Saturday, 29 June 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 29.07.2013

The Tour de France began on his day in 1913, 1919, 1967, 1978, 1984, 1996 and 2013. In 1913 there were 15 stages, covering a total of 5,338km. In 1903, the overall winner was decided by accumulated time, then in 1904 by points amassed during the race - in 1913 it returned to accumulated time and has remained so ever since; the main reason for the switch being that it was felt Belgian riders had been unfairly benefiting from the points system.

On the start line were no fewer than six previous winners, a record, who had won all by three of the Tours ever held: they were Louis Trousselier (1905), Lucien Petit-Breton (1907, 1908), François Faber (1909), Octave Lapize (1910), Gustave Garrigou (1911) and Odile Defraye (1912). For the very first time, an African rider took part - he was Ali Neffati, a Tunisian who had been "discovered" by Tour director Henri Desgrange and became a personal friend of his, being given a job as a driver for Desgrange's L'Auto newspaper when his cycling career came to an end. It's pleasing to be able to say that, while they were curious about the exotic rider, the French public exhibited no more prejudice towards him than they had towards "Major" Marshall Taylor, an American rider who enjoyed enormous popularity in France at the turn of the century - a time when, back home, he was barred from some velodrome races when a small number of venues refused him entry for no reason other than that he was black. It was also the first time that the race ran anticlockwise, heading out of Paris to Le Havre and then following the coastline south to the Pyrenees before moving across the south of the country to the Alps before heading north and back to Paris; previous editions had gone in the opposite direction.

Marcel Buysse
Givanni Michelotto, Jules Masselis, Henri Pélissier, Marcel Buysse and "The Death-Rider Of Lichtervelde" Henri van Lerberghe won the first five stages which, other than the spectators who threw nails into the road during the first stage (and ruined the chances of winning for 29 riders), an interesting four-way leadership split between Masselis, Buysse, Odile Defraye and Alfons Lauwers after Stage 2 and Lapize's decision to leave the race during Stage 3 in protest at his low salary, passed without incident with the overall leadership eventually going to Defraye, who went into Stage 6 with an advantage of 4'55" over second-place Eugène Christophe. The edition is most famous for what happened next.

Christophe dropped Defraye with relative ease during Stage 6, which started at 03:00 and took in seven major cols. He left his rival far behind on the Aubisque and wasn't too concerned when Thys caught him on Tourmalet and was first to the summit because officials had told him that he now led overall by 18'. Nevertheless, he thought that he might as well use the descent to try to extend his lead further, so in his own words he "plunged full-speed towards the valley." Then, with around 10km to go to the bottom, he found he was unable to steer. Looking down, he saw that his forks had snapped just below the crown race, and anyone who knows Tourmalet and the speeds that can be reached on the way down it will find it as amazing as he undoubtedly did that he was then able to bring himself to a safe halt.

Christophe descending
The rules stated that, unless a race official declared a bike irreparably damaged, the rider was required to repair it himself or face a stiff penalty, perhaps even disqualification. Christophe makes no mention of being refused permission, but we can assume permission was refused and he had no choice but carry his bike down the mountain in search of somewhere to mend it - he considered taking a shortcut down the goat tracks that snake all over the mountain, but he was crying with the sheer frustration of it all and couldn't see clearly enough to risk it. After two hours he reached Ste-Marie-de-Campan and met a girl who took him to Monsieur Lecomte, the village blacksmith. Lecomte said that he would repair the fork, but an official (the presence of an official at this point is why we can assume permission to replace the bike earlier was refused - he'd been joined by some nosy staff from other teams, keen to make sure Christophe didn't get any special treatment) told Christophe that this would result in a penalty. Lecomte then told him he was free to make use of the forge - fortunately, before becoming a professional cyclist, Christophe had been a locksmith; and in those days all locksmiths produced locks from raw materials rather than simply sold locks made elsewhere in factories, so he was no stranger to the tools he had at his disposal and with Lecomte's guidance he was able to complete the repair in three hours. Then the race official penalised him ten minutes, because Lecomte's seven-year-old son Corni had worked the bellows.

Lecomte have him a loaf of bread to replenish his energy levels then, having torn it up and stuffed it into his jersey pockets for easy consumption on the road, Christophe set off over the Cols du Aspin and Peyresourde towards the finish line, arriving there in 29th place and 3h50'14" after stage winner Thys - yet, incredibly, not last; fifteen riders arrived after him. There was some good news: the official that gave him the 10' penalty was considered to have been excessively harsh considering the rider's ordeal and the punishment was reduced to 3', unfortunately this still knocked him out of the overall top three once the other riders' bonuses had been added up. Moments after he'd arrived, representatives from Peugeot (who sponsored his team and supplied their equipment) surrounded him and took his bike away, then began informing everyone that he'd hit a car: they didn't want the press and public to know that one of their bikes had broken so catastrophically during normal use. The next morning his bike was returned, with a new fork, and the one Christophe fixed wasn't seen again until thirty years later when a dying man bequeathed it to him in his will.

1913 winner Philippe Thys
Marcel Buysse won Stage 7, then Garrigou and Lambot won the next two - on Stage 9, Buysse's chances of winning overall ended when his handlebars snapped and he lost just short of three-and-a-half hours, including a 25' minute penalty for getting some help mending them. He decided instead that he'd go for stage wins: Lambot won Stage 9 and Faber Stage 10, then Buysse won four of the remaining five (Stage 13 also went to Faber). After Stage 9, Thys led by 1h07'30" and looked set to win. Garrigou - who, like Thys, rode for Peugeot - was either content to take second or had been ordered by the team not to challenge; but Petit-Breton rode for Automoto and had every intention of limiting his losses, perhaps even stealing victory, by taking every chance that presented itself and making best use of the Sturmey-Archer hub that allowed him to change gear "on the fly" while Thys had to stop, remove his rear wheel, flip it over to the different cog on the other side and then fasten it up again. Both men crashed hard in Stage 14: Thys lost consciousness but recovered, then got help fixing his bike and received a 10' penalty that allowed him to remain 8'37" ahead overall; Petit-Breton was more seriously hurt and his race came to an end. The next day, Thys shadowed Garrigou all the way, responding the very same moment whenever he tried to attack, and his advantage remained inviolate. He won again the next year, then in 1920 became the first man to win three Tours.


1919 consisted of 15 stages and covered a total distance of 5,560km, which makes it the second-longest Tour ever held. As it was the first edition since the end of the First World War and France's roads had been severely damaged by bombs, shelling and tanks, the winner's average speed of 24.056km is the slowest ever recorded. Three winners from before the war were not on the startline: Lucien Petit-Breton had been killed when he was hit by a car while serving as an Army message carrier, Octave Lapize, who became a fighter pilot, was shot down over Flirey and died a few days later, François Faber was shot in the back while trying to rescue a fallen comrade from no man's land between the trenches, the very same day that news arrived informing him that his wife had just given birth to their daughter.

Odile Defraye
With an enormous percentage of an entire generation of young men lost, the average age of the starters was far higher than in previous years. Odile Defraye had won the Tour in 1912 and Philippe Thys won in 1913 and 1914 - as nobody really knew what to expect the two Belgians were favourites before the race. However, when Thys showed up it was obvious that he hadn't been riding his bike much during the war and apparently spent most of his time eating - "You have become un petit bourgeois who has lot his love for his bike and wasted a huge talent," Desgrange told him. The bike firms that had sponsored teams before the war were also in poor shape and couldn't provide the backing they once had; realising that the race would be the best way to advertise their products and they would all benefit as a result, they worked together as an organisation named La Sportive that managed to provide at least some sort of support to a little over half the riders. La Sportive remained in operation until 1923 as France tried to put itself back together. L'Auto, which owned and ran the Tour, realised that riders would be discouraged from entering if they couldn't afford to buy food - for the first time in the history of the race, the organisation supplied them.

Jean Rossius won Stage 1 but was then given a 30' penalty when judges declared that he'd contravened the rules by helping Thys, who was in a crash and decided he may as well give up;  Henri Pélissier, who crossed the line 1'15" after Rossius, became the race's first leader. On Stage 2 he won it fair and square after he and brother Francis outperformed their rivals, finishing with a 3'47" lead on Honoré Barthélemy and Jean Alavoine and an overall advantage of 19'52" over Eugène Christophe, while Rossius was 4'40" (the last rider to finish, Leon Leclerc, arrived 9h07'47" later).

Henri Pélissier wanted to abandon the race during Stage 3 and rode slowly. Tour director Henri Desgrange, who would later become his enemy following a row, realised that he was one of France's best hopes for victory and persuaded him to continue; but by this time he was 45' behind the leaders. He managed to catch up, though it took three hours of hard work to do so, then finished second behind his brother in a sprint to the finish - his overall lead now increased to 23'10. Meanwhile, Léon Scieur had had four punctures and ended up with an overall disadvantage of more than two hours - unless he experienced a miracle, he was out of contention.

Francis Pelissier, 1919
After the stage, Pélissier told journalists that whereas all the other riders were carthorses, he was a thoroughbred - this obviously won him no friends in the peloton, but Henri was rather a disagreeable man anyway and had never really had any friends other than Petit-Breton (who had "discovered" him) and his brothers (who seem to have been completely over-awed by him). It's worth noting that he was also correct - he was one of the very first riders to realise that a small amounts of healthy food consumed regularly was a better diet for a cyclist than loading up on vast piles of steak, eggs, sugar and alcohol (the list of what Maurice Garin, who won the first Tour, ate during a race in Paris in 1893 makes for amusing reading and is a good indication of the sort of things cyclists ate before more of them started to find that old Henri had been right after all). He was also one of the first to develop a training regime that had some basis in science, rather than old wives' tales, and it paid off - when he returned to the Tour in 1923 to prove a point to Desgrange, he was unstoppable. On Stage 4 he'd regret it, though: he had a puncture and, rather than riding slowly while he fixed it (as the unwritten laws of gentlemanly competition and more tangible rules of the Tour in those days stated they and he must), the entire peloton attacked and left him far behind - only faithful Francis waited. Before too long, a few riders began dropping off the back of the peloton and the Pélissiers recruited them to assist in a chase, but since they represented different teams Desgrange ordered them to stop working together. Henri did remarkably well to finish in tenth place, 34'52" behind stage winner Alavoine, but he'd lost a significant amount of time to Christophe and now trailed in second place overall with a disadvantage of 11'42". Francis was even less fortunate - he finished 17th, 3h25'27" behind Alavoine. That evening, the two of them decided to retire from the race.

Christophe, the first man to wear the
maillot jaune (probabaly)
Stage 5 was the longest in the history of the Tour at 482km. Alavoine won again, though it took him 18h54'07" to do so. Incredibly, it finished in a bunch sprint with seven other riders sharing the winning time. Christophe finished 13" after them, extending his advantage to 15'51" over Émile Masson. Barthélemy won the next stage, Alavoine won two and then Barthélemy won another two, but nobody could get close to Christophe and his lead was 23'19" at the start of Stage 11. That morning, Desgrange came to him shortly before the stage started and announced that he had come up with an idea that would make it easier for fans to spot the race leader, thus drawing more attention to him and to the race - and then produced a bright yellow jersey to replace the green armband that had previously marked out the race leader. Christophe hated it on sight, but agreed to wear it; though he had to be persuaded to put it on again for Stage 12 because some spectators had called him a canary (which ranks quite low on any list of "most hurtful insults ever hurled at the peloton").

Many years later, Philippe Thys told Champions et Vedettes magazine that he'd been offered (and had refused) a yellow jersey in 1913. His honesty and good character are in no doubt; but there is no documentary evidence to support his claim whatsoever and, since he was 67 when he said it, it's generally assumed that his mind was playing tricks on him. However, in 1920, the jersey was not awarded until Stage 9, when it was given to Thys. This leads to three obvious possibilities: the first is that the jersey didn't exist until 1919 and Thys was actually remembering an incident from 1920; the second is that Desgrange thought it up on a whim in 1919 and had no intention of it ever becoming a permanent part of the race until he suddenly remembered it a year later; the third is that it wasn't intended to be a permanent feature and Desgrange thought it up in 1919 (or perhaps remembered it. and the effect it either did have or he perceived it to have had in 1913, then reintroduced it) in an attempt to increase competition - by this point in 1919, only eleven riders remained in the race and, while he once claimed that in the ideal Tour only one rider would finish, he was well aware that fewer riders meant less interest. In 1920, most of the favourites abandoned early and the riders that remained rode slowly due to oppressive heat. Could it be that Desgrange, desperate to liven things up, brought back what has become one of the most recognised and prestigious trophies in sport simply as a last resort? There's another mystery - why is the yellow jersey yellow? The reason usually given is that the paper upon which L'Auto was printed was yellow, but some people have wondered if in reality it's because yellow has never been a very fashionable colour for clothing and it was the only one in which Desrange could get the jersey made at very short notice due to the post-war shortage of materials and at a price he liked.

