Saturday 9 November 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 09.11.2013

Shawn Milne is 30 today
Happy birthday Shawn Milne, the Massachusetts-born professional cyclist currently with the Kenda 5-Hour Energy Team. Milne's career began in high school and he went on to win stages and overall classifications in a series of races including the Fitchburg-Longsjo Classic and the Tour of Taiwan. He represented the USA in the Under-23 Road Race Class at the World Championships in 2002 and 2003. He took 10 hours and 25 minutes to complete the 113km course.


Mark Colbourne, who was born in Tredegar, Wales on this day in 1969, played international-level volleyball in the 1990s and later became interested in paragliding - but in 2009, he fell to the ground during a forced landing and broke his back. Still able to ride a standard, upright bike, be began training to compete in C1 para-cycling events (upright bikes, athletes with the most severe disabilities) in 2010 and by 2011 was able to win bronze and silver in the World Cup, then another silver at the World Championships. Colbourne won Britain's first medal at the 2012 Paralympics, a silver in the 1km Time Trial; one day later he won gold in the Individual Pursuit, having broken the World Record in the qualifiers and the final. He announced his retirement in August 2013.


Ron Skarin, born in the USA on this day in 1951, set the first UCI IHPVA (International Human-Powered Vehicle Association) Hour Record in 1979. The IHPVA record had been created to encourage the development of HPVs, which can differ greatly from standard bicycles and in general take the form of fully-faired, streamlined recumbents. Skarin's bike was streamlined but not recumbent, and he covered 51.31km - the first time an hour record for vehicles of the type had been set since 1934, when Francois Faure of France covered 50.34km. To demonstrate the potential of HPVs, the Hour Record for standard bikes, which the UCI deems to be those that do not differ fundamentally from the bike on which Eddy Merckx set his 1972 record of 49.431km, had increased by only 0.269km by 2005 when Ondřej Sosenka set a controversial record - it's not entirely clear if the bike he used was permitted under the "standard" rules, and he has a questionable doping history - of 49.7km. In the Best Human Achievement record, which permits highly modified or unique bikes provided they bear a degree of resemblance to standard bikes (such as Graeme Obree's famous Old Faithful, upon which he set his Hour Records in 1993 and 1994, and which led to the adoption of the standard, Human Effort and IHPVA classifications), has increased 5.567km from 50.808km in 1984 (Francesco Moser) to 56.375km in 1996 (Chris Boardman; record still stands). Meanwhile, in the IHPVA category, the record has increased 40.246km from Skarin's 51.31km in 1979 to 91.556km in 2011 (Francesco Russo).


On this day in 1979, the famous Castelli brand - manufacturer of some of the most sought-after cycling clothes - was awarded the Corriere dello Sport Discobolo for having (in the words of the presentation letter) "in a truly futuristic way, revolutionized clothing for cyclists."

More cyclists born in this day: Keiji Kojima (Japan, 1969); Jean-Michel Richeux (France, 1948); Mobange Amisi (Congo, 1964); Omar Hasanin (Syria, 1978); Romain Bardet (France, 1990)

Friday 8 November 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 08.11.2013

On this day in 1949, German track rider Paul Kroll died during the Berlin 1000 Laps at the Funkturm Velodrome.

Nicolas Frantz
Nicolas Frantz
Nicolas Frantz, the Luxembourg-born winner of the Tour de France in 1927 and 1928, died on this day in 1985 - four days after his 86th birthday. The son of a wealthy family, Frantz was expected by his parents to take over their profitable farm but he showed no interest in doing so and, having won the first race he entered, decided in 1914 that cycling would be his life.

The First World War brought most European cycling to a halt, and also ended the lives of many of ther great riders from before the conflict. By 1923 when Frantz turned professional, however, a new generation had arisen to take their place; riders such as Ottavio Bottecchia who won the Tour (the first Italian to do so and the first rider to have ever worn the maillot jaune from beginning to end) in 1924 and 1925. Frantz's first Tour was 1924 and he finished in second place, 35'36" behind Bottecchia but almost an hour ahead of Lucien Buysse. The following year Frantz was fourth, then second again in 1926.

During Stage 11 in 1927 a relatively unknown touriste-routier named Michele Gordini managed to secretly launch a solo breakaway and, in those days before race radio and team cars with Internet, it took the peloton so long to discover his absence that he built up a lead of 45 minutes before they gave chase. Had he have maintained it he'd have begun the next stage in the maillot jaune, but mechanical problems put him out of action and Frantz, who had led the efforts to catch him, won the stage and became race leader. By the end of Stage 16 his lead stood at over an hour; he would subsequently lose time to Maurice Dewaele but, with the mountains behind them, the race was his. In 1928, Frantz topped Bottecchia's 1924 achievement by starting in yellow and keeping the jersey all the way to finish. Disaster seemed about to rob him of victory in Stage 19 when his frame snapped on a railway crossing, but he borrowed a step-through bike from a woman watching the race and was assisted back to the peloton by his Alcyon team, continuing on it though it was too small for him until he could be supplied with a replacement Alcyon machine and went on to win his second Tour.

