is the sort of year that any cyclist dreams of having even though the Worlds slipped out of her grasp once more. The trouble is, 2010 was much the same. So was 2009, as were several years before that - and Marianne, while doubtless loving the victories, isn't only in racing for the glory: she loves the competition, as is made plainly obvious by the grin plastered across her face in all the races she enters.

Thus, she's getting bored. "It will not be a problem for Marianne to motivate for the 2012 Olympic Games and World Championships in Limburg, but I am worried about the subsequent period," says Rabobank manager Jeroen Blijlevens, winner of eleven Grand Tour stages during the 1990s. "It's not like Marianne, after the national cyclocross championships, to say that she was having no fun, so we have to be careful that she doesn’t lose her motivation."

But Marianne's at the top of her game - she's arguably already the most successful female cyclist of all time as she approaches her 25th birthday, indisputably the strongest and most successful of the current generation, so where does she go from here? She's standing on the highest rung of the ladder, wanting to go higher... but the ladder ends here. Actually, there is one place she could go; a place where the competition is stiffer and where her opponents would be stronger. Men's races.

"Riding in some smaller men’s races could make her stay motivated on the one hand," Blijlevens adds, "but could also make her continue to make progress, because I think she can get much better - the men could ride her to the next level."

Vos' progress aside, what would be the likely outcome, other than quite a few of the boys revealing how they react when they get whupped by a girl? One initial opinion among Twitterers is it'd be disastrous for women's cycling, the fear being that the top 10% of the women's peloton could be creamed off to ride in some future mixed racing series and thus leave the women's sport without its greatest - headline grabbing - stars. That would not be a good thing. But, what are the chances of that happening? Not much, it seems. For a start, there's the simple fact that apart from Vos, who is an exceptionally talented rider, very few women would want to race against the men for the simple reason that, while Pat McQuaid was entirely wrong when he said women's racing isn't as developed as men's, the vast majority wouldn't remain competitive. Secondly, how likely is it that the UCI would permit mixed competition in anything other than one or two races?

Vos is very good, but she's not unbeatable. That's the best
argument against anyone who would claim the prospect of
her competing against men is indication that women's
cycling
(image credit: Mogens Engelund CC BY-SA 3.0)
What we're talking about is primarily a stunt and it's one that will get noticed, especially if Vos wins a men's race (and there's every indication that she would). A high percentage of the cycling press ignores women's cycling entirely, or at the very least relegates it to page-filler, but which of them could resist a headline like  "Marianne Vos victorious against male rivals!" That'll apply to readers too; perhaps even make those who fall for attitudes like those of McQuaid, those who heard the (male) commentators at the Worlds describing the Elite Women's road race as boring and haven't ever bothered to take a look for themselves, start thinking to themselves that if Vos is so good she can ride against the men then women's cycling must be pretty good after all. Then, perhaps, they might make the time to have a look and new fans is precisely what the sport needs if it's going to bring in new sponsors and new revenue, the first step to getting the athletes the equal pay and prize money that they deserve.

There will of course be those who say that if a cyclist such as Vos needs to look elsewhere, women's cycling can't be very good. The best comeback to that is her failure to win the World Championships over the last five years, and that - if it happens - she won't be leaving women's cycling entirely and only racing men. This is proof that there are other female cyclists who can beat her, that there are other female cyclists who are as good as her.

There's a risk, just as there is with everything, but the potential benefits are vast.

Daily Cycling Facts 11.01.12

Happy birthday to Scotty "The Bulldozer" Cranmer, BMX-riding winner of several Dew Tours and one gold and two silver X-Games medals. Scotty also holds the honour of being the first rider to ever successfully land a frontflip-tailwhip in competition. He was born in New Jersey in 1987.

Cameron Meyer, who was born in Viveash on this day in 1988, is an Australian cyclist who pursued a very successful career on track as a junior including three World titles and four National titles in 2006. He then began to race on roads as well, winning the Tour of Tasmania in 2007, then the Tour of Japan and a bronze in the World Under-23 Time Trial Championships in 2008. Meyer became National TT Champion at Elite level in 2010, also winning three gold medals at the World Track Championships and another three at the Commonwealth Games. In 2011, he retained his TT title and added the National Madison Championship, two golds in the World Track Cup, two more at the Oceania Championships, one gold and one silver at the World Track Championships and an overall General Classification victory at the Tour Down Under.