Firmin Lambot
Barthélemy won Stage 11, his third consecutive victory, then a little-known Italian named Luigi Lucottin won two. Christophe's lead remained intact, and at the start of Stage 14 he had an overall advantage of 28'05" over second place Firmin Lambot. Over the course of the Tour's history since that year, the legend of the Curse of the Yellow Jersey has appeared. It has some basis in reality - the race leader can expect to have to deal with more attacks than any other rider, especially if he's one of the also-rans allowed to win it in the early stages when as many as a hundred other also-rans will be after their own time in the spotlight or if he's a General Classification contender in the final stages, when rivals will be trying to steal it and the Tour. Cyclists are a superstitious bunch, as anyone who has seen the assortment of charms they dangle from their handlebars or the utter horror on their faces if somebody spills salt during a meal at the team's hotel will tell you; thus it wasn't long before some people appeared to genuinely believe in the Curse and blamed it for the bad luck its wearer supposedly experiences because of it. Christophe was its first victim - during Stage 14, on the rough cobbled roads around Valenciennes, his forks snapped. This happened to him in 1913 (see above) and would happen again in 1922, and since the rules of the day stated that every rider had to carry out his own repairs he had no alternative but to carry his bike for an hour to the nearest forge, where he made sure that nobody did anything that could possibly be considered to have assisted him in any way. He finished tenth, last-but-one, 2h28'58" after Lambot (who took 21h04'27" to get to the finish line) and dropped to third place overall, 2h00'53" behind Lambot and 7'56" behind Alavoine.

On Stage 15, Christophe had so many punctures that it looks rather like somebody might have been paying spectators to throw tacks in the road, which was most certainly not unknown in those days but tended to be carried out less blatantly than before the war. He lost more time, but remained in third place 2h26'31" behind the winner. Alavoine stayed second with +1h42'54", Lambot won with 231h07'15" and many riders realised that amassing stage wins was not necessarily the way to win the Tour.


During the 1920s, Henri Desgrange had become increasingly convinced that the teams' manuacturers, almost invariably bike manuacturers, were using nefarious means to ensure their riders won and sales went up as a result. He was right, they were; he was also right when he said there was nothing he could do to stop them other than ban trade teams altogether and replace them national teams who, in theory at least (in some cases, national teams have been so tied up with one sponsor that they're virtually a trade team - and vice versa, as is the the case with Euskaltel-Euskadi to this day). In 1929, when Alcyon worked together to get Maurice de Waele over the line in first place even though according to Desgrange he resembled a corpse, he'd had enough and from 1930 only national teams came. That situation came to an end in 1962 and the trade teams returned; then - officially to control protests against doping controls but arguably in an effort to end complaints that the race caused too many road closures (Geoffrey Nicholson, Le Tour, ISBN 0-340-54268-3) they were introduced in 1967 and 1968, after which they vanished forever.

There were 22 stages that year and they covered a total of 4,708km. For the first time there was also a prologue, and the race had been designed to be the hardest Tour ever. It cannot, therefore, have been an uneventful race all the way until it reached Mont Ventoux in Stage 13 on the 13th of July - but because of what happened that day, everything else had been forgotten.

Tom Simpson was the finest male rider Britain had ever produced and, thanks largely due to him, the Tour was increasingly popular on that side of the English Channel where there was a real sense that he might even become the first British winner. He was also intelligent and funny, making him popular with the other riders; those that might not have liked him (and not one surviving rider from his era will admit to that) learned to respect him, because he had the legs to go with it.

It was hellishly hot that morning before the stage began and forecasters warned it would get worse, reaching as much as 45C. That worried official race doctor Pierre Dumas - when he went for a walk at 06:30, he met some friends. "If the riders take something today, we'll have a death on our hands," he told them. They may have shared his concerns, but Dumas - who had come to cycling almost by chance, with no previous background in the sport - was well known for taking doping far more seriously than anybody else. Many people accepted it a simply a part of the sport, one that was better not discussed, so they may also have not.

It seems odd that, only 45 years ago, medical science believed that drinking the amount of water now recommended during athletic activity was actually harmful; but that was the case and, as a result, race organisers permitted riders no more than four standard bidons (about two litres) of water per stage. The riders, meanwhile, knew that they got thirsty and mounted cafe raids in which they would descend en masse upon rural bars and shops and guzzle down any fluids they could find, not caring about the large bills that showed up on their managers' desks months later. Early on in the stage, Tom had been drinking from a bottle of brandy.

He'd been up Ventoux before and was well aware that, as Raphaël Géminiani had tried to warn Ferdinand Kübler more than a decade earlier, it's "not like any col." Kübler thought he could prove himself stronger than the old volcano, so Ventoux ended his Tour career. Tom had once written the following, describing an earlier experience:
"It is like another world up there among the bare rocks and the glaring sun. The white rocks reflect the heat and the dust rises, clinging to your arms, legs and face. I rode well up there doing about five miles to the gallon in perspiration. It was almost overwhelming hot up there and I think it was the only time that I have got off my bike and my pants have nearly fallen down. They were soaked and heavy with sweat which was running off me in streams and I had to wring out my socks because the sweat was running into my shoes."
He knew, then, that Ventoux demanded respect. At Chalet Reynard, near the point where riders emerge from the weird and airless forests of the lower slopes and come out into the blast furnace of a road that leads to the top, the heat and alcohol was already giving his problems and several riders passed him. Team manager Alec Taylor wondered briefly if this might be a psychological trick designed to make his rivals think he couldn't cope, but when he drew close to Tom he could see that it wasn't. A little further up he was even worse, unable to concentrate and wondering about all over the road in a place without barriers to prevent a plunge over the side. At this point, Taylor and team mechanic Harry Hall still didn't doubt Tom would make it up the mountain and were far more concerned about what he might do to try to make up the time he was losing once he was over the summit - he'd long ago earned a reputation for being a lunatic descender, apparently relishing the thrill of high-speed corners that would have had most other riders reducing their speed by half. Then he crashed.

Hall was the first one to reach him. "That's it for you, Tom," he said, preparing himself for the emotional outpouring that was sure to come when the rider sat out the remainder of the stage in the team car, following his comrades. But Tom wanted to go on. Both men wished later that they'd stopped him.

For a man suffering as Tom was, he made it a very long way - it's 5.35km along the road and not far from 400m upward to the place where he fell for the second time. This time he wasn't going on, though he didn't know it because he was already unconscious, his hands locked in a deathgrip to the bars and his legs still trying to pedal. Hall was first to him again and said later that he knew it was too late. With the help of another mechanic, Ken Ryall, they prised his hands loose and laid him down at the side of the road. One of the Tour's police outriders summoned Dr. Dumas, who was there in moments. He, his deputy and a nurse took turns administering heart massage, mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and oxygen until the helicopter arrived and took him to hospital, where he was declared dead. His last words, spoken as Hall reached him, were not "Put me back on my bike!" - that was made up by a journalist who wasn't there. Hall and Taylor say they were "Go on! Go on!"

The cause of death was given as a heart attack but Dumas, knowing that there was more to it than that and realising that Tom had bequeathed him a chance to prevent more stupid deaths, refused to sign the death certificate until an approved poisons expert had carried out an autopsy. Five days later, it confirmed that he had been taking the amphetamines that were also found in the pockets of his jersey; the drugs having prevented him from being able to know when his body was unable to take any more.

1978
Hinault (left) with Joop Zoetemelk
22 stages, 2 split + prologue, 3,908km. Hinault's first victory, on his very first appearance in the race.

Top Ten Final General Classification
1 Bernard Hinault (FRA) Renault 107h 18' 00"
2 Joop Zoetemelk (NED) Miko +3' 56"
3 Joaquim Agostinho (POR) Flandria-Velda +6' 54"
4 Joseph Bruyere (BEL) C&A +9' 04"
5 Christian Seznec (FRA) Miko +12' 50"
6 Paul Wellens (BEL) Raleigh +14' 38"
7 Francisco Galdos (ESP) KAS +17' 08"
8 Henk Lubberding (NED) Raleigh +17' 26"
9 Lucien Van Impe (BEL) C&A +21' 01"
10 Mariano Martínez (FRA) Jobo +22' 58"

1984
Laurent Fignon
23 stages + prologue, 4,020.9km.
The Battle of Hinault and Fignon, eventually won by Fignon (his second consecutive victory). For the first time the Tour was joined by a women's race, the Tour de France Féminin: Marianne Martin won, followed by Heleen Hage and Deborah Schumway

Top Ten Final General Classification
1 Laurent Fignon (FRA) Renault-Elf 112h 03' 40"
2 Bernard Hinault (FRA) La Vie Claire-Terraillon +10' 32"
3 Greg LeMond (USA) Renault-Elf +11' 46"
4 Robert Millar (GBR) Peugeot +14' 42"
5 Sean Kelly (IRE) Skil-Reydel-Sem +16' 35"
6 Ángel Arroyo (ESP) Reynolds-Papel Aluminio +19' 22"
7 Pascal Simon (FRA) Peugeot +21' 17"
8 Pedro Muñoz (ESP) Teka +26' 17"
9 Claude Criquielion (BEL) Splendor-Mondial-Moquettes +29' 12"
10 Phil Anderson (AUS) Panasonic-Raleigh +29' 16"

1996
21 stages + prologue, 3,895.4km.
Bjarne Riis wins, bringing the Indurain Era to an end. Later, he would admit to doing so with the help of EPO. The period permitted by the legal statute of limitation has since expired, meaning that Riis cannot be stripped of the title; however, he is generally regarded as having not won and is not listed as having done so in the Tour's official records.

Top Ten Final General Classification
1 Bjarne Riis (DEN) Telekom 95h 57' 16"
2 Jan Ullrich (GER) Telekom +1' 41"
3 Richard Virenque (FRA) Festina +4' 37"
4 Laurent Dufaux (SUI) Festina +5' 53"
5 Peter Luttenberger (AUT) Carrera +7' 07"
6 Luc Leblanc (FRA) Polti +10' 03"
7 Piotr Ugrumov (LAT) Roslotto-ZG Mobili +10' 04"
8 Fernando Escartin (ESP) Kelme +10' 26"
9 Abraham Olano (ESP) Mapei +11' 00"
10 Toni Rominger (SUI) Mapei +11' 53"


Livio Isotti, born in Pesaro, Italy on this day in 1927, won the Giro della Romagna in 1950 and Stage 7 at the 1953 Tour de France, where he was 42nd overall.

In 2013, the 100th edition of the Tour began in Corsica - the first time that the race had ever visited the island, which was the only French metropolitan district it had not previously visited. With 2012 winner Bradley Wiggins staying away, there was no clear favourite; however, Cadel Evans, Chris Froome, Andy Schleck and Alberto Contador were all heavily backed by fans. Stage 1 followed the trend set over the previous decade or so by being a full, mass-start stage rather than an individual time trial prologue and was marked by several crashes and a remarkable incident in which Australian outfit Orica-AIS' enormous team bus, the largest at the race in 2012, became wedged under the banner over the finish line - with the peloton fast approaching. It was initially decided to end the race at the 3km to go point but, when the bus was finally moved, the stage ran its full course, though not without another crash that left stage win favourite Mark Cavendish limping to the line. The crash having taken place in the last 3km, all riders were awarded the same time; however, Marcel Kittel was first over the line for the victory.

Cyclists born today: George Hincapie (USA, 1973); Bob Haro (USA, 1958); Sante Gaiardoni (Italy, 1939); Frank Brilando (USA, 1925); Pedro Caino (Argentina, 1956); Pedro Lopes (Portugal, 1975); Ľuboš Kondis (Slovakia, 1976); Pascal Poisson (France, 1958); Cesare Zanzottera (Italy, 1886, died 1961); Yaichi Numata (Japan, 1951); Rusli Hamsjin (Indonesia, 1938); Matías Médici (Argentina, 1975); Niels Baunsøe (Denmark, 1939); Lars Olsen (Denmark, 1965); Ernesto Grobet (Mexico, 1909, died 1969); Evrard Godefroid (Belgium, 1932); Manuel Aravena (Chile, 1954); Ernest Moodie (Cayman Islands, 1959); Philippe Grivel (Switzerland, 1964); Moises López (Mexico, 1940) - and, possibly, Louis Trousellier, who was born on the 29th of either January or June in 1881.

Friday, 28 June 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 28.06.2013

The Tour de France has begun on this day three times - 1914, 1969 and 1985. By 1914, eleven years since the first edition, the race had been increased to 15 stages and the total distance was 5,405km; making stages on average 360km in length. In fact, the longest was 470km - while this is as long as two long stages together in a modern Tour, riders had a rest day after ever stage. There were eight plain stages and seven mountain stages, time trials not being introduced until 1927. Today is also the anniversary of the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo: one month and once day later the First World War began, then six days after that Germany invaded Belgium and declared itself at war with France. There would not be another Tour for five years.