Among Frantz's other achievements were victory at the National Road Race Championships from 1923 to 1934 and at the Tour of the Basque Country in 1926.


Jan Raas
Raas at the Amstel Gold Race, 1977
Born on this day in 1952, Jan Raas was a highly talented sprinter who also possessed an unusual ability to perform well on short climbs which, combined with his quick-witted tactical senses, made him a formidable adversary in the Classics. Winning around 115 races during his career, he was often listed as the Netherland's most successful cyclist prior to the remarkable career of Marianne Vos.

One of ten children raised on a farm at Heinkenszand, Raas is unusual among professional cyclists - especially those from the Low Countries - in that he had to interest whatsoever in bikes or bike racing until he was 16 - the age he got his first bike. He entered his first race perhaps simply as something to do more than for any other reason, but was immediately smitten - and on the 21st of July 1969, weeks after leaving school he started racing soon afterwards and, only months later on the 21st of July in 1969, he won for the first time. A successful amateur career followed, starting with one victory and several good results in 1971 and then a stage win at the Olympia's Tour, victory in the Zeeland Provincial Amateur Road Race Championships and two more wins in 1972. A year later he won five times, including his first General Classification (the Omloop van Zeeuws-Vlaanderen), and in 1974 he won a total of eight times including two stages at the Olympia's Tour and the Amateur National Championships. By the end of the season, Ti-Raleigh had offered him a contract - and so began his professional career.

That year, Raas managed three podium finishes at the Vuelta a Andalucia (two second, on third) and won a couple of races at home. Then, in 1976 - only his second year as a professional, remember - he won the National Championships, took second place on Stage 2 at Paris-Nice and, most impressively of all, was second behind Freddy Maertens at the Amstel Gold Race, the most important bike race in the Netherlands and which takes place on a notoriously tough, technical and dangerous parcours. Three top ten finishes including third place on Stage 2 at the Tour de France left nobody in any doubt at all that a major new talent was on the scene.

Feeling that he was ready to go for bigger things but knowing he wouldn't have the chance whilst Ti-Raleigh was home to Hennie Kuiper, Raas switched for the 1977 season to Frisol-Thirion-Gazelle, which was looking for a new potential Grand Tour winner to take over where Luis Ocana left off. He won Stage 1 at the Tour Méditerranéen, Milan-San Remo and the Amstel Gold Race at the start of the year, then came 13th at Liège-Bastogne-Liège before winning four Belgian and Dutch races in the run-up to the Tour de France where he finished top ten twice and won Stage 6 before abandoning after Stage 14, and would go on to win another three Dutch races before the season ended. Frisol ended sponsorship at the end of the year and the team closed; Peter Post, manager at Ti-Raleigh, reconsidered matters and, no doubt, persuaded his sponsors to provide a bigger salary offer - Raas, now joint-leader alongside Gerrie Knetemann, was back on the squad for 1978 and would remain until 1983.

In 1978, Raas won twelve races before the Amstel Gold Race, which took place on the 25th of March, then won that too by beating Francesco Moser by a minute and sixteen seconds. He was second at the E3 Harelbeke and third at both the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad and the infamous Paris-Roubaix, and managed podium finishes in most of the other races he entered. In the summer he won Stage 3 at the Tour de Suisse as well as the Prologue - though he was not awarded the yellow jersey despite leading the race, a curious and unprecedented move by Tour director Felix Levitan who claimed that bad weather had made it impossible for the stage to be properly contested (Raas and Levitan had, it is said, argued over sponsors, which may have had something to do with it all) - and Stages 1a and 21 at the Tour de France, finishing top ten on six other stages including four podiums; he was 24th overall and fourth in the Points classification, and won four more races including Paris-Brussels and Paris-Tours before the season drew to an end. In 1979, an incredible year, he won the Prologue, Stage 2 and the General Classification at the Ronde van Nederland, the Prologue and Stage 5b at the Tour Méditerranéen, Stage 3 at Paris-Nice, the E3 Harelbeke, the Ronde van Vlaanderen and the Amstel Gold Race and seven other races before the Tour, where he won Stage 5 before again abandoning. Then, the next year, 25 races before the Tour, including Stage 3 at the Ronde van Nederland, the Prologue and Stages 2 and 3b at the Tour Méditerranéen, Kuurne-Brussel-Kuurne, the E3 and another Amstel Gold Race, also coming third at Milan-San Remo, the Dwars door Vlaanderen and the Ronde van Vlaanderen. At the Tour, he won Stages 1a, 1b, 7b and 9 and finished top ten on four others before again leaving the race.