On this day in 1891, "Baron" Georges-Eugène Haussmann (he was never ennobled), the architect of many of the Paris thoroughfares along which the Tour de France passes on its final stage each year, died at the age of 80.

Heinz Stucke, cyclo-tourist extraordinaire
(image credit: Anthony Atkielski CC BY-SA 3.0)
Happy birthday to Heinz Stücke, the German touring cyclist who set a new distance record in 1995. Since giving up his job and setting out on his bike in 1962, he has ridden more than 609,000km - almost all of them on the same three-geared, steel-framed bike he began with. The bike was stolen in Portsmouth, UK, in 2006 but discovered the next day dumped in a nearby park.

María Teodora Adoracion Ruano Sanchón, known as Dori Ruano, was born on this day in 1969. A road and track cyclist, she represented Spain at the 1992, 2000 and 2004 Olympics and became World Points Race Champion in 1998.

Other birthdays: Gabriele Altweck (Germany, 1963); Orlando Bates (Barbados, 1950); Konrad Czajkowski (Poland, 1980); Ervin Dér (Hungary, 1956); Gilles Durand (Canada, 1952); Jiří Opavský (Czechoslovakia, 1931); Fritz Ruland (Germany, 1914); Ian Stanley (Jamaica, 1963); Josef Volf (Czechoslovakia, 1939); Wol Yamamoto (Guam, 1974).

Tuesday 10 January 2012

Daily Cycling Facts 10.01.12

Bernard Thevenet, the man who beat Merckx
(image credit: Ken CC BY 2.0)
Bernard Thévenet
Bernard Thévenet was born on this day in 1948 and in 1975 became the man who defeated The Cannibal. He was born in 1948 in the tiny Burgundy village known as Le Guidon, a name which rather fittingly translates into English as "the handlebar." His early interest in the sport was facilitated by the local priest who moved Mass to an earlier time so that Thévenet and the other choirboys could watch cycle races as they passed through the village; he would later remember, "The sun was shining on their toe-clips and the chrome on their forks. They were modern-day knights."

The young Bernard's parents knew of their son's passions but would not allow him to race as they needed him to work on their farm, so he would sneak off to enter local events - they remained unwise, until he began winning them and appeared in the newspapers. At first, they tried to forbid him from continuing, but the cycling-loving priest talked them into going to see him race and, when they saw how fast the boy was, convinced them that he had the potential to go a long way. Of course, anyone with even a passing interest in the history of cycle racing will know how far he went, ending the Tour de France reign of no less than Eddy Merckx, the greatest cyclist to have ever lived, then winning a second Tour in 1977. In addition, he won the Dauphiné Libéré in 1975 and 1976 and was victorious in numerous other races.


Craig Lewis was born on this day in 1985. Lewis returned from a horrific crash after being hit by a car and left with 47 broken bones, massive internal bleeding and punctures in both lungs early on in his career to win the Under-23 Road Race and Criterium titles in 2006, then managed three top ten stage race finishes a year later. In 2008, he finished the Giro di Lombardia in 11th place. Over the last two years, he has won stages at the Tour de Romandie and in the Giro d'Italia, proving himself very much a rider to watch in the coming years as he enters his peak. He will ride with the new Champion System team in 2012.

"Catlike," it says on his helmet - and, accordingly,
Hayden Roulston looks as though he's just about
to fall asleep.
(image credit: Thomas Ducroquet CC BY-SA 3.0)
It's also the birthday of Hayden Roulston, Craig's team mate at HTC-Highroad, who was born today in New Zealand in 1981. Hayden, who began his professional career with Cofidis before moving on to Discovery (from which he resigned after a "nightclub incident"), HealthNet and the Cervélo TestTeam before finding his way to Stapleton's superteam, has been a leading light on his home nation's racing scene as well as making his mark in Europe where he has won stages in the Tour of Poland, Tour de Wallonie, the Vuelta a Espana and even the Tour de France. He also finished the 2010 Paris-Roubaix in 10th place and has won two silver and two bronze medals in the Commonwealth Games. While Hayden was keeping himself busy building up his palmares, Discovery was mutating into Radioshack - for whom he will be riding in 2012, following their merger with the Schleck Bros.' Leopard Trek; a merger that Lewis described as "detrimental to the sport."