Le Tour, 1914
The assassination was the tipping point at which Europe descended into war rather than the cause, of course: her most powerful forces (Great Britain, Germany, Austro-Hungary and France) had been building up their armies for decades, peering nervously at one another and turning the entire continent into a powderkeg. The relationship between France and Germany had been especially frosty for a very long time due to the question of Alsace, the region that has changed hands between the two countries numerous times and where, until comparatively recently, the majority of the population spoke a German dialect (that row led in a roundabout way to the invention of the Tour, as it happens, but describing how with sufficient detail to make doing so worthwhile would take a lengthy article of its own); as a result the parcours went from Belfort, which sits between the Vosges and Jura and is just kilometres from Alsace to Longwy near the Luxembourgian border. That way, it stayed well clear of the German border for a fourth consecutive year.

Le Grand Départ, 1914
The number of starters had grown enormously since the first Tour, meaning that reporters and race officials were no longer able to recognise every rider; so for the first time each bike had a number displayed upon it. Don Kirkham and Ivan Munro became the first Australian riders to take part, racing for Phebus-Dunlop they would come 17th and 20th respectively.

Philippe Thys and his Peugeot-Wolber team mate Henri Pélissier were favourites, but also racing were six previous winners: Louis Trousselier (1905), Lucien Petit-Breton (1907, 1908), François Faber (1909), Octave Lapize (1910), Gustave Garrigou (1911) and Odile Defraye (1912). Three riders would win after the war - Firmin Lambot (1919, 1922), Léon Scieur (1921) and Lucien Buysse (and 1926). Thys also won in 1913 and in 1920 would become the first man to win three Tours; Pélissier won in 1923. Eleven Tour winners with fifteen victories between them in one edition remains a record, and one that's unlikely to be broken. When Thys won Stage 1, beating several of his main rivals in the sprint and the rest by at least 3'21", he looked set to dominate the race - though Jean Rossius, who second with the same time, came very close to taking the lead on Stage 2, which he won. However, on that occasion it was Thys who was second, also recording the same time, so they shared leadership. This situation remained until after Stage 5.

On the third stage, riders arrived at a checkpoint (in those days, they had to stop and sign their names to prove they hadn't taken shortcuts) an hour late and found that the official in charge had got bored and left a subordinate to wait for them. As a result, they were given incorrect instructions and ended up riding 30km in the wrong direction, completely unaware until organisers discovered the mistake and sent a car to find them so that they could be brought back and the race could be restarted. Emile Engel, who had won stages in the Independents class in 1909 and 1910, won his only stage as a professional, sponsored rider that day (later on he was in a collision with another rider named Maurice Brocco. The language he used when explaining to Brocco why it was his fault was so strong that he was disqualified); Thys, Rossius and several others finished joint fifth. Stage 4, the longest at 470km, went to the Swiss Oscar Egg with Pélissier second for the same time, Thys and Rossius were joint fourth. It was on Stage 5, when Egg won again, that Thys finally managed to get away from Rossius and gained upper the hand; he was third and Rossius was fifth.

Stage 6 brought the riders to the Pyrenees and the climbers took over. Lambot won the stage whilst Thys was second, 7'40" behind him. Rossius was eleventh, 1h02'09" behind the winner: overall victory slipped from his grasp. The Tunisian Ali Neffati was hit by an official race car on the Aubisque and couldn't finish the stage; fortunately for him the rules of the day allowed him to remain in the race after his likely time had been determined and he was given 42nd place and raced again. Jean Alavoine won the sixth stage of his career when he was first over the finish line for Stage 7, leading a group of five men that, in addition to himself, included Marcel Buysse (2nd), Thys (3rd), Pélissier (4th) and Rossius (5th). The mountains were left behind in Stage 8 for the 370km trip between Perpignan and Marseilles and the weather was so hot that the riders didn't want to race, riding at little more than walking pace. Henri Desgrange, trying to prevent a boring stage, stopped the race and rapidly organised an impromptu sprinting contest eventually won by Lapize (who got into an argument with Egg - Egg's language, like that of Engel earlier the same day, was found disagreeably coarse, but he escaped with a fine). Stage 9 took a mountainous 338km route from Marseilles to Nice: Rossius won with a 6'54" led over joint second Pélissier and Thys, but by now his overall disadvantage was so great that it no longer mattered. François Faber, who had become the first foreigner to win the Tour in 1909, was spotted taking a drink from a motorcycle and being pushed, for which he was awarded a 90' penalty - that didn't matter either, any chance he may have had at the start of the race were long gone now.

Pélissier's disadvantage was 44'30" at the start of Stage 10, but he was the only man in the race able to take on Thys and still thought he might be able to do so, fighting hard to win Stage 10 - he managed it and took back more than 10', starting Stage 11 34'27" behind. That day, the finished together so the gap remained untouched after Garrigou won; after Stage 12, which he won, he reduced it by another 2'37" whilst Thys was sixth - the only stage in which he didn't finish in the top five.

Philippe Thys
Faber won Stages 13 and 14. Pélissier was still 31'50" at the beginning of Stage 14, but then an opportunity fell into his lap: on the way to Dunkirk, one of Thys' wheels collapsed. The rules stated that a rider had to either repair all faults himself (strictly without outside help) or wait for a race official to declare it irreparable, in which case a replacement part could be provided from the team car. Thys realised that following correct procedure was likely to cost him too much time, so he took a risk and went off in search of a bike shop to buy a new wheel (it was a big risk, because officials were being especially firm that year: earlier in the race, one of the sponsored riders threw away a half-eaten sandwich. Seconds later it was pounced upon by an independent, thanking his lucky stars for some free food - and the professional rider got a 30' penalty for assisting a rider who wasn't a member of his team). Officials spotted him and he was penalised 30', which sent Pélissier haring off towards Dunkirk in an attempt to make up the remaining 1'50" and take control of the race. Precisely what happened next is a mystery: Pélissier said that there were spectators in the road at Dunkirk and they wouldn't let him through. This happened, rather conveniently, at a time when there were no race officials nor police officers around to back him up, which has led many to wonder if he was simply unable to counter the heroic - and successful - attempts Thys made to preserve his lead. Pélissier would win the final stage, but took back no more time.

When the riders returned to the real world after the race, Europe was a very different place. The war began just two days later, and a few weeks after that Desgrange used his L'Auto newspaper to publish the following letter to his champions:
"For 14 years, Le Auto has appeared every day.  It has never let you down. So listen my dear fellows, my dear Frenchmen.  There can be no question that a Frenchman succumbs to a German.  GO! Go without Pity!"
Faber, Petit-Breton and Lapize would not return in 1919 when the Tour next took place: Faber was shot in the back while trying to rescue a fallen comrade from no man's land between the trenches, Petit-Breton died when he was hit by a car while serving as an Army message carrier and Lapize, who became a fighter pilot, was shot down over Flirey and died a few days later. They were not the only ones, but most of those who could only dream of Tour success are now forgotten.


In 1969 there were 22 stages and the race covered 4,110km - seven more stages than 1914, but 1,295 fewer kilometres. After a few decades in which the Tour was open only to national teams, commercially sponsored trade teams returned in 1962. However, after a riders' protest against ani-doping tests in 1966 (which organisers believed had been provoked by sponsors, who wanted the problem covered up rather than brought out into the open where they might become associated with it) they decided to return to national teams (or at least, that was the official reason: in his book Le Tour (ISBN 0-340-54268-3), Geoffrey Nicholson argues that the decision may have been prompted by accusations that the race caused too many road closures and that by reintroducing national teams teams they were trying to drum up patriotic support). Trade teams countered by refusing to allow their best riders to compete, which is why Eddy Merckx didn't take part in the Tour of 1968. Organisers relented and the trade teams returned on 1969 (with Eddy Merckx, once political intervention - and the hundreds of protesting fans who surrounded the Belgian Federation's headquarters - had seen to it that his highly questionable doping conviction from the Giro d'Italia earlier in the year had been quashed), initially on the understanding that the race would revert to national teams every few years. 43 years later, this has not happened.

Eddy Merckx
Merckx had not yet won a Tour, but he'd already been World Champion and won a Giro, three editions of Milan-San Remo, a Tour of Flanders, Paris-Roubaix, Gent-Wevelgem, Liège-Bastogne-Liège and La Flèche Wallonne; the spectators that saw him on the start line were already realising that here was a rider whose talent was far greater than any of those who had come before him. He had made no secret of the fact that he was there to win, yet one thing stood in his way - for a period of eighteen days between the positive test at the Giro and the start of the Tour, he'd been suspended from competition. That was enough time without race practice to affect his form, and he was not at his best. Rudi Altig of Salvarani knew that and he put it to good use by beating the Belgian by 7" in the prologue. Stage 1a ended at Merckx's hometown Sint-Pieters-Woluwe and he was determined to win, but now Marino Basso took advantage of his reduced form and sprinted past him in the last 50m (Sint-Pieters-Woluwe is also home to the Palais Stoclet, a private home that must be seen if you ever happen to be in the area as it's the finest example of 20th Century architecture anywhere in the world); Altig finished outside of the top ten but was able to retain the yellow jersey when the first 96 finishers were awarded the same time.

Stage 1b was a team time trial, in which Faema beat Bic by 46" and Salvarani by 48". Merckx therefore started the next day in yellow, but he didn't chase when a group led by his team mate Julien Stevens escaped because none of his rivals went with them. He finished 16" after Stevens, which meant Stevens took the maillot jaune. "It was a great moment for him to take over the yellow jersey. I was quite happy to give it up - temporarily; it's much too conspicious," he said later. Only a year ago, the moment the break got away, Merckx would have been after them and kept going until he'd hunted down every single member regardless of whether they presented him with any sort of challenge or even if they were team mates - he was maturing, and that made him even more dangerous. Stage 3 went to Eric Leman of the Flandria team, this time the first 116 riders over the line were given the same time and so Stevens remained in yellow for another day. He'd have lost it on Stage 4 when Rik van Looy escaped, making good use of the terrain (described as flat stage officially, it's actually rather hilly and precisely the sort of parcours a Flanders Classics specialist such as van Looy can use to his advantage) - not because he thought he had any chance of winning the Tour, but in an attempt to get himself noticed by the selection panel for the World Championships; he managed to build up a considerable gap that, if he'd kept it to the end, would have got him into yellow. Stevens wasn't ready to give it up just yet, however, and went after him  accompanied by seven other riders. Among them was René Pijnen, who rode with van Looy on the Willem II-Gazelle team (ah, those heady days when a bicycle manufacturer and cycling team were happy to associate themselves with a cigar firm), who set about trying to disrupt the chase. The others turned on him and using the various means and ways by which an unwanted rider can be ejected from a group (including, but not limited too, verbal warnings that the unfavoured one is going to be kicked into a ditch or wall just as soon as there's a reasonable chance that the race officials are looking the other way) got rid of him. Stevens finished 42" after van Looy and kept the yellow jersey, the rest of the group were 2" behind and Pijnens arrived 53" later (van Looy got his ticket to the Worlds and came 24th; so did Stevens, but he won a silver medal).

Julien Stevens
The following day, the Tour reached the mountains of Alsace and everything changed. Stevens had used up too much energy the day before; he couldn't stay with the break led by Désiré Letort, who had been in the Stage 4 chase group, and lost the jersey. Joaquim Agostinho won the stage by 18" against Altig; Letort was tenth he'd won enough time to put himself into the overall lead the only time he wore the maillot jaune in his nine years as a professional - but Merckx was now in second place overall with a disadvantage of only 9". It was no surprise the next day, when the race climbed its first serious mountains (including the Grand Ballon, Alsace's highest point, and the Ballon d'Alsace which, on the 11th of July 1905, had been the first mountain the Tour ever climbed) when he converted that disadvantage into a 2'03" advantage. He was 28th on Stage 7 but none of the riders that came before him were close enough to cause much concern and Altig remained 2'03" behind, so Merckx was confident going into the Stage 8a individual time trial. It didn't go quite as well as he might have liked with only 2" being added to his lead, but it was still early days and while he was 29th behind stage winner Michele Dancelli in 8b that afternoon, Altig recorded the same time so again nothing changed.

In Stage 9, Merckx and Roger Pingeon escaped together. Merckx had the strength to win mountain stages even though he was built like a sprinter, but Pingeon's lighter build left him less tired at the end of the stage and he was able to win the sprint. For Altig, a sprint specialist, the stage was an unmitigated disaster: he finished in 76th place, 7'59" behind Pingeon and Merckx, which cost him. Now trailing Merckx by 10'04" overall, his chance to win was lost.

Pingeon was now in second place overall, but trailed Merckx by 5'21" in the General Classification. Herman van Springel won with a 2'01" lead the next day but was much to far down the leadership to make any difference at all, and the 5'21" stayed intact. Then Merckx won Stage 11, adding another 22", then 1'28" when he was third behind Felice Gimondi on Stage 12. He maintained it at 7'11" for the next two stages (which went to Guido Reybrouck and Agostinho) and had no reason at all to win the time trial in Stage 15 - but he did, and finished with 8'03" advantage overall. Raymond Delisle beat him by 2'45" on Stage 16 after a small group away up Portet d'Aspet; since he too was no rival there was even less reason for Merckx to bother himself with winning Stage 17. But Merckx had a greater competitive drive than anyone else, as well as the legs to go with it - he went solo for 140km over Tourmalet and the Aubisque; and when the stage finished and he'd beaten Dancelli by 7'56", he was 16'18" ahead overall. Pingeon may have technically been in second place, but it was irrelevant now: Merckx had reduced the entire field to the level of also-rans. Barry Hoban won Stages 18 and 19, thus becoming the first British rider to win two consecutive days at the Tour (it would be 29 years before Cavendish repeated his feat, then did it again - twice - a year later).