Raas stayed away from the Tour in 1981, but won sixteen times at other races including the General Classification at the Etoile de Bessèges, Stage 3b at the Tour Méditerranéen, the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad, the E3 Harelbeke, Gent-Wevelgem and Paris-Tours. By 1982 he was back to his usual self and won twelve races including the Dwars door Vlaanderen, Paris-Roubaix and Amstel Gold Race before making another assault on the Tour where he won Stage 6 (and the Team Time Trial, Stage 9a).

There were fourteen victories early in 1983, including Kuurne-Brussel-Kuurne, the Ronde van Vlaanderen and the National Championship, but an uncharacteristic third at the Amstel Gold Race suggested he might be beginning to approach the last years of his career - as seemed to be borne out at the Tour that year where he was 61st in the Prologue, 12th on Stage 1 and then 125th on Stage 3 before deciding to go home. What's more, it was widely known that Raas and manager Peter Post - who had a deserved reputation for being hard to get along with - had been arguing, and at the end of the season when each decided they'd had enough the team closed. Seven members chose to stay with Post and went with him to his new team, sponsored by Panasonic; six stayed with Raas and went with him to a new team sponsored by Kwantum. In 1984, Raas crashed hard at Milan-San Remo and damaged his back and internal organs so seriously that he was never able to regain the form he'd once had. Having won nine races that season, including another National Champion and (after the crash) Stage 9 at the Tour de France, he called time on his career as a cyclist.


A man with Raas' experience and skills was, however, too valuable to be lost to cycling, and he became Kwantum's directeur sportif. When Kwantum backed out of cycling, Raas proved himself to be a clever businessman too and secured new sponsors, managing to keep the team going for far longer than is normal: it became Superconfex, then Buckler, then WordPerfect, then Novell and then Rabobank, with whom Raas signed a contract in 1996 - by which time he was general manager rather than directeur sportif having decided he was unwilling to spend as much time away from his wife following an armed robbery at their home in 1994. Raas remained in this role up until 2003, when what were reported to be "insoluble differences" with Rabobank caused him to finally end his connection to the team. Rabobank, incidentally, continued to back the team right up until 2012; then, after a brief spell during which the bank honoured riders' contracts but didn't wish to be associated to the team, it became Blanco before Belkin took over - and Belkin is the name by which, at the end of the 2013 season, it is still known. Raas remained bitter about the split for many years, refusing to refer to the team as Rabobank in his column for the Algemeen Dagblad newspaper.

Raas' five victories in the Amstel Gold Race - which became known as the Amstel Gold Raas among fans - remains a record to this day; despite finishing the Tour only twice (in 1976 and 1978), he shares the record of stage wins by a Dutch rider with Gerrie Knetemann and Joop Zoetemelk.


Born in the USSR on this day in 1947, Vladislav Nelyubin competed in the road race at the 1968 Olympics but did not finish. In 1972, he came second in the Peace Race and in 1973 he was second overall and won the Points classification at the Tour of Austria. Nelyubin's son Dmitry was also an Olympian cyclist, but was murdered one New Year's Day 2005 by a man who claimed to have been attacked by neo-Nazi skinheads and to have mistaken him for one of them. Every year, Vladislav organises a memorial race in the city where his son died.


Luciano Dalla Bona, born in Pressano, Italy on this day in 1945, won silver in the Time Trial at the 1964 Olympics.

Gerald Mortag, who was born in Gera, East Germany on this day in 1958, won a silver medal in the Team Pursuit at the 1980 Olympics and gold at the World Track Championships in 1977, 1978 and 1979. The East German cyclists had been predicted to do well at the 1984 Olympics but were ultimately unable to compete due to the boycott of the Games by the USSR and Eastern Bloc nations; instead, they took part in the Friendship Games that were held as an alternative (and turned out to be an unexpected success when many of the countries sending athletes to the Olympics sent their B-teams - including, somewhat curiously as it had been their decision to boycott the 1980 Moscow Olympics in protest at the USSR's invasion of Afghanistan, the USA) and won gold.

More cyclists born on this day: Cláudia Carceroni-Saintagne (Brazil, 1962); Odd Berg (Norway, 1923); Brian Lyn (Antigua and Barbuda, 1961); Mike Cowley (Great Britain, 1941); Johnny Bairos (USA, 1977); Renzo Colzi (France 1937); Adler Capelli (Italy, 1973).

Thursday 7 November 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 07.11.2013

James Moore (right) with an 1869 model S-Works Venge
The very first Paris-Rouen race took place on this day in 1869, making it one of the oldest official and organised bicycle races in history - and, it's believed, the first bike race to be held between two cities.