Antoine Fauré was born in Lyon on this day in 1869 and wa one of the 60 cyclists to start the very first Tour de France in 1903, but not one of the 21 to finish. He did rather better the following year when he won Stage 2 in the independent class (Aucouturier won among the professionals), then abandoned in Stage 4; and would enter again in 1907, 1909 and 1912 - 1909 was the only year in which he finished, taking 37th place.

152 Newbury Street,
Boston
On this day in 1879, the Massachusetts Bicycle Club was founded by Albert A. Pope, Edward W. Pope, William G. Fish, Arthur W. Pope, Frank W. Freeborn, George G. Hall, H.E. Parkhurst, C.H. Corken, William H. Ames, Augustus F. Webster, H. Winslow Warren, Winfield S. Slocum, William F. Brownell, Joseph P. Livermore, and Albert S. Parsons. Six years later, the club had more than 200 members and sufficient funds to have an clubhouse designed and built at 152 Newbury Street, Boston.

Other birthdays: Jean Alfonsetti (Luxembourg, 1908); Karl-Ivar Andersson (Sweden, 1932); Adolfo Belmonte (Mexico, 1945); Vic Browne (Australia, 1942); Gheorghe Calcişcă (Romania, 1935); Phillip Collins (Ireland, 1972); Auguste Garrebeek (Belgium, 1912, died 1973); Dieter Gieseler (Germany, 1941); Oscar Goerke (USA, 1883, died 1934); Theo Hogervorst (Netherlands, 1956); Gholam Hossein Koohi (Iran, 1951); Kimpale Mosengo (Congo, 1963); Joseph Werbrouck (Belgium, 1882, died 1974); Jutta Niehaus (Germany, 1964); Michel Zanoli (Netherlands, 1968, died 2003); Marlon Pérez (Columbia, 1976); Michel Vaarten (Belgium, 1957); Kamsari Slam (Malaysia, 1941); Jürgen Simon (Germany, 1938, died 2003); Amar Singh Billing (India, 1944).

Monday 9 January 2012

Daily Cycling Facts 09.01.12

Amy Gillett, 1976-2005
Amy Gillett
Today would have been the birthday of Amy Gillett, who was born in Adelaide in 1976. Originally a world-class rower, Amy had been idientified as a track and road cyclist with enormous potential and was predicted to win medals at the 2006 Commonwealth Games. Tragically, she was killed in Germany when a driver lost control of his car and ploughed into a group of cyclists with whom she was training on the 18th of July 2005. Five of her team mates were seriously injured, two sufficiently so that it was thought they also might die. Amy was 29 when she died and was studying for a PhD. She had been married for less than a year and a half.

The Amy Gillett Foundation was set up in her honour, an organisation that aims to cut cyclist fatalities on the road to zero by encouraging safer cycling and increasing awareness of cyclists among other road users as well as funding two scholarships per annum, one to a young female athlete and one to a researcher whose work will assist in reducing cyclist deaths on the roads. You can learn more about their work here.


Though known primarily for her success as a mountain biker, Mette Andersen has also enjoyed considerable success in both cyclo cross and road racing. Born in Denmark on this day in 1974, she won the National MTB Cross Country Championship every year from 2001 to 2004, the National Cyclo Cross Championship in 2002, 2003 and 2005 and the National Individual Time Trial Championship in 2004. Prior to her retirement, she came second in the National Cyclo Cross Championship of 2010.

Happy birthday to Mat "The Condor" Hoffman, born on this day in 1972. Mat is widely renowned as one of the best vert BMX riders the world has ever seen, breaking world records and inventing new tricks for many years and in doing o developing, promoting and driving the sport. He is also the owner and founder of the famous Hoffman BMX brand.

Happy birthday to Yoanka González, 2004 World Scratch Race Champion, born in Cuba in 1976.

Happy birthday to Emanuele Sella, the Italian cyclist born in 1981.