Pierre Matignon's unexpected victory in Stage 20 is worthy of note. He was the lowliest of domestiques, in the race purely to act as a servant for Frimatic's leader Agostinho; and he started the stage in 86th place. Three hours behind Merckx, he'd given up all hope of a good result so long ago that he'd spent much of the intervening time locked in a private competition with Sonolor's André Wilhem to become lanterne rouge, because being last in the Tour gains a rider far more media attention and race contracts than finishing anywhere else outside the top ten does. Wilhelm decided he was unable to ride as slowly as Matignon and gave up the battle early in the stage, sprinting away from him.

Puy-de-Dôme
Up at the front of the peloton, the leaders (or those that were left; around 45 riders had abandoned by this point) were biding their time, waiting for the final decisive climb up the corkscrew road to the summit of the Puy-de-Dôme. When Wilhelm rode away, Matignon punctured and, being a domestique, was left to fend for himself because he wasn't important enough for the team to try to help him back into the race. They wouldn't expect to see him the next day, and at that point Matignon would have been certain he'd been on his way home later that evening. Ah, what the hell - he decided he may as well hurry up a bit, perhaps he'd at least get a chance to see the stage being won. Then he caught the peloton, so when it slowed to pass through the feeding station with 66km to go he grabbed a musette and attacked. The leaders watched him go and remained steadfastly unconcerned. Over the following 20km, he built up a 3' lead. The leaders still weren't especially concerned, but when he had 5"with 30km to go they decided it would be better to be safe than sorry - a chase group, made up of domestiques who'd pleased their masters sufficiently to be permitted a chance to get themselves on television, was sent off to catch him and return him to his rightful position. They couldn't catch him; he had a lead of seven and a half minutes when he got to within 20km of the finish line. Now Peugeot began to worry - at this rate, there was a chance that a complete unknown was going to rob Pingeon of his second place in the General Classification, so they sent a serious chase group of strong climbers off to do the job. They got within 2km of him by 10km to go, at which point Merckx decided he'd better sort things out. When he launched, Matignon's fun could last only seconds longer.

Or could it? Merckx got within sight of his quarry just as Matignon turned onto the final section towards the summit, a private track that rises for 5km at 12.5%, but with 500m to go he still hadn't caught up. Angry now, he stomped on the pedals and lurched forward after a man who was clearly suffering and weaving about all over the road in a desperate attempt to deal with the gradient. He didn't look back again. From then onwards, he saw nothing - there was nothing to see, the universe was him, his bike, a gradient and the pain. Then there was also the summit, and 1'25" there was Merckx. The most unimportant man in the Tour had won one of its most prestigious stages, and in doing so he had beaten the greatest cyclist that ever lived. He died in 1987, aged only 44.

Van Springel and Spruyt won Stages 21 and 22a, but it was far too late for anything to change now. Merckx increased his advantage to 17'54" in the Stage 22b time trial. He'd won six stages and worn the maillot jaune for seventeen days, as well as winning the General Classification, the King of the Mountains and the Points competition, all after turning up to the race after missing two valuable weeks of preparation. What was he going to do to his rivals next year?


In 1985, cycling had left the Era of Merckx behind and now another one, the Age of Hinault, was coming to an end as the Breton aimed for a fifth and final Tour; which would make him Merckx and Anquetil's equal. He had been beaten by Laurent Fignon the year before and the American Greg Lemond came close several times - now Fignon was away recovering from surgery on his knee, so the La Vie Claire team dealt with the Lemond problem by signing him up. A deal was reached - if Lemond looked the better bet for overall victory, Hinault would ride for him. If Hinault was better, Lemond would ride for him.

There were 22 stages and a prologue that year, covering 4,109km in total. For the first time, the multi-coloured Combination jersey was inflicted upon the eyes of spectators (it had been white when the classification was introduced in 1968, then the classification vanished in 1975 and the white jersey was given to the leader of the new Youth classification instead. In 1980 it reappeared as the TF1 GP but lasted only three years. After reintroduction in 1985, it vanished again in 1989 and has never returned), but otherwise there were no major changes to the way the race was run in 1984. Hinault won the prologue - he had to, really, because it was in Brittany and he was a Breton folk hero. He beat Lemond by 21", but a 6km time trial gives no indication of what will happen later in a three-week Grand Tour.

As is usually the case, the General Classification contenders didn't worry too much about the first week and Hinault didn't mind when Eric Vanderaerden took the yellow jersey in Stage 1 thanks to time bonuses. Rudy Matthijs won Stages 1 and 2, then La Vie Claire beat Kwantum by a minute in the Stage 3 team time trial, which sounds an even better result when one bears in mind that they did so on their standard road race bikes rather than using specialised time trial machines like the other teams did; which may be why a huge mob of fans climbed over the barriers to get to them. Hinault, who felt uncomfortable in crowds and had felled a well-built shipyard worker during an angry protest at Paris-Nice in 1982, flew into a panic and landed the sort of punch that would make a boxer proud on the chin of a press photographer. Police bundled him into a car and sped him away to his hotel before he set his sights on another target.

Eric Vanderaerden
Vanderaeden stayed in yellow, but Hinault was 32" behind him in second place and La Vie Claire riders occupied the next seven places in the overall top ten too. Kim Andersen (who now works with Frank and Andy Schleck), who was with the team, escaped in a breakaway during Stage 4; Kwantum's Gerrit Sollevend won the stage but Andersen ended up in the maillot jaune with an advantage of 19" over Vanderaerden and 1'01" over Hinault. Little changed during Stage 5 which was won by another Kwantum rider, Henri Manders; then, once initial winners Vanderaerden and Sean Kelly had been penalised for irregular sprinting, Lemond came second behind Francis Castaing (Peugeot) the next day, picking up sufficient time bonuses to place himself third overall with a 2" advantage over Hinault. Ludwig Wijnants won Stage 7, the gap between Lemond and Hinault stayed the same.

It all changed with the Stage 8 time trial. All great Tour riders can perform well on any type of parcours, like many of the very best Hinault was especially good in a time trial - and he won this one by 2'20", taking back the maillot jaune with a 2'30" advantage over second place Lemond. This time, police were ready and he was protected from the crowd - or the crowd was protected from him - by a police escort. Dietrich Thurau (Hitachi) was judged to have drafted behind another rider and penalised, though he made it quite clear he disagreed with the decision. He was still furious at the start of Stage 9 the next morning when he spotted the chief of the race judges, a man named Raymond Trine, and then it was his turn for trouble: he had his hands clenched around Trine's throat when the race started, at which point he dropped him and ran to his bike, jumped on and started pedaling. After the stage had finished, he was apparently quite surprised when informed that he'd been thrown out. That stage, and the next, were hilly, so some of the less well-known riders used them to gain time on rivals while the General Classification contenders conserved energy for the upcoming mountains where bigger gains could be found: Maarten Ducrot and Jørgen V. Pedersen shared them. On Stage 10, the British rider Paul Sherwen (who is now the "Voice of the Tour" for people who watch it on TV in Britain, Australia and the USA) crashed in the first kilometre of Stage 10; two team mates stayed with him to help get back to the peloton, but he told them to go on without him rather than risk their own chances. He tried desperately to catch up, riding solo for more than six hours over six tough climbs, but could not; when he reached the finish line (he'd met the aravan coming back the other way some kilometres down the road - everyone had assumed he'd abandoned and the finish line infrastructure was being packed away) he was more than an hour behind Pedersen and a full 23 minutes beyond the maximum time. He should therefore have been eliminated, but judges were so impressed by his efforts that just as had been the case following a similar incident in 1979, the rule was waived and he stayed to ride again the following day. In the General Classification, Lemond won back a few seconds and, when they arrived at the Alps for Stage 11, he was 2'16" behind Hinault.

Parra at the Vuelta, 1989
Luis Alberto Herrera and Fabio Enrique Parra climbed the Alps like a short flight of stairs because they were both Colombian and had grown up training on Andean roads that started at far higher altitudes than those at which Alpine roads stopped. Herrera rode for Cafe de Colombia, but his team were only interested in the King of the Mountains and so he had no reason not to agree when Hinault suggested they work together. La Vie Claire management forbade Lemond from following them - they'd decided now who the boss was. The Breton crossed the finish line 7" after the Colombian and his overall lead rose to four minutes - the next day he took things much easier and finished 16th, making sure he recorded the same time as 10th place Lemond.

Hinault was apparently still feeling the effects of the mountains in the Stage 13 time trial because Vanderaerden beat him by 1'07". This, however, was not enough to break into the overall Top Ten; meanwhile, Lemond finished 19th, 1'23" slower than Hinault. The Breton's advantage rose to 5'23". Stage 14 was hilly - no problem at all for Herrera, who attacked early to pick up some more King of the Mountains points. This time, Lemond was given the go-ahead to chase, accompanied by Robert Millar, Pedro Delgado and six others while Hinault stayed where he was. They couldn't catch him, but did well to finish 47" later. Hinault was with Panasonic's Phil Anderson around 1'30" down the road, but in the final kilometre they were in a crash with three others. Race rules state that, if a rider crashes within the final 3km, his or her overall time will not be reduced for the time that passes until he or she is back on the bike but that the rider must get to the finish line unaided. This was fortunate for Hinault because he was on the ground for some time while doctors attended to him but lost only 1'50" overall, though his face and the maillot jaune were covered in blood when he got back on his bike. What was less fortunate was that he'd broken his nose.

Lemond in yellow, 1990
Few people expected him to show up at the start of Stage 15, but Hinault was tougher than that - he had two black eyes, his nose was bandaged and he was having difficulty breathing, but he was there. Incredibly, he lost no time that day, then added 6" the next by first matching and then beating the American as Eduardo Chozas and Frédéric Vichot won the stages. Stage 17 nearly proved to be his undoing - featuring Tourmalet and Luz-Ardiden, two of the toughest climbs in the Pyrenees, it was simply too much for a man in his condition and he was unable to respond when Lemond escaped with Delgado and Stephen Roche. Further on, Delgado attacked. Roche went after him, which forced Lemond to respond because Roche was close enough to potentially become a General Classifiation rival. Lemond believed that he had a better chance of chasing down Delgado and could even win the stage, which in turn he might be able to upgrade into overall leadership over the next few stages; but when he asked team manager Paul Koechli for position he was refused. Instead, they ordered him to wait for Hinault and help him limit time losses, claiming that the Breton was only 40" back down the road. Koechli may have been mistaken, but Lemond maintains that it was a lie told because they were afraid he might pretend not to have received the order and go for glory if he knew the truth, which was than Hinault was actually some minutes away (later, the team claimed that Lemond had in fact been given permission and had made it all up rather than admit he wasn't strong enough). Lemond slowed, waited, then slowed some more. Various other riders sailed past him, but still Hinault hadn't caught up. Eventually, the finish line came within sight and he had no choice but to cross it at a gentle pace 2'52" behind Delgado, the man he still says he knew he could have beaten. Hinault 1'11" later, though with an overall lead still standing at 2'25". Lemond was, understandably, furious; especially when he realised he'd been lied to. Hinault was grateful that he'd proved himself faithful, and promised that next year he - Le Patron - would ride as Lemond's domestique.

Roche won Stage 18a and Régis Simon won Stage 18b before the race left the mountains behind, then Vanderaerden and Johan Lammerts won the two plain stages that followed. None of them posed any sort of challenge to Hinault who still led by 1'59" after Stage 20. Stage 21 was the last time trial and turned out to be Lemond's ever Tour stage win, but the 5" by which he beat Hinault made no difference now when there was only Stage 22 left. Matthijs finished the Tour as he had started by winning that last stage, while Hinault's final overall advantage was 1'42". He had equalled Anquetil and Merckx, but next year would be different: another era had ended and, while Lemond won three Tours and is one of the greats by any standards and although Miguel Indurain won five and Lance Armstrong won seven, it's been a long time since fans saw a rider in the same vein as Merckx, Hinault and their like. At the time of writing, it was also the last time a Frenchman won the Tour - they need another, soon.

Hinault, his face battered after Stage 14
The 1985 race had two major effects. The first came as a result that there had been too many time trials in the last few years, which gave some riders what was perceived to be an unfair advantage - it took a while to happen, but in the early 1990s race organisers found themselves in agreement and times trial kilometres started to decrease. Nowadays there'll usually be one or two individual time trials, one team time trial and sometimes a prologue, though any one of them can be omitted (interestingly, if time trial results hadn't counted towards General Classification results in 1985, the overall outcome would have been very different: Herrera would have won with an advantage of 16", Delgado would have been second and Lemond would have been third at +2'28. Hinault would have been eighth at +4'47". The second was that Hinault was the first rider to win using clipless pedals, having worked closely with LOOK during their development. It was largely as a result of his victory that they replaced the older type, with toe cages and straps, as rapidly as they did.


