Morocco-born French rider Richard Virenque, winner of a record seven King of the Mountains classifications in the Tour de France - an achievement that would be as impressive as it first sounds had at least some of these wins not been attributable to his EPO use - and, as such, held up by some as the greatest climber cycling has ever known, was born on this day in 1969 in Casablanca.
Virenque claims to have had no interest in cycling during childhood but was bitten by the bug when his brother persuaded him to accompany him to a race. Their grandfather was a cyclist and encouraged the young Richard to join a local club, where he began winning races as soon as he had his racing licence. His skill as a climber - spectacular even without EPO - was immediately evident and, when he joined the Army to complete his National Service, he was attached to a battalion that served as a home for talented sportsmen. With his Service over, he would soon become a professional with RMO in 1991 and then, the next year, rode his first Tour as a substitute for Jean-Philippe Dojwa and says that he immediately began dreaming of becoming King of the Mountains. He would wear the yellow jersey for the first time that same year.
In 1998, as all cycling fans know, Willy Voet was apprehended by customs officials and found to be in possession of a vast haul of doping products, kick-starting the furore that had been waiting to happen for many years and which, due to the team for which Voet worked, became known as the Festina Affair. The team's directeur sportif, Bruno Roussel, claimed during the shameful "it's not my fault, they made me do it" rows that followed that when Virenque heard that Voet had been busted, his first reaction was to say: "My stuff! What am I going to do now?"
A number of Festina riders admitted to having used drugs, but Virenque continued to plead not guilty and escaped without the six-month ban that they received. He rode in the 1999 Giro d'Italia, but Tour organiser Jean-Marie Leblanc tried to prevent him from taking part in the Tour that year after his name began showing up in the investigation into Bernard Sainz, the shady Dr. Mabuse who would eventually be jailed for working as a doctor despite having no medial training. However, the rider had not yet been found guilty of anything and under the far less strict rules of the time, the UCI decreed that he would ride. He came 8th overall. That same year, he wrote a book and gave it the name Ma Vérité, "My Truth," and included within it a number of directions in which he said the Tour, UCI and other organisations should be taking in their efforts to stamp out doping. It is, quite frankly, virtually unreadable, valuable only in that now we know what we know about Virenque, it provides an insight into his rather disagreeable and dislikable character (meanwhile, some readers might find it useful to read before Voet's Breaking The Chain as, in comparison, Voet writes like a Classical poet).
In 2000, when the investigation led to trial, Virenque at first continued to protest his innocence and performed a cringe-making wounded angel routine before finally breaking down and confessing, but attempted to claim that he had been doped by others without his knowledge. Voet, meanwhile, who by this time had decided that the best course of action was to admit everything, said that the rider had not only doped through his own free will but had been involved in drugs trafficking. He was handed a nine month suspension, which was widely regarded as too lenient and resulted in many calls for an increase to a year (the maximum for a first offence, but it was eventually reduced at an independent tribunal to six and a half months. He returned to cycling once the ban was spent, but found himself persona non grata and experienced difficulty in finding a new contract - Cofidis apparently told him they might be interested, but would not take him for at least a year until the flack had died down. He was eventually taken on by Domo-Farm Frites, who had been supplied with extra financial assistance by Eddy Merckx after their sponsors refused to provide the money needed to take him on. He immediately proved himself by winning Paris-Tours; however, as Paris-Tours is a race for sprinters rather than climbers, this led many to wonder if his climbing abilities had always come from a syringe. Then. 2003, he moved on to Quick Step and won his sixth King of the Mountains. He won his seventh, a record, the next year.
The saddest thing about Virenque is the large amount of evidence, obvious from his early and post-Festina success, that he would have been a great rider even without resorting to doping - had he relied on honest hard work rather than drugs, he still would have enjoyed a remarkable career. His greed, though, meant that being a great was not enough; only domination would do - the doping culture in cycling during the 1990s provided him with an easy route. Nevertheless, perhaps because France has become so eager for success in what is, after all, their game, he retained enormous popularity in his home nation.
Virenque's King of the Mountains record guarantees immortality, but he has found another sort too. Cyclists use many words and phrases when discussing with one another rivals that they believe to be doping: "he's got new legs," "he's got a magic suitcase in his hotel." Sometimes, they also accuse a rider of having "dined with Virenque."
Marijn De Vries
Marijn de Vries (image: Pelfort.eu) |
Having revealed herself as an exceptionally strong rider right from the start, she won her first professional race for Leontien.nl in 2010 and has continued adding respectable results. In 2012 she finished Stage 4 at the Gracia Orlova in third place, then took fifth at the Chrono des Nations. AA Drink-Leontien.nl closed at the end of the year with owner Leontien Ziljaard-Moorsel stating that, following a long career in team management, she simply didn't have the energy to face yet another round of battling for sponsorship money; De Vries moved to Lotto-Belisol and got her season off to an excellent start with eighth place at the Ronde van Drenthe. Late in the year, she revealed that she would move to Argos-Shimano for 2014.
Being one of the friendliest and most articulate (her English is exceptionally good even for a Dutch woman - and all Dutch people speak English better than many English people do) riders in professional cycling, Marijn can frequently be found chatting with her many fans on Twitter and the race reports complete with unique, often very funny insights into the racing world, are eagerly read by women's cycling fans around the world.
Jess Varnish (image credit: Nicola CC BY-SA 3.0) |
Jess Varnish, born in 1990 in Bromsgrove, is an English track cyclist whose career coincided with the sport's remarkable renaissance in Britain, and has been there in the period during which Britain's women's track team transformed from under-funded and almost forgotten to world-beaters.
Varnish enjoyed her first major successes during her amateur career, becoming European Junior Keirin Champion in 2007 (she was second in the 500m), then won silver in the Sprint at the Junior World Championships that same year. She successfully defended her title and won the 500m in 2008, also taking third in the Elite Sprint at the National Championships as the first of a series of excellent results as she adjusted to riding at the highest level, then from 2011 started to win a lot: the European Under-23 500m, European Elite Team Sprint and National Elite 500m Championships that year, the Team Sprints at London, Cali and Glasgow in 2012 and then in 2013 the 500m, Sprint, Team Sprint and Keirin at the National Championships.
Happy birthday also to Daniel Kreutzfeldt, the Danish track cyclist who was born today in 1987 in Roskilde.
James Lewis Perry, the South African rider who found fame with the defunct British team Barloworld for the 2003/4 season, then left and rejoined them for their final 2006/7 season, was born on this day in Cape Town, 1979.
Whittingham's 2003 Hour Record
On this day in 2003, Sam Whittingham set a new IHPVA/WHPVA (recumbent and faired bikes) Hour Record at 83.71km in Uvalde, Texas. At the time of writing, he has broken his own record three times (and the current record - held by Francesco Russo - stands at 91.562km).
Other cyclists born on this day: Philipp Wasleben (Netherlands, 1987); Alice Maria Arzuffi (1994); Maris Bogdanovics (1991); Jarlinson Pantano Gomez (1988); Lijun Bai (1988); Eric Bennett (1986); Stuart Shaw (1977); Mosquera Miguez; Jorge Contreras Vargas (1983); Francesco Reda (1982); Nikolay Kazakbaev (1982); Gianni Vermeersch (1992); Vincenzo Ianniello (1986); Itmar Esteban Herriaz (1983); Genki Yamamoto (1991); Prajak Mahawong (1981); Svitlana Galyuk (1987); Davide Mucelli (1986); Cinthya Coto; Andrzej Kaiser); Gerda Fokkerr.
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