More birthdays: János Dévai (Hungary, 1940); Mariano Friedick (USA, 1975); José Gómez (Spain, 1944); Verena Jooß (Germany, 1979); Maxim Belkov (USSR, 1985); Michael Markussen (Denmark, 1955); Kyoshi Miura (Japan, 1961); Janusz Sałach (Poland, 1957); Volodymyr Semenets (USSR, 1950); Jason Donald (USA, 1980); David Bernabeu (Spain, 1978).

Sunday 8 January 2012

Daily Cycling Facts 08.01.12

Jacques Anquetil
On this day in 1934, one of cycling's all-time greatest riders was born: Jacques Anquetil, son of a builder. It was said that while "Anquetil could drop nobody, nobody could drop Anquetil" and that as a result he was always racing the clock, rather than other riders - one of the reasons he became known as Mr. Chrono.

Anquetil obtained his first racing licence on the 2nd of December 1950, when he was riding with the amateur AC Sottevillais - he would remain a member of the club for the rest of his life, never forgetting the support it offered in the early days of his career, and there is a memorial provided by the club on his grave at Quincampoix. Soon after joining, he passed his exams and became a qualified engineer, finding employment with a local factory but, having by this time realised that his future was on the bike, he walked out of the job after less than a month because his boss refused to allow him extra days off for training. Fortunately, AC Sottevillais' coach and manager André Boucher was a talented man and the young Anquetil developed fast; rapidly beginning to bring in victories and money.

Just two years later, the young rider won a bronze medal at the Olympics. Boucher gathered a selection of press cuttings and mailed them to a representative of the famous La Perle bicycle manufacturer which ran a racing team, asking him to send them on to the team's manager Francis Pélissier (brother of Henri who won the Tour in 1923). The representative was impressed and so the cuttings did find their way to Pélissier, who was also impressed and personally rang Anquetil - who, as a nineteen-year-old lad, was presumably over-awed to get a call from a Pélissier - to offer him 30,000 francs per month to ride for the team as an independent (a class of semi-professionals who received limited backing from their team and were responsible for finding and paying for their own board and lodgings at races). Anquetil, in the way of young men everywhere, went straight out and spent the money on a new car; a Renault Frégate, the manufacturer's top-of-the-range model that was supposed to be a rival to Citroen's legendary DS, that he crashed twice in the first year he owned it. In 1953, Pélissier sent Anquetil to the GP des Nations which had become known as the unofficial world time trial championships and where he would compete against British star Ken Joy. At that time, British cyclists considered themselves to be far stronger time trial riders than their Continental counterparts, but once out on the parcours - upon which Joy had started sixteen minutes earlier - Anquetil wasted no time in catching and passing him, then won. The British rider was crushed, but in a way Anquetil had done the British racing scene a big favour: after many years of insularity created by the National Cycling Union's ban on road racing, British cyclists had little experience of  the level of professionalism in Europe and incidents such as this were a valuable lesson in how they needed to shape up if they were to realise their recent dream of competing in events such as the Tour de France. However, Pélissier was not yet convinced that the future lay with Anquetil, and at the same race the following year he concentrated his support on the Swiss rider Hugo Koblet who would win the Tour in 1951. Anquetil was not happy, but he beat Koblet and once again won, as he would a total of nine times.

Anquetil in 1963
(image credit: Dutch National Archive)
Later in his life, Anquetil developed an affection for Britain based on the nation's love of time trials. In 1961, he was invited to attend the annual Road Time Trails Council awards ceremony at the Royal Albert Hall, where he handed over prizes to Brian Kirby and the legendary Beryl Burton, who became perhaps the most successful British athlete of all time. Three years later, he was approached with a suggestion that he might consider taking part in a British race over a 25 mile course and was enthusiastic - when asked how long he thought he would take to complete the race, he replied "46 minutes" - 8 minutes faster than the record time set for the course. Anquetil was famous for an ability to accurately assess any course after studying maps for no more than few minutes, and the times he estimated he would take to complete them were rarely incorrect. Sadly, in this case we'll never know if he really could have finished in the time he stated because he asked for £1000 to take part - Vic Jenner, a timber merchant who had provided large amounts of money to cycling events in the past, had said he would put up the money but when he died a short while afterwards nobody else had the means to replace his offer. However, Anquetil did race in Britain that year when he took part in a cycling exhibition at the Herne Hill velodrome, riding with Tom Simpson.