Cyclists born today: Vasil Kiryienka (USSR, 1981); Leslie Rawlins (Trinidad and Tobago, 1954); Pietro Guerra (Italy, 1943); Simone Cadamuro (Italy, 1976); Filiberto Mercado (Mexico, 1938); Rafael Montiel (Colombia, 1981); Lucien Victor (Belgium, 1931, died 1995); Ernst Fuhrimann (Switzerland, 1913); Julio Cesar Rodríguez (Colombia, 1966).

Thursday, 27 June 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 27.06.2013

Philippe Thys
The Tour de France began on this day in 1920, 1933, 1957, 1968, 1970, 1974 and 1979. In 1920, the race was 5,503km in length and consisted of 15 stages - 12 of which were won by Belgian riders, who also took eight of the top ten places at the end of the race. In 1919, riders faced terrible roads that had been badly damaged during the First World War; while France was still putting itself back together (the economy remained in a poor state, so the bike manufacturers once again joined frces in an organisation named La Sportive to provide sponsorship), great efforts had been made to repair the transport structure and as a result the average speed increased very slightly. There were also many more riders - only 67 started in 1919 and just 10 finished, a year later 113 started and 22 finished.

The most notable difference was Philippe Thys (his name, incidentally, is pronounced Tayce to rhyme with race; I've known this for years but still pronounce it "Theese" for some reason): he was a non-combatant during the war and had apparently spent most of it eating, so when he raced in 1919 he was hopelessly overweight - in desperation, he shaved off his handlebar moustache before the race to reduce wind resistance. His performance was so poor that newspapers asked why he'd even bothered to enter the Tour, before too long he began to wonder the same and went home. Later, Desgrange attacked him: "You have become un petit bourgeois who has lot his love for his bike and wasted a huge talent," he said. Stung, Thys spent the winter training hard: when he showed up on the start line in 1920 he weighed 69kg, just as he had done when he won in 1913 and 1914. He was lucky to be there because an accident at Milan-San Remo had resulted in a complex fracture to his collarbone, but he instantly became a favourite. Other popular riders were Henri Pélissier, Eugène Christophe, Jean Alavoine and Louis Mottiat.

Félix Goethals
The race set out from Paris with Mottiat winning Stage 1 to become leader but then Thys won Stage 2 - he, Mottiat, Jean Rossius, Félix Goethals and Emile Masson now had equal overall times, but since he'd won the stage it was decided that he was now leader. Pélissier won Stages 3 and 4 but without gaining significant time. While Mottiat lost time, Thys (still in yellow), Rossius, Goethals and Masson remained neck and neck after the third stage; then Thys and Masson matched one another after the fourth - and competition was dwindling: the race was run in searingly hot weather that year and, by the end of Stage 4, 65 riders had already abandoned.

It now looked as though Pélissier was to be Thys' greatest rival, and as the strongest rider in France he might well have been; however, during Stage 5 he was given a two-minute penalty when race officials saw him throw away a damaged tyre. Tour rules of the day strictly stated that each rider had to finish with every piece of equipment that he'd had with him when he started, a rule that Pélissier - with some justification - considered stupid. He complained, but the penalty remained; s he announced that he would have no further part in the race (and he didn't, until 1923 when Tour director Henri Desgrange finally needled him so much that he came back and won just to prove a point).

In Stage 6 the riders reached the Pyrenees and both organisers and fans eagerly anticipated some excitement as, other than Pélissier's tantrum, the race had been boring so far. It didn't happen: Thys rode wisely rather than bravely by staying with the main group and keeping a close eye on anyone who might turn out to be a rival, knowing full well that he had no need to increase his lead with half the race still to go. Meanwhile, Desgrange was apoplectic with fury because the riders kept finishing in a group - he always wanted the race to be about every-man-for-himself heroics, not team work and mutual assistance. Therefore, he'd have been delighted when Thys attacked in Stage 9 he got away and beat Hector Heusghem - and by doing so, he became the first rider of that year's Tour to wear the maillot jaune; introduced one year earlier, it wasn't awarded until Stage 9 in 1920. The reason for that is lost (probably, as were the reasons behind so many things that happened in the early Tours, with the loss of material when documents were transported from occupied Northern France to Vichy France during the Second World War); however, a likely reason is that the maillot jaune seems to have come about purely as a result of one of Desgrange's many whims and it simply hadn't occurred to him until that point to bring back what would become one of the most recognised symbols in sport.

Hector Heusghem
Heusghem won Stage 10, still without making up enough time to present any meaningful sort of challenge to Thys. Desgrange was now so furious that he threatened to end the race, though this may have been an empty threat intended to make the riders compete a little more aggressively (no race meant no prize money, after all) - either way, he was persuaded that it should continue. Nothing improved much, apart from Thys' advantage. Stage 11 went to Leon Scieur, the first of his career (just a year later, he won), then Thys took Stages 12 and 13 to widen the gap even further. Goethals and Rossius won the final two stages, but both had ceased to be rivals a long time ago.

Thys' overall time was 231h07'15". He therefore became the first man to win three editions and had finished top five on every single stage, been a part of every breakaway, won four stages, been second in seven others and third on one more. Heusghem was second with +57'21"; Firmin Lambot, who took third place, was another 42'56" behind Heusghem.

Honoré Barthélémy
Desgrange may not have been impressed by the race, but he was vastly impressed by how much Thys had improved since the previous year, later proclaiming him one of the Tour's true heroes and insisting that had the war not brought racing to an end for so many of his best years he'd have won five or six Tours. The French public, meanwhile, were far more impressed by Honoré Barthélémy: he'd already had several minor crashes before Stage 8, but then he had one that left him stunned, with a dislocated shoulder and covered in blood. When he stood up he found that he was also unable to bend his back. Abandon? Not a chance - Barthélémy was made of far tougher stuff than that. He took out a spanner, flipped his handlebars up the other way so he could sit upright and then carried on. When the concussion began to wear off, he discovered that the sight was not returning to one eye - a sharp stone had lodged in it and the eye had to be removed. He finished in eighth place, more than five-and-a-half hours slower than Thys but the best-placed Frenchman.


Ever since 1905, L'Auto had chosen the rider considered to have been the best climber and named them meilleur grimpeur after the race. However, because climbers tend to be small and light, they're often absolutely useless and getting back down the mountains again as a stronger, heavier rider will find his or her bike easier to control; so time won on the way up would very often be lost shortly afterwards and being a brilliant climber didn't necessarily carry any advantage. For the first time in 1933, organisers introduced a new competition by which points would be awarded to the first riders to the top of several peaks along the parcours (later, peaks would be categorised as 1, 2, 3, 4 and - hardest of all - Hors Categorie, with a rising point scale to match). This year was, therefore, the first in which the King of the Mountains became a part of the Tour.

Speicher, 1933
There had also been some changes to time bonuses. Prior to 1932, the winner of each stage was awarded a time bonus of two minutes or three if he finished three or more minutes ahead of second place. In 1932, this was extended - the stage winner was awarded a four-minute bonus, second place for two minutes and third one minute, each of which would then have an extra three minutes added on if the margins were three minutes. The idea was to give sprinters a chance at the General Classification because, with their larger muscle mass, they lost significant amounts of time to the climbers in the mountains - as is still the case with riders such as Mark Cavendish today, though the King of the Mountains has since been joined by the Points competition contended by the sprinters (many people without an interest in cycling fail to understand that the Tour is in fact a collection of four races - the General Classification, the King of the Mountains, the Points competition and the Teams Classification; riders also compete for the Combativity Award and, if eligible, the Youth category). This worked in the favour of André Leducq, who won a total of 24 bonus minutes during the race and thus beat second place Kurt Stöpel (who was the only German rider to have stood on the Tour's podium for 64 years, until Jan Ullrich repeated his placing in 1996) by that time plus the 3" that would otherwise have been his advantage. Fans and officials considered this unfair, so the rules were changed again - now, only the stage winner got a bonus and it was reduced to two minutes.

The race set out from Paris where it was started by the American actor, dancer and singer Joesephine Baker, who would become a French citizen in 1937 (she remained in France during the War and worked for the Resistance, later becoming the first American-born woman to be awarded the Croix de guerre medal. Among many other achievements, Baker was the first black woman to star in a major film and was later offered the unofficial leadership of the US Civil Rights moement - with which she had been deeply involved - following the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, though she turned it down). There would be 23 stages covering 4,395km and, for the first time since 1912, the 80 riders headed off in a clockwise direction around the nation. 40 of those riders were independent touriste-routiers, the remainder were members of the national teams of Germany,  Switzerland, Italy, Belgium and France - the latter two were considered to have the best chance, though the Belgians were split by Flemish/Walloon rivalry. The French team, consisting of Maurice Archambaud, Georges Speicher, Antonin Magne, Léon Le Calvez, René Le Grevès, Roger Lapébie, André Leducq and Charles Pélissier, was considered to be one of the strongest ever seen at the Tour.

Maurice Archambaud won Stage 1 for France and thus took the maillot jaune, then made sure his advantage remained intact until Stage 9 when Georges Lemaire of Belgium took it. Italy's Learco Guerra - one of Desgrange's favourites for victory - won Stage 2, then Alfons Schepers of Belgium won the following day before the race reached the Alps. During Stage 3, Pélissier collided with a car and crashed; he continued but was in too much pain to keep up the pace and finished outside the time limit. As a superb sprinter and winner of thirteen stages over the course of his career, his absence was an early disaster for the team. Belgians Jean Aerts and Léon Louyet took the next two stage wins, then Guerra and Speicher took two consecutive stages each. On Stage 9, French team leader Archambaud suffered badly on the climbs and then cracked on the Col d'Allos, a 2,250m pass that featured in every Tour between 1911 and 1939 but then fell out of favour and is rarely seen now. Guerra, in second place, tried to use it to his advantage; but his attack was brought to a rapid halt by a puncture - he lost time (most of which he made up, remaining second with a disadvantage of only 23") and Lemaire took the lead.

Only seven riders finished within the time limit (+8% of the stage winning time) on Stage 10, somewhat of a surprise as it was a flat stage and because the man who set the limit by winning the stage was a virtually unknown French touriste-routier named Fernand Cornez. Desgrange extended it to 10%, but still only 43 riders made it to start the next day when the limit was again set at 10% with four riders finishing beyond it. Realising that too many had already been lost, Desgrange extended it to 15% and all four survived - though one, Ernest Neuhard, had been hit by a race official's car and would never regain the time he lost, eventually becoming lanterne rouge. Archambaud, who had regained his ability to climb, won the stage and his two-minute bonus allowed him to take back the maillot jaune. He didn't have it for long - the very next day, Speicher took it.

Georges Lemaire
Leducq won Stages 13 and 14, then the race arrived at the Pyrenees. Archambaud probably expected to move back into the lead because he was a better climber than Speicher; but while Speicher, who had finished tenth overall in 1932, was virtually helpless on the climbs and would lose significant time on the way up every col, he had mastered the fine of art of remaining just the right side of losing control of a plummeting bike on the descents and was able to regain the time and catch the peloton each time it got away. Lemaire was now in second place and could almost certainly have mounted a serious challenge, but now the split in his team put him at a serious disadvantage: he needed them to work together, but the Flemish riders rode instead for Jean Aerts. It worked rather well for Aerts in the short term because he won Stage 15, 17, 19, 20 and 21, but unfortunately he was too far down in the General Classification to rival Archambaud or Speicher and, in the long term, it cost them the Tour. This time the time bonus system worked in Guerra's favour - he couldn't catch Speicher, whose advantage remained intact all the way back to Paris, but when he won the final stage the two minutes he was awarded raised him from third to second.

Vicente Trueba, the first ever
King of the Mountains
Sixteen mountains had been chosen for the new climbing competition, with ten points for the fastest man to the summit, nine for the second and so on down to one point for the tenth man - Vicente Trueba, a Spaniard, collected ten points on nine of them. Records for the rest of the mountains are incomplete, so it's not possible to say for certain if he won a total of 126 points, as some sources claim, or 134 as some others have it. Either way, Antonin Magne had either 81 or 78 for second place, so it was enough: Trueba, a touriste-routier and virtual unknown, became the very first Tour de France King of the Mountains.

Despite his victory, Speicher was for some reason not initially selected for the team that would represent France at the World Championships later than year; a matter of some controversy at the time. Then, the night before the race, one of the selected riders dropped out. Managers searched for Speicher and eventually heard that he'd gone to see a film, so they barged into the cinema and asked if he'd ride as a replacement. He agreed and won - the first man to have ever won the Tour and the World Championships in a single year.