The winner, taking 10 hours and 40 minutes to complete the 123km, was James Moore, an Englishman who had been born in Bury St.Edmunds in 1849 but grew up in Paris; he received a huge prize of 1,000 gold Francs. 120 people, among them two women, started the race, but 24 hours after the start only 32 had finished - including one of the women, who had entered as Miss America (she was in fact English, and her real name was Mrs. Turner - bicycle racing, in Britain and elsewhere, was not considered to be a sport befitting gentlemen, never mind ladies, and the idea of women taking part in public athletic competition was widely frowned upon; Mrs. Turner therefore felt the need to conceal her identity - a great pity, as it means we know nothing more about her) and crossed the line in 29th place after 22 hours and 50 minutes. The race had been inspired by the popularity of a shorter event at St-Cloud in Paris the year before, an event that Moore also won and which is often - despite convincing evidence of earlier events - said to have been the first organised bike race in the world. A day after that, he won Britain's first organised race at Brent Reservoir, near to which he is believed to be buried.

The race - which imposed some strict rules, such as banning riders from being towed by dogs or fitting sails to their bikes - was organised by a magazine, Le Vélocipède Illustré, and businessmen the Olivier Brothers who are usually credited as being the first to realise the commercial potential of the bicycle and the first to begin mass-producing them after going into partnership with Pierre Michaux. Michaux, a blacksmith, had invented the velocipede (briefly also known as a "Michaudine") when he came up with the idea in the early 1860s of adding pedals* to the draisienne, the hobby-horse that had changed little in the half-century since Karl Drais** invented it - curiously, Moore had befriended the Michaux family in Paris during his youth.

*Just as nobody knows for certain if the race in St-Cloud was the world's first or where Moore is buried, nobody really knows if Pierre Michaux really was the first to think of fitting pedals to a draisienne to make a velocipede. It might have been his son Ernest, or even by Pierre Lallement who may have come up with an earlier design and later had connections to the Olivier brothers, and possibly even worked for Pierre Michaux for a while.

**For that matter, we don't know for certain that Drais invented the hobby-horse, either. He might have been copying something he'd seen.

Antonella Bellutti
Bellutti at the 1996 Olympics
Born in Bolzano on this day in 1968, Italian Antonella Bellutti was a distinguished athlete in her youth, winning seven Junior National titles for the 100m hurdles and setting a national Junior record. Later, she fell in love with cycling and took second place in the Individual Pursuit at the National Track Championships in 1992, then won the event and the National Individual Time Trial Championship on road two years later. In 1995, she won the Pursuit at the Manchester round of the World Cup and at the National Championships where she also won the 500m, then came second in the Pursuit at the World Championships and managed ninth place at the Trofeo Alfredo Binda.

1996 would be an excellent year: she won the Pursuit at the Cali round of the World Cup, the Pursuit and 500m for a second year running at the National Championships, took second place in the National ITT Championships, third place in the Pursuit at the World Championships and won the Pursuit at the Olympics, beating Marion Clignet and Judith Arndt.

In 1997, Bellutti win the Pursuit at the Adelaide, Cagliari, Fiorenzuola d'Arda and Cali rounds of the World Cup and began to dominate in the Points race too, winning it at Athina and Cali. She also won the Omnium at the European Championships before going to the Nationals, where she won the Pursuit, Points, 500m and Sprint, and kept the Pursuit and 500m National titles the following year, also winning the Pursuit and Points at Cali.

Bellutti made a return to road racing in 1999 and won the Giro Pordenone shortly after taking a bronze in the Points at the Moscow round of the Track World Cup. The middle part of the year was based on the track again and she won the 500m, Points and Sprint, then went back to the road and came third at the Chrono Champenois. In 2000, having won the 500m and Pursuit (and come second in the Points) at the National Championships, she went to the Olympics and won gold in the Points race before calling an end to her cycling career - two years later, at the Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, she came seventh in the two-woman bobsleigh event with Gerda Weissensteiner.

In addition to showing talent in several very different sports, Bellutti has turned her hands to some very different jobs: between 1992 and 1995 she was a physical education teacher, then some years later she contributed several articles to newspapers and was included on the national register of journalists. In 2001 she was elected to a position on the Italian Olympic Commission and, a year later, became technical director of the men's national track team (a role she gave up as it was seen to conflict with her role at the Commission). In 2003, she was athletes' representative at the national anti-doping agency, and since 2012 she has been one of the chief organisers of the XXVI World Universities Winter Games, due to be held in December 2013.


Happy birthday to Tanya Dubnicoff, the retired Canadian track cyclist who represented her country in three Olympics and won four gold medals in the Pan-American Games. She now lives in California where she works as a cycling coach, training the Canadian national squad among many other teams.