(image credit: Velorunner)
That ability to read a parcours so accurately is evidence of Anquetil's formidable intelligence, which combined with his physical attributes to make him the devastatingly effective rider that he was - Dick Yates said, "That Anquetil was a highly intelligent man there can be no doubt and he was the nearest thing to a true intellectual that cycling has ever produced." He found astronomy fascinating and, according to those who knew him, had a working knowledge and understanding of the science; yet he also had a superstitious side that remain common among cyclists to this day. In 1964, a fortune teller for a French newpaper predicted that he would die on the 13th day of the Tour de France. His wife Janine tried to hide it from him, but he found out when fans of his rivals sent him anonymous letters with clippings of the prediction and, on the rest day before the 13th day of the race, he locked himself in his hotel room and refused to come out. Eventually, Raphaël Géminiani managed to tempt him out by promising to take him to a party,something almost guaranteed to pique the famously hedonistic rider's interest; the next day, feeling the after effects of a night of excess, Anquetil rode badly and was dropped soon after the stage began. However, he survived the day and went on to win the Tour, his fifth. That he suffered so badly may be seen as evidence that tales of wild parties he supposedly held during races and his habit of preparing himself by staying up late and drinking vast amounts of wine (he claimed that his preparation the night before a race consisted of "a pheasant with chestnuts, a bottle of champagne and a woman") are simply legends - legends that the he, like Mario Cippolini four decades later, did nothing to dispel, realising the effect that being passed with ease by a rider they believed to be hung-over would have on his opponents (Géminiani said that Anquetil had on more than one occasion bluffed his rivals into thinking he was no good in the mountains - which, in truth, were not his favourite part of a race - before "tearing them to shreds," further evidence that he used psychology against rivals). Janine also insists that the tale in which the rider successfully treated mid-race indigestion as he battled Poulidor to the top of the Puy de Dôme by gulping down half a bottle of champagne passed to him from the team car by Géminiani is a myth; despite it being recounted as fact in many books (if we were to stop telling all the good stories from Tour history that are really myths, however, we'd lose many of the best tales; and the truth should not be permitted to get in the way of a good narrative when dealing with matters such as cycling).

In 1954, Anquetil began his mandatory two years' military service. Towards the end, he was given orders that he described as the "strangest, the most unusual that a gunner has ever been asked to carry out" - namely, to beat the Hour Record that Italian Fausto Coppi had set fourteen years previously at 45.848km and which he had already failed to better in 1955. The agreement was that, should he succeed, half the prize money would go to the Army and the other half to the mother of a soldier who had been killed in Algeria. Anquetil, of course, would keep the glory - worth far more to a young cyclist than any amount of money. His first two attempts failed when he started off to quickly, but on the third - riding a near-exact copy of Coppi's bike built from scratch in three days especially for the attempt - he covered 46.149km. Coppi placed his seal of approval upon the achievement by giving the French rider his autograph.

Memorial, Chateaufort
(image credit: Henri Salome CC BY-SA 3.0) 
In 1965, Anquetil beat the Hour Record once again with 47.493km. However, this time it was disallowed because he arrogantly refused to submit to an anti-doping test afterwards, feeling that a rider of his stature - by this time, he had won his five Tours, two Giro d'Italia and a Vuelta a Espana - should be afforded better treatment than having to urinate in a bottle in a tent set up in the middle of the track. He would, he said, be perfectly content to supply the sample in the more dignified surroundings of his hotel room; but the Italian testers disagreed. The row became rather heated and manager Géminiani (a man known for his short temper - which was never displayed more memorably than in 1952 when he lost his patience with Jean Robic, who had for some reason decided to give a press conference while in the bath: Géminiani stormed over and pushed his head under the water three times, holding it there until Robic could no longer hold his breath)  tried to physically throw the testers out of the tent.