In 1957, the French had an even stronger team; this time it was made up of Roger Walkowiak (team leader for the first time due to the absence of Louison Bobet and Raphael Géminiani), Jean Forestier, François Mahé, Gilbert Bauvin, Louis Bergaud, André Darrigade, René Privat, Jean Stablinski, Albert Bouvet and new domestique Jacques Anquetil. The parcours was considerably more mountainous than in recent years, which made the Spaniard Federico Bahamontes and Luxembourgian Charly Gaul favourites; the French team therefore also benefited from the race directors' perhaps not entirely consequential decision not to grant Gaul's request that he ride for the Dutch team, which was much stronger than the Luxembourg/Mixed team. Gaul was not in the best form he'd ever know, but the Dutch would nevertheless have been made far stronger by his inclusion. For a short while, it looked as though the public in France and further afield would have little chance to see their heroes in action: race organisers had a row with the national broadcaster and it began to look as though it wouldn't be on television at all. Fortunately, both parties realised that compromise was in both their interests and an agreement and figure acceptable to both was reached. Meanwhile, the Tour was looking after the radio and newspaper reporters - they had a brand new, state-of-the-art mobile media centre, paid for in part by the advertising on the riders' jerseys which had made a reappearance after 27 years of plain national colours.

Left to right: Privat, Barone, Anquetil, Bauvin, Bobet
The race set off from Nantes and riders faced 22 stages covering a total of 4,665km. Darrigade won the first stage for the second year running, and he'd do it again three more times before he retired. The next day, Privat won the stage and enough time for the maillot jaune; the race came to an end for Gaul who was feeling ill, probably because of the oppressively hot weather (Gaul was as well-known for his hatred of hot weather as he was for his ability to keep going in the most dangerous, treacherously wintry weather long after other riders had given up for their own safety). Stage 3a was a team time trial and France won, then Anquetil won 3b. Marcel Janssen of Belgium won Stage 4, but without enough time take the yellow jersey from the French; then Bauvin won Stage 5 and Anquetil gained the time he needed to have his turn in yellow. André Trochut from the Sud Quest French regional team won the next day, again without the time to challenge Anquetil.

In Stage 7, Roger Hassenforder of the Nord-Est-Centre regional team won. The French team, finding themselves for the first time without a rider positioned to defend the maillot jaune, allowed Nicolas Barone of Ile de France to take it; this was not a problem as the race was only one third done and there would be plenty of time to take it back - in fact, wasting energy trying to keep it at such an early stage might even have cost them in the long run. In fact, it came back the very next day: the Italian Pierino Baffi won the stage, Jean Forestier moved into the lead. Anquetil won Stage 9 and Bahamontes abandoned (officially because of a boil on his arm that had grown s large and painful he could no longer steer, though many people said the real reason was he was angry because Jesus Lorono had been picked as team leader instead of him); which meant that the two mighty climbers, perhaps the only men who might have wrested victory from his hands as soon as the race reached the mountains, were gone. The day after that he became leader.

Stage 15 was an individual time trial, won by Anquetil who would later become known as Mr Chrono due to his near-total domination of races against the clock - this was the first Tour time trial he ever won. Unfortunately for Gaul, Stage 16 was very much one he'd have had an excellent chance of winning by an enormous margin if only he'd still been in the race - it had all the things he liked, such as steep climbs, pouring rain, fog, hail and icy gale force winds. As other riders retreated into themselves and got on with battling for survival rather than against each other, the expected challenge to Anquetil's lead never materialised. Several riders crashed, Nello Lauredi and Stanislas Bober both suffering injuries that forced them to abandon, but the worst victims of the stage were the accredited press motorbike rider René Wagner, who had never crashed a motorbike before, and his passenger, the reporter Alex Virot. Wagner was injured and spent time in hospital, Virot was killed instantly.

So, on Stage 18 when the Tour went over the Tourmalet and the Aubisque before leaving the mountains behind, Anquetil decided that he might as well attack everybody else instead - and by the looks of his form early on in the stage he might have done some serious damage had he not missed his musette as he passed through the feeding stattion. Not much further on, he bean to run out of energy - fortunately, his team mates rallied round him and shared their own food so he avoided the bonk. At the finish line he was 2'38" behind stage winner Gastone Nencini: it was a sizable dent in his campaign rather than the crushing blow he'd hope to inflict on his rivals, but far smaller than anything he needed worry about at this late point. Stage 20 was another time trial, he won that too and took back a little time, then handed over to Darrigade who won the last two stages. On his first appearance at the Tour, Walkowiak's domestique had won four stages, worn the maillot jaune for sixteen stages, come fifth in the Points competition, fourth in the King of the Mountains and first in the overall General Classification. The cycling world sat up and took note.


In 1968 there were 22 stages covering 4,684.8km. There were eleven national teams: three were French, two were Belgian and the Netherlands, Germany, Spain, Italy and Great Britain had one team each, joined by a combined Swiss/Luxembourgian team - it would also be the last year in which national teams took part because, in 1969, the race returned to the commercially-sponsored trade teams format and has remained that way ever since - national teams were popular with the fans and, therefore, the organisers; but less so with the trade teams the riders came from and they would sometimes refuse to send their best riders to the Tour because their trade team received so little of the glory following a win; this being the reason that Faema held Eddy Merckx back from representing Belgium in 1968.

The polka dot jersey was first seen at the Tour in 1968
For the first time, the race ended at the Vélodrome de Vincennes (more correctly known as the Velodrome La Cipale) in Paris; the Parc des Princes velodrome, which had hosted the last finish line of every single earlier Tour, was old and outdated and in the process of being demolished to make room for the Périphérique - the rubble from the venerable old track that had seen so many important events in cycling history was transported a short distance away and used to create the foundations of a new football stadium.

A new jersey was introduced to mark out the leader of the new Combination classification, who would be determined as the rider who was doing the most well in the General Classification, King of the Mountains and the Points competition (seen as a contest for the all-rounders, the Combination never really became popular and was abandoned not many years afterwards). The eye-searingly ugly multi-coloured Combination jersey, incorporating various elements of all the rest, had not yet been thought up; instead the Combination leader wore a white jersey emblazoned with what the French term a macaron - an elaborate confection or pattern. The polka dot jersey (maillot à pois rouges) wouldn't come into being until 1975 when Chocolat Poulain (a firm which wrapped its products in polka dot packaging) began sponsorship, in 1968 the leader of the competition also received a macaron to add to his normal team jersey. Finally, the Points competition jersey also underwent a change: having been green ever since the competition was introduced in 1953 (because that was the corporate colour of its first sponsor, a manufacturer of lawn mowers), it turned red at the request of a new sponsor. This would not last - the following year it returned to green and has remained so ever since.

Raymond Poulidor
Following the death of popular rider Tom Simpson as a result of dehydration and exhaustion at least partially brought about by drugs, organisers had been forced to introduce anti-doping tests following each stage and billed the race as "the clean Tour." However, test procedures had not moved on a great deal over the last two years since Raymond Poulidor became the first rider ever tested at the Tour when he was stopped in his hotel by laughably amateurish testers. It's also fair to say that, at that time, neither the Tour nor the UCI had even begun to suspect just how much of a problem for the sport doping would become - after all they, the riders, the majority of the sponsors and a great many fans were well aware that since the dawn of cycling, cyclists had used drugs simply to make the sheer effort required to survive an event such as the Tour (never mind win it). It's also fair to say, with hindsight, that a large percentage of those who claimed to support tests were merely paying lip service.

The first eleven stages were not especially interesting as riders took turns to win and swapped the yellow jersey back and forth until Stage 5a when the Belgian Georges Vandenberghe took it, then kept it until Stage 15. In Stage 12, the riders reached the Pyrenees and finally things began to liven up a little; Poulidor lauched a ten-man break towards the end of the stage and succeeded in getting them over the line with a 2'30" advantage over the main group. Since several of the riders considered most likely to challenge him were in that group - including Lucien Aimar, Jan Janssen and Herman van Springel, it can be seen as indication that the wildly popular Pou-Pou had at least a reasonable chance at winning the victory that Anquetil (who had ridden his last Tour two years ago) had prevented him winning for so long.

It was not to be. Stage 15 fell on the 14th of July, Bastille Day, and the French were determined to win. Roger Pingeon, who had sworn to support Poulidor at the start of the race, was given permission to attack from 200km to go - if it went wrong, he'd exhaust himself and possibly have to retire from the race. If it worked, it would be one of the most glorious stage wins for years. By the time Pingeon reached 50km to go, he was leading the peloton by thirteen minutes and showing no signs of stopping. Poulidor decided then that now the remaining distance was so reduced, he had the strength to join his team mate: the most popular riders in France, crossing the finish line together on Bastille Day, was worth the risk. He attacked; but yellow jersey Vandenberghe, van Springel, Aimar and Janssen responded immediately and went after him. This was dangerous - to catch Pingeon, Poulidor needed to set a very high pace; but by doing so he risked leading his team's main rivals right into a place from which they could most easily ruin the French plan. He'd have been better off giving up, returning to the peloton and hoping they did too; but instead he tried to outpace them. Then, disaster - the rider of an official press motorbike lost control and knocked him to the ground - face covered in blood, Poulidor finished the stage; after a very painful attempt to continue the next day he lost more than nine minutes, then on Stage 17 he called it a day and went home. In 1969, when the trade teams returned, they brought Merckx with them and Poulidor's chances were lost forever.

Jan Janssen
The German Rolf Wolfshohl had earned the maillot jaune after Stage 16 and kept it through the next, but then Spanish Gregorio San Miguel took it on Stage 18, the second day in the Alps. Pingeon, now the leader of the French team, launched a blistering assault that day and was the first man to the top of the Cols du Granier, Cucheron and Porte before crossing the line solo with a lead of 2'35" on second place Aimar and nearly 4' on Janssen and van Springel. He was still behind them in the General Classification: had he have been able to keep riding like he did that day he'd have been almost guaranteed to win overall, but nobody can perform at that level for long. The British rider Barry Hoban won the next day after a superb ride over Arabis, Colombiere and Cordon, but van Springel won time and took the yellow jersey. He kept it as the race left the mountains in Stage 20, then through the last two flat stages and all the way to the final stage, 22b. When the stage began, Janssen was 16" behind in third place overall - an extremely uncomfortable situation for the Belgian rider, because although he was known for his ability against the clock Janssen was good too. In the end, Janssen won it by 54"; giving him a 38" advantage overall. He hadn't worn the maillot jaune once in the race, but the Netherlands had its first Tour winner.


Eddy Merckx had been kept away from the Tour by his Faema team in 1968, then in 1969 he won by almost eighteen minutes. In 1970, he returned and won again with an advantage close to thirteen minutes, also winning the King of the Mountains and second place in the Points competition. Some riders appear, win everything in spectacular style, then burn out and vanish as rapidly as summer hoverflies, but the world sensed that Merckx was something different and this had not prevented him becoming the easy favourite (winning Paris-Roubaix, Paris-Nice, the Giro and the National Championships helped, of course). However, he was not team leader - that job still belonged to Guillaume "Lomme" Driessens.

The race covered 4,366km that year and there was a prologue and 23 stages. Five of them were split into parts A and B - the riders hated split stages and often complained at their inclusion, but the organisers said they were necessary because UCI rules banned stages above a certain length in an attempt to reduce riders' temptation to dope. However, each split stage consisted of a short road race and a time trial and, in each case, even the combined total didn't make for a long stage. A little more digging revealed that split stages made more money for the organisers in broadcasting rights, which the riders didn't feel particularly happy about, but split stages remained a part of the Tour for many years to come. A few days before things got under way, the Frimatic team became one of the very first to voluntarily remove one of its riders due to doping - Paul Gutty was revealed to have failed a test at the French Nationals; he was replaced by René Grelin.

Merckx won the prologue, a 7.4km time trial at Limoge. In Stage 1 numerous riders attempted to escape, some alone and some in groups, but Faema wouldn't allow any of them to get away. Cyrille Guimard won the next day but  Merckx stayed in yellow. On Stage 2, an escape had more success. None of the riders involved were judged likely to cause problems and, since Faema's Italo Zilioli was the most promising rider among them, Driessens gave him and team mate Georges Vandenberghe his blessing and they went off in search of a stage win (Zilioli got one, too). Merckx was not happy, because he'd been dreaming of wearing yellow all the way to Paris. Driessens is almost forgotten now in comparison to Merckx, but he then proved why he was team leader - after Merckx had tried to go after them and tired himself, Driessens called him back. Did he see, now, that he could have had an easy time of it while other teams used valuable energy trying to prevent Zilioli taking the yellow jersey that Merckx, if he saved himself now, could so easily take back later when it mattered? Merckx saw, and when Faema won the team time trial the next day he also saw how they would control the rest of the race.

José-Antonio Gonzalez-Linares
The race settled into the rhythm of the first week with the General Classification contenders watching with amused indifference as the domestiques and also-rans fought one another for anything they could grab while the chance to do so was still open. Merckx was back in yellow at the end of Stage 6 and the end of the week, to prevent him becoming bored, Driessens let him win Stage 7a. He learned two more lessons that day, the first of them planned and the second completely by chance: after winning 7a he hadn't the strength to beat José-Antonio Gonzalez-Linares in 7b, where he could have won far more time. Merckx learned to save his legs for when he could do most damage. It rained heavily in Stage 7b and Roger de Vlaeminck, who was desperate to win time, over-reached himself and crashed hard on a corner. Merckx saw him lying the road, just before he was taken away in an ambulance, and learned that it's better to take risks only as a last resort. With de Vlaeminck out, Joop Zoetemelk became leader of the Mars team.