Hilton Clarke, who was born in Ormond, Australia on this day in 1979, has won a large number of events primarily at home, in New Zealand and in North America. In 2011, he became the first rider to win the CSC Invitational) twice. Known as a sprinter, he has ridden for United Healthcare since 2011.


Tom Meeusen, born in Brasschaat on this day in 1988, won the Debutant's race at the National Cyclo Cross Championships in 2004 and the Junior National Cross Country Mountain Bike Championships of 2005 and 2006. In 2007, he won the tough Junior competitions at the Ruddervoorde and Koppenbergcross cyclo cross events, then in 2008 he became Under-23 National Cyclo Cross Champion and in 2009 he came third in the U-23 European Championships. 2010 was his first year at Elite level and he was third in the National 'Cross Championships. In 2011 he made a return to mountain biking and won a race at Averbode in Belgium, then another at Apeldoorn in 2012; in 2013 he kept up both disciplines and won a 'cross race at Zonnebeke, an MTB race at Steenwik and then in October the 'cross race at Marianne Vos' hometown Den Bosch. Meeusen has ridden for Telenet-Fidea throughout his career.


This day in 2004 saw the inauguration of Sri Lanka's Cyclone, a mass participation bicycle rally aimed at establishing cyclist's rights and promoting the bike as a means of transport in the Asian nation.

On this day in 1942, Fausto Coppi set a new Hour Record at 45.798km at the Vigorelli track.

More cyclists born on this day: Per Kærsgaard Laursen (Denmark, 1955); Kenji Takeya (Japan, 1969); Emil Beeler (Switzerland, 1937); Pat Murphy (Canada, 1933); Harald Wolf (East Germany, 1955).


Wednesday 6 November 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 06.11.2013

Frank Vandenbroucke
Frank Vandenbroucke
Born in Mouscron, Belgium on this day in 1974, Frank Vandenbroucke - known as VDB - was one of the bad boys of professional cycling, but initially a charming and colourful one who was supported by legions of adoring fans. Sadly, that likable personality, along with the enormous talent he demonstrated early in his sporting career, would be destroyed by a succession of emotional and drug problems, and he died a tragic and early death.

Aged four, Frank was hit by a car while riding his bike in the village of Ploegsteert and suffered injuries serious enough to require four operations and to give him problems for the rest of his life, yet his mother remembered years later how he hadn't cried until a doctor cut his beloved cycling shorts in order to be able to examine his leg. As a teenager, he tried athletics and showed talent, winning a regional schoolboy's championship, but cycling remained his true love: in 1989 he received his first racing licence, and won his first race. An unnamed rider, speaking to journalist Philippe van Holle, recalled meeting him during a race soon afterwards (as published originally in ProCycling):
"It must have been when I was about 19 or 20 and went out training with a friend on the Belgian borders. As we spun along, out of nowhere this skinny blond kid was on our back wheel. He looked about 14. He was still there 15 minutes later, so we picked up speed. He just sat there, so we picked up the pace again. It was still no problem for him. I looked over my shoulder and he gave me a half-mocking, half-friendly grin. In the end, we went as hard as we could to try to get rid of him and teach the little brat a lesson, because by now he was getting a bit too cocky for our tastes. But whatever we did, he still hung on. After about an hour, we came into a village called Ploegsteert, at which point he came alongside with real arrogance and said 'OK, I'm back home now, so 'bye. By the way, I'm Frank Vandenbroucke.' Neither of us had ever met a kid like him."
In 1991, Vandenbroucke won the National Novices Championship, in 1992 the National Juniors Championship and two Junior races; then in 1993 the National Junior Madison Championship and three races, which earned him a trainee contract with Lotto-Caloi (Jean-Luc, his uncle, was directeur sportif) for the final part of the season. It was upgraded to a professional contract the following year and he won two more races, including Stage 6 at the Tour Méditerranéen, his most prestigious yet. He started 1995 with Lotto but moved to Mapei-GB early in the season, enjoying his best year to date with seven victories, but then smashed it with 17 victories including the General Classifications at the Tour Méditerranéen and Österreich-Rundfahrt as well as first place at the tough Scheldeprijs Classic in 1996. In 1997 he won the Tour de Luxembourg and entered the Tour de France for the first time, stunning the cycling world with two second place stage finishes (2 and 16). In 1998, he won the Paris-Nice stage race and Gent-Wevelgem, another tough Classic in which riders battle against powerful and, frequently, icy-cold winds blasting in off the North Sea. Now there was no doubt that a major new talent - perhaps, even, the new Eddy Merckx that Belgian fans had hoped for for so long - had arrived. Cofidis, a French team, snapped him up for 1999 with a 30 million Belgian Franc (£340,000; 397,000 Euros; $546,600) salary over three years as the bait.