Anquetil's attitude towards doping was an unusual one. While he never made a full admission to using drugs, he was completely open with journalists and other figures at a time when the subject tended to remain unspoken, as exemplified by none other than Charles de Gaulle when he said of Anquetil, "Doping? What doping? Did he or did he not make them play the Marseillaise abroad?" Anquetil's views on the matter, meanwhile, are better summed up by the response he gave when the subject came up during a televised interview: "Leave me in peace. Everyone takes dope." The nearest he came to a confession was when he told the story of how he and Roger Hassenforder - who entered the Tour six times and finished once, in 50th place - had decided to find out if amphetamine has the same effect on fish that it has on humans by dropping a handful of Maxiton tablets into a restaurant's fish tank. Apparently, it does.

He was the first cyclist to achieve five overall victories in the Tour de France, including his incredible win in 1961 when he wore the maillot jaune in every stage of the race - a feat that had happened before, but against far weaker fields than one which included riders like Jean Stablinksi and Charly Gaul. He also won the Giro d'Italia twice, the Vuelta a Espana once, the Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré twice, Liège-Bastogne-Liège and Bordeaux-Paris once, Paris-Nice five times and the Grand Prix des Nations nine times, among many other victories. Even the notoriously bad-tempered Bernard Hinault, who detests being compared to the cycling giants that came before him, says that being compared to Anquetil "is an honour."

Towards the end of the 1960s, Anquetil became increasingly angry with the French fans for transferring their loyalty to Raymond Poulidor: Poulidor was a great rider, but he was human. Anquetil, meanwhile, often seemed more than that and had a tendency towards pomposity at times which meant that while he enjoyed enormous respect, he was not especially liked by many French, who prefer their heroes flawed (we can seem the same characteristics in their attitude towards Lance Armstrong). On the 27th of December, in what looks rather like a tantrum, he announced his retirement and devoted the rest of his life to running his farm at his chateau, Le Domaine des Elfes - according to Dick Yates, "he had a deep love of the land and was at his happiest when driving a tractor." Like Bernard Hinault (who claimed not to have ridden a bike for many years after retiring), Anquetil gave up cycling altogether and is known to have ridden just three times afterwards; once at the Grand Prix des Gentleman in which professionals try themselves against the greats of years gone by, once on an afternoon jaunt with friends and once with his daughter on her birthday. He did, however, maintain links to the cycling world, commentating on races for French television where his race analyses were became considered the best in the business and stirring up controversy when he showed bias towards Luis Ocaña by explaining to him in detail how he should go about beating Eddy Merckx at the Tour de France.

Anquetil's grave
(public domain image)
He was 53 when he died of stomach cancer, at 6am on the 18th of November. Towards the end, Poulidor came to see him and the two men became friends. "He said to me that the cancer was so agonisingly painful it was like racing up the Puy de Dôme all day, every hour of the day," Poulidor said. "He then said, I will never forget it, 'My friend, you will come second to me once again.'"


Mirella van Melis, one of the many great Dutch cyclists to have begun her career in cyclo cross, was born on this day in 1979. In 1997, she became World Road Junior Champion, then won eight National Track Championships over the next three years whilst also winning stages and podium finishes at several road races.

Happy birthday to mountain biker Paola Pezzo, born in 1969 in Verona. Paola was World Champion in 1993, won a gold medal at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, then became World Champion for a second time and won the Grundig World Cup in 1997, won the European Championship in 1999 and took another Olympic gold in 2000. Her most recent major victory was becoming National XC Champion in 2005.

Fernand Sanz (full name Fernando Sanz y Martínez de Arizala), born on the 28th of February 1881 in Madrid, won a silver medal in the Men's Sprint at the 1900 Olympics when he represented France. However, he has a far better claim to fame than that: he was the illegitimate son of Alfonso XII, King of Spain. He died on this day in January in 1925.

Other cyclists born on this day: Nicholas White (South Africa, 1974); Severino Andreoli (Italy, 1941); Chelly Arrue (USA, 1969); Jim Davies (Canada, 1906, died 1999); Rolando Guaves (Philippines, 1945); Rudy Houtsch (Luxembourg, 1916); Jaroslav Kulhavý (Czechoslovakia, 1985); Peter Latham (New Zealand, 1984); Jiří Mainuš (Czechoslovakia, 1945); Klaus Nielsen (Denmark, 1980); Vladimir Osokin (USSR, 1954); Kurt Rechsteiner (Switzerland, 1931); Edwin Santos (Guatemala, 1972); Eric Wohlberg (Canada, 1965).