Frimatic team mates Joaquim Agostinho and Mogens Frey got away in the mountains of Stage 9 and worked together for many kilometres. Near the end, Frey started drafting behind Agostinho and refused to do his share of the work, which Agostinho assumed meant that he was being given the win - but then as the finish line drew near Frey tried to sprint past him. Agostinho grabbed his handlebars and forced him to stay in second place, crossing the line first as he rightfully deserved. Nevertheless, interfering with another rider is against the rules; the judges disallowed it and Frey was awarded the win. The next day, Merckx got away again. He won the stage after only three riders, including Zoetemelk who jumped to second place in the General Classification, could follow. This revealed to Merckx that Zoetemelk had the potential to be a rival; Zoetemelk disagreed, telling journalists that as far as he was concerned Merckx stood head and shoulders above all other riders in the world.

Merckx won Stage 10 and the 11a time trial, then took Stage 12 too. During Stage 13 the team heard that directeur sportif Vicenze Giacotto, who had built up the team around the Belgian star, had died of a heart attack and Merckx became even more determined to win so that the victory could be dedicated to him. On Stage 14 he learned another lesson, one that many cyclists - including Ferdy Kübler in 1955 - have learned over the years: the Ventoux is not like any other col. He was the first to the finish line at the top, but the effort of getting there was so great that as soon as he arrived he fell to the ground unconscious. The mountain was reminding the world that even though Merckx was the most powerful cyclist to have ever lived, it was far more formidable.

Luis Ocaña won Stage 17 and Bernard Thévenet won Stage 18, the first Tour stage wins of either man's career. Ocaña would be one of the very few riders to challenge Merckx a year later (and as Merckx himself admits, he might have beaten him had a crash not ended his race) and Thévenet would finally bring his reign to an end in 1975. Merckx won the time trial in Stage 20b, then another in Stage 23, but the race had been his for a long time.

Eddy Merckx had so much talent that he would have been the most successful rider the world had ever seen no matter what. However, the lessons Driessens taught him in the Tour de France of 1970 transformed him; he no longer relied on his sheer power and skill to win races, he could ride tactically and strategically, too. Therefore, he became magnitudes more dangerous that he would otherwise have been.


In 1974, the Tour covered 4,098km in 22 stages. Four of them were split, two into a road race and an individual time trial, one into a road race and a team time trial, one into two road races. There was also a prologue, run as an individual time trial. Stage 2, which was run as a 164km circuit race, took place in Plymouth, United Kingdom - the first time that the Tour had ever crossed the channel and, because of the logistics involved in transporting the riders, bikes and infrastructure there and back, the complaints of the riders and the general indifference of the British public, the last until 1994 (when it returned, for one stage from Dover to Brighton and another around Portsmouth, it was hugely popular and vast numbers of people turned out to watch).

The Tour visited Britain for the first time in 1974
Eddy Merckx didn't enter the Tour in 1973 and he arrived in 1974 after failing to win a single victory at the Spring Classics. He had won both the Giro and the Tour de Suisse, then undergone surgery on his perineum just five days before the start of the race; due to the absence of Joop Zoetemelk (seriously ill with meningitis) and Luis Ocaña (who had abandoned the Tour de l'Aude after crashing, then had his contract terminated for failure to communicate with team managers), he nevertheless remained the favourite. Bernard Thévenet was there but did not have good form after several crashes at the Vuelta a Espana, but it was widely expected that Raymond Poulidor (now aged 38) would do all he could to beat Merckx whenever possible, even though he had little chance of an overall win.

Merckx won the prologue in Brest, but with an advantage of only 6" over second place Jesús Manzaneque and 8" over third place Joseph Bruyère, his Molteni team mate. Stage 1 ran from Brest to Saint-Pol-de-Léon and was won by Ercole Gualazzini; Bruyère was 1" behind him for second, Merckx sixth with +25", and so Bruyère took the maillot jaune.

Only a couple of hundred people in
Britain would have known who
Henk Poppe was in 1974 - he didn't
thrill with his stage win as a result
The stage in England was problematic all the way - everything had been arranged months beforehand, but customs officials appeared to know nothing about it and, finding themselves saddled with an unexpected situation, responded by becoming as officious as they possibly could. Thankfully, it turned out that race director Jacques Goddet had forgotten to pack his passport, which provided some much-needed amusement for the riders following their customs ordeals. The venue also left much to be desired - in France, to be selected as a stage town is considered an enormous honour and local authorities spend a fortune resurfacing roads and sprucing everything up for the cameras; Plymouth seemed uncertain what it had done to become victim of this huge, bizarre foreign madness (it was the British terminal used by a new ferry line sailing to and from Roscoff, the company thinking that bringing the Tour across would be a good way to advertise themselves) and authorities just wanted to get it over and done with as soon as possible, ideally with no disruption to daily life. Therefore, the race was held not on roads following a route designed to show off as many of Plymouth's charms as possible, but on an unopened bypass. The British were in those days not in love with cycling and so, other than cyclists and a few curious locals, there were not many spectators (what's more, only a small part of the Caravan had bothered making the trip - with the tradition of throwing massive amounts of free stuff to the crowds, it would have been about the one thing that persuaded people with no interest in the sport to attend) and so the riders didn't put in much effort, allowing little-known Henk Poppe to win a bunch sprint. If the French customs officials on the way to Britain had been awkward, their British counterparts on the way back were positively malevolent and apparently found the idea of large numbers of bikes being transported about the place during the world's largest bike race highly suspicious; several teams were stopped and had their belongings and equipment searched. Riders, used to be waved straight through when the Tour visited mainland European countries, were not all impressed at the hold up. That, then, was the last Britain saw of the Tour for twenty years.

Back in France, Patrick Sercu won Stages 3 and 4 (it's his birthday today, incidentally) while Merckx picked up sufficient bonus time to win back the yellow jersey. Gerben Karstens was second and became convinced that Sercu and Merckx were helping one another (Sercu rode for the Brooklyn team, but they were both Belgian and partnered up to race six-day meets during the road race off-season. It should also be pointed out that this wasn't the first time they'd been accused of helping one another, and Kastens wasn't the first to say so). Angry, he stormed off right after the stage - and forgot to attend a dope test, receiving a ten-minute penalty as a result once he'd remembered and rushed back, getting there just a little too late. Having been second in the General Classification, he registered a protest with officials but was unsuccessful. Usually in a situation such as this, the peloton would be quietly pleased that circumstances had removed a potential rival; but things were different this time. For a start, they were yet to accept tests as part of the fabric of professional cycling and still hoped they'd go away, secondly they were angry that on the previous stage the UCI testers had also demanded that Régis Delepine be penalised for the same reason, despite his excuse being rather a good one: he was unconscious in hospital after crashing on the finish line (they didn't get their way). Cyrille Guimard, president of the Riders' Union, informed the organisers that enough was enough and if Sercu's penalty wasn't removed the riders would strike. Since there was no alternative, his penalty was removed. He came 24th on Stage 5 but collected enough bonuses to become race leader, then back the yellow jersey in Stage 6a before Molteni won the 6b team time trial and Merckx won Stage 7, placing himself back into the lead.

Stage 8 was split into two road races, one of 136km and one of 152km. Cyrille Guimard won the first, Sercu the second; then in Stage 9 the Tour reached the Alps. Merckx won 9 and 10, but in both cases was surprised by Poulidor who, nine years his senior, attacked so hard on the steepest sections of the parcours that the Belgian couldn't follow. It was sad that, when both stages finished in a bunch sprint, Pou-Pou simply couldn't equal the Cannibal's explosive power and came third. On Stage 10, Merckx became prey to a superbly engineered example of tactics from the KAS team when Vicente Lopez Carril escaped. Since it was an important stage and the Spaniard was high enough in the General Classification for a good time to make a big difference, potentially even changing the likely outcome at the end of the race, Merckx had no choice but to chase. Unfortunately, he was in the second group, accompanied by KAS riders Gonzalo Aja and Francisco Galdos. Aja was also doing well in the General Classification - which put Merckx in a very awkward place: he could either let Carril win the stage and time, or go after him and let Aja and Galdos draft behind him having a relatively easy time of it until the decided it was time to sprint past him and take the stage. But, he was Eddy Merckx; so he gave chase and relied on sheer power to beat them in the final sprint.

Carril, who died less than a year later from a heart attack (Willy Voet lists his death in Breaking The Chain, but says - rightly - this is not proof of doping) won the next day before the Alps were left behind; then Jos Spruyt (who led the race over Mont Ventoux - Merckx, perhaps remembering what the mountain had done to him in 1970, seemed content to watch), Barry Hoban, Jean-Pierre Genet shared the three stages before the Pyrenees between themselves (and Cyrille Guimard tested positive for the banned drug piperidine after Stage 13, due to a knee injury this would be his last Tour). Once there, the race encountered two dramatic incidents: in the first, a large crash forced Galdos to abandon (Mariano Martinez of La Redoute-Motobecane fell right in front of Merckx, but the Belgian somehow avoided him - he had bags of luck as well as skill). The second took place late at night, after the stage - six team cars and press vehicles were blown up by a left-wing Basque separatist organisation called the Internationalist Revolutionary Action Group. The vehicles were badly damaged, fortunately the riders were all in their hotels sleeping, the mechanics were hard at work in the hotel garages and the managers and soigneurs were busy doing whatever it is they do overnight during the Tour (which they'd probably much rather we didn't know about); however, when the bombers released a statement informing all Spanish riders that if they didn't leave the race immediately they'd be considered conscious representatives of Franco's Fascist government and legitimate targets for assassination, many of them were afraid and seriously considered going - officials persuaded them to continue with promises of increased police presence with a motorbike carrying armed officers assigned to any Spanish rider who escaped solo. Carril, who was at the time Spanish road race champion, refused to wear his national jersey for fear that he might be too tempting a target. Merckx won, but on Stage 16 Poulidor escaped again and this time was successful, beating Carril by 41" and gaining his first stage win for nine years. Merckx was fourth at +1'49"; Poulidor, Carril and Michel Pollentier all took time from him and Poulidor took more, moving into third place overall, when he came second behind Jean-Pierre Danguillaume on Stage 17.

Danguillaume won again the next day, unchallenged by the favourites who remained near Merckx and watching him like vultures for any sign of weakness. There were none; with no more mountain stages and two time trials, both of which he was almost certain to win, he'd as good as won. In the first, Stage 19b, he won by 2". Then he won the 21a 113km road race by 1'25", so it didn't matter at all that Pollentier beat him by 10" in the last time trial. He had no need at all to win the final stage, 22, but he did.

Despite having undergone invasive surgery less than a week before the start, Merckx had now equaled Jacques Anquetil's record five Tours. He also won the overall Combativity award and was  second in the Ponts competition and the King of the Mountains. He'd won eight stages to bring the total for his career to 32, beating the previous record (set by André Leducq in 1935) by seven, and he was the first man to have won the Giro d'Italia, the Tour de Suisse and the Tour de France in a single year. Later that same year, he became World Champion and was thus the first of only two men to have ever won cycling's most prestigious prize, the entirely unofficial Triple Crown for which there is no trophy, podium nor money. Merckx was a superb climber (Merckx was superb at everything), but he never excelled quite so much in the mountains as he did everywhere else. This year, he'd been outwitted by another team and twice embarrassed by a man who, in the world of professional cycling, was old. After so many years in which he was unbeatable, cracks were starting to show - in 1975, Thévenet returned and brought the Merckxian Era to an end.


By 1979, Merckx had retired and the peloton had a new boss - and this one, who came to be known as The Boss ("le Patron") - was almost as good as Merckx had been. He was Bernard Hinault, and he would one day become the only man to have won all three Grand Tours at least twice.

Alpe d'Huez
Riders had been grumbling about split stages for years and in 1978 they decided enough was enough and threatened to strike after being stirred up and motivated (or perhaps forced) by Hinault. Organisers relented, there were none in 1979. There were also changes to the team time trials - previously, they hadn't affected an individual rider's General Classification placing unless he won time bonuses; now the result counted towards the overall outcome. For the first and, to date, only time, the riders faced two Alpe d'Huez summit finishes and they would be watched by a potentially huge new audience, because for the first time in its 76 years the Tour was broadcast in the USA.

Hinault was the favourite; not least of all because, not counting the prologue, there were four individual time trials and he was virtually guaranteed to win them all (which he did). He had also won last year, his first Tour. Meanwhile, Joop Zoetemelk - who had been second last year and was one of the very few riders capable of challenging Merckx, was widely considered to be the man most likely to give him problems.

Unusually, the race started in the Pyrenees. Gerrie Knetemann won the prologue with Zoetemelk taking third and Hinault fourth, both 4" behind him, then René Bittinger sprinted away from Jean-René Bernaudeau to win Stage 1. Stage 2 was an individual time trial, won as expected by Hinault with a 10" lead over Zoetemelk for the maillot jaune. He won Stage 3 too, but this time couldn't gain time - on that stage, the British rider Paul Sherwen (who now presents British, American and Australian Tour de France TV coverage) finished after the time limit following a crash and should therefore have been eliminated from the competition. When judges heard how he had ridden solo for a vast distance in an attempt to remain in the race, they waived the rule.