It was an enormous sum to a 24-year-old, and it would start up the machinery of his downfall and eventual demise. At Cofidis, Vandenbroucke met two riders with whom he shared much in common, the Frenchman Philippe Gaumont and the the Maltese-born British rider David Millar. None of the three knew it, but there were dark days ahead for all three of them - Gaumont would be changed with doping (though the case was dismissed) in 1998 and again, as part of the investigation into the notorious "Dr. Mabuse" Bernard Sainz (who wasn't a doctor but never corrected people who believed him to be one, and was later sentenced to three years' imprisonment for illegally practicing as one), a year later. During the second investigation, in an attempt to save his own skin, Gaumont named names, listing riders he believed or knew to be doping, including Millar who was subsequently banned for two years. Gaumont, who burnt every possible bridge back into cycling with the publication of his Prisonnier du dopage, never returned to the sport and died having spent a month in a coma following a massive heart attack in 2013, when he was 40 - heart attacks at relatively young ages being one side-effect of EPO, which thickens the blood by increasing the number of red cells and in doing so strains the heart. Millar, who sunk into the depths of depression and alcoholism, somehow found the mental strength necessary to drag himself back out; he returned to cycling and enjoyed many successes, becoming a highly respected spokesman for the peloton and an authority on anti-doping, and is popularly considered to have become the most honest man in the sport. Vandenbroucke got on with Gaumont and they became friends; he did not like Millar and would not speak to him. It was Gaumont, Vandebroucke said, who first introduced him to recreational drug use, teaching him how to "trip" by mixing nonbenzodiazepine sleeping aid Zolpidem with alcohol, which is reported to create mild euphoria and hallucinations, and to Sainz. He described how he first took the drug in his autobiography:
"After our daily work-out, training for Calpe, we all met in a hotel room to do something that was entirely usual at Cofidis: drinking beer, listening to music and other things. Gaumont put a pill in my mouth, I asked him what he was doing. "Stilnoct," he said [Stilnoct is a brand name of Zolpidem - JO], "here - have one!" I didn't really see much point in taking a sleeping pill at a party. "No thanks," I told him, "perhaps later, when I go to bed." He laughed. "You innocent," he told me, taking another sip of his drink. "We don't take these to sleep, we take them to hallucinate. Come on, have two and some alcohol, then in a quarter of an hour you'll be tripping. You gotta try it, man!" I hesitated. "C'mon, jump in," he said. It was at that very moment that it all started - the machine was switched on, all because I said yes when faced with the question of whether or not I would take those pills."
That 1999 was the beginning of the end is made even more heartbreaking by it also having been Vandenbroucke's most successful year as a rider - and even more so by it being the year that his first daughter, Cameron, was born. He won nine times in total, including highly prestigious events such as the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad (one of the most prestigious of the Classics after the five Monuments), Liège–Bastogne–Liège (which is a Monument and, as the oldest of them, is considered the greatest by some - and his victory, 30" ahead of second-place Michael Boogerd, was simply spectacular) and two stages plus the Points classification at the Vuelta a Espana. He and Cameron's mother, Clotilde Menu, were said to have a difficult relationship and were not married; they broke up that year.

He remained with Cofidis in 2000, but already his results were sliding - he came second in the National Championships, but otherwise could not distinguish himself all season, and his contract was not extended into 2001. Instead, he moved to Lampre-Daikin which probably thought it'd found a bargain, but in April a car in which he was travelling was stopped by police. Driving the car was a certain Bernard Sainz, who was unable to provide the police with insurance documents, so they searched the vehicle - and found what they believed to be a very large amount of illegal doping products. In fact, the drugs were homeopathic remedies (some sources, apparently incorrectly in view of Sainz escaping prosecution, say that they were in fact EPO, morphine and bronchodilator clenbuterol, which would later be the reason for Alberto Contador's ban; Sainz still claims to this day that he only ever supplied homeopathic drugs), but Sainz was by that time under so much suspicion that, after he claimed to have spent the night at Vandenbroucke's home, the property was searched. Small quantities of various drugs were found, which the rider claimed had been prescrived by a veterinary surgeon for his dog (as Cycling News later put it, "there have also been no reports of VDB's dog kicking the bucket after" the drugs were removed for analysis). Sainz, incidentally, claimed to have hardly known the rider; he could not be connected to the drugs at Vandenbroucke's home and was not charged.

Vandenbroucke was dragged in handcuffs to a police station to be questioned, prompting fans to start a petition protesting at what they saw as unnecessarily harsh treatment - among the 2,500 people to sign it was his sworn rival Peter van Petegem; nevertheless, he was given a provisional ban of six months, but found a new contract - with a vastly reduced salary - riding for Domo-Farm Frites in 2002, where he rejoined his old friend Johann Museeuw and manager Patrick Lefevère, both of whom he had met at Mapei. That year, he won the Mere road race in Belgium, but was stopped twice for drink-driving in his sports car. Compounding Vandenbroucke's problems was another unsuitable romantic pairing, to an Italian model named Sarah Pennachi; while the couple seem to have loved one another - and had a daughter, Margaux, in 2001 - friends and family termed the relationship "diabolical," saying that when they were together they fought, but when they were apart became depressed. She frequently left him, returning to Italy; he frequently left her, staying with friends at Eeklo. On one occasion, when they argued on the phone, Vandenbroucke pretended to commit suicide by firing a shotgun into the air.

Lefevère evidently believed that Vandenbroucke could save himself and wanted to give him that chance, because when he started QuickStep-Davitamon in 2003 he offered the troubled rider a place. Incredibly, despite his declining mental health, Vandenbroucke was second at the Ronde van Vlaanderen (another Monument, widely considered the hardest after the brutal Paris-Roubaix). With some justification, he considered second place to be a perfectly adequate result, but Lefevère believed he could have won had he have made the effort. Vandenbroucke walked out, and his second place proved good enough to enable him to secure a new contract with Fassa Bortolo for 2004. Before signing his contract, he asked the team not to pay him unless he won - which can be seen as a desperate attempt to force himself to pull his life back together in order that he could carry on in the sport he loved. It didn't work: after failing to win a single race and not even managing to show up at most of those he was entered for, he was sacked halfway through August. How he managed to persuade the managers of Mr. Bookmaker.com-Palmans that he was worth signing up is one of the great unanswered mysteries of cycling, but somehow he did and when he won the 160km Zwevegem race a month later, he secured himself a place on the team for 2005 - even though he finally admitted to police in December 2004 that he had used EPO, steroids, morphine and amphetamines.

Once again, Vandenbroucke missed most of the races for which he was entered in 2005. promoting the team's directeur sportif Hilaire van der Schueren to demand he proved he was still a racing cyclist. When matters did not improve and he failed to keep managers informed of his progress and whereabouts, he was sacked. Also that year, he was sentenced following his 2004 confession, declining his chance to receive a light sentence in return for naming his drug supplier, but the court showed some leniency - presumably due to his obvious addiction problems - and handed him 200 hours of community service. He appealed; another court fined him 250,000 Euros. Even at that point, the promise he'd once shown brought him a contract - he started 2006 with Unibet but left the team - amicably, apparently - in July, then went to Acqua e Sapone a little over a month later. During 2006, Vandenbroucke and Penacchi finally divorced and he returned to live with friends at Eeklo, telling people that he was seeking to build a new, quieter and more peaceful life for himself

Vandenbroucke experienced one of the most bizarre episodes of his life - at an amateur race unaffiliated with either the UCI or the Italian federation, he was recognised by an official. He'd been racing with a licence in the name of Francesco del Ponte, Frank of the Bridge. While he admitted to using the licence and racing with it, claiming that he "needed" to race and was unable to function without it, he was strangely unclear when asked who had made it or suggested the name. "It's inappropriate," he argued. "In Flemish, broucke means pants. I would have called myself Francesco del Pantalone. I don't know who did it and I don't want to know." The photo on the licence depicted Tom Boonen. "I would certainly not have used a photo of Tom," he insisted (it is notable that Boonen was the protege of Vandenbroucke's friend Museuuw, and had already by that point enjoyed all of the successes that Vandenbroucke once seemed destined to win. Could it be, perhaps, that he wished he was Boonen, and wanted to keep quiet rather than be forced to admit it?)

Early in 2007, Vandenbroucke published his autobiography Je ne suis pas Dieu, I'm Not God. It made for worrying reading, leaving no doubt that its author was a man who had experienced a full mental breakdown.
To Stilnoct and amphetamines, I added Valium... Sometimes I didn't sleep a second in five days. I started seeing things, people who didn't exist. Like people hiding around me in the bushes with telephoto lenses. I used to hear them coming, with their combat-shoes; they got out of their bus parked in front of the house. They were coming to arrest me. Shit, my dope! I ran to the bathroom to throw my stock of amphetamines down the toilet and the syringes into the waste bin... Sarah didn't used to see them and tried to get me to understand. But how couldn't she see them, those policemen, dozens of them, and their flashing lights! She must be crazy. But was she making it up: could she see them really?"
In June, four months after the book was published, Vandenbroucke attempted suicide following a year in which he described himself as having been more depressed than ever before. He would later write:
"I went to fetch the most expensive bottle of wine from my cellar, a magnum Château Petrus 1961. I poured it out and I drank a toast to my life. I'd asked the advice of a doctor. Insulin would do it.
I wrote a farewell letter: it knew it was clumsy [lâche] but for me it was the best solution...
"There's no need for an autopsy. I injected 10cc of Actrapid. Please, don't let them open my eyes."
...I was alone. I put on my world champion's jersey, I injected myself and then I went to lie on my bed and I waited to die. I was so happy. No more worries at last... Deliverance at last. It was my mother who found me later that day."
Acqua e Sapone manager Palmiro Masciarelli went to see him in hospital and reported back that he was gravely ill. During the period when he was between Unibet and Acqua e Sapone, then Mitsubishi-Jatarza for the first four months of 2008, he won nothing and was known to be in bad health and, as a result, he could not find a new team for the remainder of 2008, then returned in 2009 with Cinelli-DownUnder. That he won two races that year - Stage 2 (15km ITT) at Les Boucles de l'Artois and Olen - evidence either that he had either backed away from the brink or that he was now using so much doping that his health no longer mattered. That year, on holiday in Senegal, he got drunk and checked into a hotel at 2am on the 12th of October in the company of a Senegalese woman. At 4am, the woman called for a mop and bucket, saying that he had vomited. By 1pm the next day, he had not been seen; by 8pm he was reported as dead. He was 34 years old. Two days later, the Senegalese woman and two other individuals were arrested and charged with stealing two mobile phones and some money from the dead cyclist. One month later, his family requested that no further tests to establish whether he'd been using drugs at the time of his death be carried out.