Joop Zoetemelk
Stage 4 was a team time trial, won by the legendary Ti-Raleigh led by Knetemann. After Stage 5, the first plain stage, Hinault remained in yellow but had lost time, his lead over Zoetemelk being reduced to 12". Hennie Kuiper lost a lot of time due five punctures, which he says were caused by one of his Peugeot-Esso mechanics fitting the bikes with the wrong sort of tyres for the parcours - had he have been 31" faster, which is entirely feasible, he'd have become new leader. Jan Raas won the stage, then Jos Jacobs won Stage 6, Leo van Vliet won Stage 7 and Ti-Raleigh won another team time trial in Stage 8. Stage 9 was raced on the notoriously difficult cobbled tracks of Paris-Roubaix. Zoetemelk escaped and, the exact same moment he responded,  Hinault punctured, which several other riders took as an opportunity to attack. Then he was stopped by protesting strikers a little further on. Fortunately, the strikers decided that doing as the riot police ordered and leaving a gap for the riders to get through was a good idea, because Hinault was now seething with anger and was the kind of man who was more than happy to wade into a crowd with his fists flailing - three years later, when a mob of striking shipbuilders tried to disrupt Paris-Nice, Hinault was straight off his bike and punched one of them in the face (the "victim" seem rather pleased to have been punched by the great Hinault). He also hated Paris-Roubaix, so the cobbles didn't improve his mood, nor did another puncture 10km from the line and by the time he finished, 3'26" after Zoetemelk and now second place in the General Classification with a disadvantage of 2'08", he was on the point of exploding. "There are some riders who will suffer plenty after what has happened today," he announced - and some riders will not have slept peacefully that night. Meanwhile, Jacques Anquetil was impressed by how hard Hinault had fought to limit his losses and declared the Breton his favourite to win.

Jo Maas won the unimportant tenth stage between Roubaix and Brussels, then Hinault had another puncture in the Stage 11 time trial. He had to wait in front of an abusive crowd of Dutch fans while it was fixed, but his anger made him faster and he slashed his disadvantage to 1'32". Christian Seznec, Pierre-Raymond Villemiane and Marc Demeyer won the next three, then there was another time trial in Stage 15. This time, Hinault was unstoppable: as others got into difficulties with terrible weather on the difficult mountainous parcours, he scorched his way through the 54km and beat Zoetemelk by 2'37", ending the day back in yellow and with an advantage of 1'48". Zoetemelk won Stage 18, which started and finished on the Alpe d'Huez and was intended to cross Izoard before the route was altered shortly before the riders set out, taking back 47" but unable to snatch back the maillot jaune. With third place Hennie Kuiper 21'23" behind Zoetemelk overall, the race was now between just two men - but with five plain stages and one time trial to go, the odds were massively in Hinault's favour.

Hinault seems to be rather impressed by Zoetemelk's
nerve after he dared attack on the last stage
Dietrich Thurau and Serge Parsani were allowed to win Stages 19 and 20 because they were both far down in the leadership and it no longer mattered. There was no change between Hinault and Zoetemelk at the end of either stage, the gap remaining at 1'58". Then the time trial arrived and Hinault extended it to 3'07". Knetemann won Stage 22 and things at the top stayed the same, as they did after Stage 23 despite Hinault winning. Usually, the last stage of the Tour is an almost ceremonial occasion in which the riders mug it up for the fans and press before composing themselves for the final, glorious approach to the finish line. One that doesn't happen, or at least happens so rarely that it's become an unwritten rule, is that the leaders are not attacked. 1979 was different - Zoetemelk had come to the race with the best form of his life and he wasn't going to give up his best ever chance at winning until there were no chances left - he attacked Hinault, but Hinault outclassed him in a sprint to the finish line. Later, it was announced that Zoetemelk had tested positive for doping and he was penalised 10' - so Hinault won by 13'07".


Harm Ottenbros
Sometimes, entirely unexpected things happen in cycling. A prime example of this was the result of the 1969 World Championships. Harm Ottenbros, who had been born in Alkmaar on this day in 1947, wasn't even supposed to be in the race, having been chosen at the last minute when Jan Janssen became sick - he wasn't even Janssen's replacement, being in his first professional year (though he'd made a good start, winning Stage  5 at that year's Tour de Suisse and managing three top three stages at the Giro d'Italia) and was only there in order that the Netherlands could field a full team.

Numerous riders were there with no intention to beat Eddy Merckx (which they knew they couldn't) and wanted simply to make his victory, since it was inevitable in their view, as inglorious as possible; Merckx responded by simply getting off his bike and walking away in the final lap, not caring about the people in the crowd who swore and spat at him when he did so. This changed matters entirely - the two new favourites, Gerben Karstens of the Netherlands and the Belgian Roger de Vlaeminck (who, some people say, was an even better rider than Merckx) had become locked in a battle of their own: de Vlaeminck knew that if he attacked Karstens would be able to give chase whereas Karstens knew that if he attacked, the stronger de Vlaeminck would almost certainly overtake. So they played cat-and-mouse, fixated on one another.

Meanwhile, Ottenbros joined forces with another near-unknown, Julien Stevens (Stevens had won a stage at the Volta a Catalunya in 1966, then the GP Pino Cerami and Road Race and Pursuit National Championships in 1967 and a stage at both the Tour de Suisse - three days after Ottenbros' - and the Tour de France earlier that year, but with Merckx and de Vlaeminck at the height of their powers when it came to both winning races and grabbing headlines, so his achievements had been overlooked). They got away and, with the other riders otherwise engaged, rode unchallenged to the line where Ottenbros won by a tiny margin.

The World Championship was far and away the greatest victory of the rider's career, but he regretted it in the future. The general opinion, among fans and journalists alike, was that Ottenbros had won undeservedly and through sheer luck - they were right about the luck, but Pierre Chany, one of the few journalists to support the rider, declared: "The race needed a winner - and it was Ottenbros." Other riders - with the notable exception of Franco Bitossi, who congratulated him on his victory when the two men competed in the Ronde van Vlaanderen (Ottenbros later gave Bitossi a World Championship jersey as a gesture of thanks - felt the same way and gave him an insulting nickname, the Eagle of Hoogerheide. Bahamontes, the great climber, was given the honourable nickname the Eagle of Toledo; Ottenbros' nickname was insulting because Hoogerheide is flat - it's far from the most insulting thing that was ever said in the peloton, but Ottenbros hated the name and said that he became better known for it than for his World title.

Ottenbros had ridden for Willem II-Gazelle since 1967, his first professional year. When tobacco advertising was banned in sport, the team became Gazelle for 1970 but, when it was unable to recruit a replacment for Willem II, it folded at the end of the year and Ottenbros, who had never been able to repeat his success, fell on hard times. He had been glad to lose the title because the insults began to slacken off, but he knew he'd never be able to find a place at the top level of cycling again. "The old feeling never came back. I was never happy again," he said. Wanting nothing more to do with the sport, he took his bike to the Zeeland bridge and threw it into the Oosterschelde estuary.

Today, Ottenbros lives in the Netherlands. He still has a rainbow jersey and his medal, but says it's been many years since he last looked at them. He works with disabled children, enjoys sculpting and is friends with Janssen. "If I could live my life all over again, I'd miss out the cycling bit," he says, but in recent years he has begun cycling for pleasure again, riding with Alkmaria Victrix in Alkmaar, the first club he ever joined.  It is to be hoped that he is content.

Photos of Harm today

Taylor Phinney
Taylor Phinney
The son of Davis Phinney, a successful professional cyclist himself, and the arguably even more successful professional cyclist Connie Carpenter-Phinney (who also enjoyed highly successful careers in rowing and speed skating), Taylor Phinney was born in Boulder, Colorado on this day in 1990.

Taylor's cycling career began when he earned a place on Slipstream, then a junior team (and now the UCI ProTour Garmin-Sharp), when he was 15. Within two years, he had won the National Pursuit Championship at Elite level and was Junior World Individual Time Trial Champion; then in 2008 he became Junior World Pursuit Champion, Under-23 National 1km Champion and Elite National Team Pursuit Champion. Since then, he has concentrated on road racing but continued to win on the track, winning the Elite World Pursuit Championship in 2009 and 2010.

In 2009, Phinney scored his first big victory on the road. Having signed his first professional contract (with Trek-Livestrong) for that season, he won the Prologue at the Flèche du Sud on the 20th of May, then went on to win the U-23 Paris-Roubaix on the 31st. In 2010 he rode with the new Trek-Livestrong U-23 squad, winning the U-23 Paris-Roubaix for a second time, numerous stages and, at the Olympia's Tour, his first General Classification; when the team became RadioShack halfway through the year he became a trainee member of the elite roster and won stages at the Tour of Utah and the Tour de l'Avenir before becoming U-23 World ITT Champion.

Phinney is known for his "purest of the pure" philosophy, being vociferously opposed to doping and choosing to eschew even legal caffeine pills. When British rider Steve Cummins won a stage at the 2012 Tour of Beijing, Phinney sent him a Tweet of congratulation: "He, like me, follows his own personal policy of no caffeine pills and no painkillers. Purest of the pure!" it read, inspiring VeloNation to get in contact to find out more. He explained that, while caffeine and painkillers are permitted in competition and that he had tried them in the early days of his career, "it just felt uncomfortable that I would be fooling my body into feeling something that it wasn’t supposed to be feeling."

Perhaps he sensed the oncoming storm at RadioShack - while he could not have known that USADA was about to charge the team's part-owner Lance Armstrong with doping as part of an investigation into what may prove to be the biggest scandal in the history of professional cycling, he may have picked up on things that were never said rather than what was, subconsciously perceiving the presence of dark and explosive secrets - which would explain, despite the faith Trek-Livestrong and RadioShack had shown in him, his willingness to depart for BMC at the start of the 2011, where he remained - along with Cummings - in 2013.

His first year with BMC passed relatively quietly and with only one victory, the Prologue at the Benelux Tour (he was fourth overall and second in the Points competition), but he got his first taste of riding a Grand Tour: he was fifth on Stage 10 at the Vuelta a Espana, but abandoned after Stage 12. In 2012, he was 15th at Paris-Roubaix, riding the full Elite version this time. He had begun the year saying that his main aim was to win the first stage, an individual time trial, at the Giro d'Italia - he did so, beating Welshman Geraint Thomas of Sky by 9". He finished the race in 155th place, only two places from last, but proved that he was able to complete a Grand Tour. Later in the year, he was fourth in the Road Race and ITT at the Olympics, then second in both events at the World Championships.

2013 got underway with a good third overall at the Tour of Qatar and seventh at Milano-San Remo, but he was unable to perform so well as in 2012 at Paris-Roubaix, taking 23rd. He returned to the Giro d'Italia and survived illness, allergies, a painful injured knee and saddle sores through to Stage 16, when an infection finally forced him to abandon. Widely hailed as a future great and tipped for Grand Tour success, he is a rider to watch in the coming years.


Patrick Sercu, born in Roeselare, Belgium on this day in 1944, is today the race director of the Six Days of Ghent. Track racing is something about which he knows a great deal, being a record holder - he won 88 out of 223 six-day races he started and won a total of 51 Olympic, World, European and National titles. He was also a successful rider on the road, winning the Points competition at the Tour de France in 1974.

Born in Neerpelt (as was his more famous brother Jelle, two years earlier) on this day in 1988, Dennis Vanendert was National Junior Cyclo Cross Champion in 2006 and has gone on to achieve good results in numerous races, suggesting that major successes may be just around the corner.

Paul Wellens, born in Hasselt, Belgium on this day in 1952, won the Tour of the Basque Country and Stage 15a at the Tour de France in 1977, the Tour de Suisse and Stage 13 (and sixth overall) at the Tour de France in 1978, was eighth overall at the Tour de France in 1979 and won Stage 12 of the Tour de l'Avenir in 1983. He is the older brother of retired professional riders Johan and Leo, whose careers fell in the same era, and the uncle of Yannick (a promising amateur) and Tim (2008 Belgian Junior Mountain Bike Cross Country Champion, riding in 2013 for Lotto-Belisol).

Born in Altdorf on this day in 1974, the Swiss Markus Zberg won Stage 3 at the Tour de Suisse and Stages 1 and 22 at the Vuelta a Espana in 1998, came second at the World Road Race Championship and Paris-Nice in 1999 and was National Road Race Champion in 2000 and 2008. He retired following a serious crash at the Tour de l'Ain.

Other cyclists born today: Kent Bostick (USA, 1953); Otto Männel (Germany, 1886); Wes Wessberg (USA, 1939); Erminio Suárez (Argentina, 1969); Geir Dahlen (Norway, 1960); Marc Thompson (USA, 1953); John Boulicault (USA, 1906, died 1985); Ivan Beltrami (Italy, 1969); Günther Schumacher (West Germany, 1949); Livio Isotti (Italy, 1927, died 1999).