Vandenbroucke was the son of Jean-Jacques Vandenbroucke, a professional rider with Hertekamp-Magniflex in 1970, and the nephew of Jean-Luc Vandebroucke who was professional between 1975 and 1988 and winner of the GP des Nations in 1980, the Tour de Picardie in 1981, the Tour de l'Aude in 1986 and the prologue of the 1987 Vuelta a Espana. His brother-in-law Sebastian Six was a very successful amateur rider and his cousin Jean-Denis Vandenbroucke was professional between 1996 and 2000.

Hugo Koblet
It was on this day in 1964 that Le Pedaleur de Charme Hugo Koblet died in a car crash that may have been suicide. Koblet's career was enormously successful with eight National Championships and General Classification victories in the Giro d'Italia (1950) and Tour de France (1951). However, he could not resist giving into the playboy lifestyle made possible by his success, remarkably good looks and charm - Victor Godder, directeur of the Tour, called him "the perfect specimen for demonstrating the miraculous power of the human race," no less, and he might have won even more races had it not have been for a number of beautiful women, countless parties and, eventually, debt.

His death, at the wheel of his Alfa-Romeo sports car when he was 39 years old, was witnessed by a man named Emile Isler. Isler claimed he'd see the cyclist driving at 120-140kph along a stretch of road, then drive back in the opposite direction more slowly while looking at the roadside Then, he turned round again, accelerated to high speed and drove directly into a pear tree.

More on Koblet here.


Heiri Suter
Heiri Suter
Not so well known nowadays is Heiri Suter, another Swiss cyclist who became the first man to ever win Paris-Roubaix and the Tour of Flanders in a single year in 1923. Born on the 10th of July 1899 at Granichen, Suter was also unofficial world champion in 1922 and 1925 after winning the Grand Prix Wolber (which served as an unofficial World Championships at that time), official Swiss road champion five times during the 1920s and multiple winner of several Classics including the now defunct Züri-Metzgete (six times in ten years) and Paris-Tours (twice) and the first non-Belgian to win the Tour of Flanders. He died on this day, aged 79, in 1978.


Cherise Taylor-Stander
Born in Pretoria on this day in 1989, Cherise Taylor-Stander came second in the Junior National Championships of 2006, then second in the Junior World Championships a year later. In 2008, she won Stage 4 at the Tour of Chongming Island, then won the National Championships at Elite level before signing her first professional contract, with MTN, for 2009.

As is often the case, the shift into professional cycling proved something of a shock and Taylor went for a season without victory, then left the team at the end of the year. In 2010, however, she won another National Championship and was seventh overall at the Tour of New Zealand, bringing an offer of a door into European cycling with a place on the repected Lotto-Belisol team. With them, she performed well at Chongming Island, the Giro Donne and the Holland Ladies Tour, also winning the Individual Time Trials at the National and African Championships that same year. In 2012, after successfully defending her National ITT title, she scored her biggest victory in Europe to date when she won Stage 2 at the Route du France. She had aimed to take a place on South Africa's Olympic team that summer, but was prevented from doing so by the national Olympic federation.

In May 2012, Taylor married elite mountain biker Burry Stander. Less than one year later, on the 3rd of January as he returned to his bikeshop after a training ride, Burry was hit and killed by a taxi.


Urs Freuler
Urs Freuler, born in Bilten, Switzerland on this day in 1958, Urs Freuler was primarily a track rider (he was World Points Champion from 1981-1987 and then again in 1989, National Points Champion in 1981, 1986 and from 1989-1992, European Sprint Champion in 1981, National Individual Pursuit Champion in 1985, World Keirin Champion in 1983 and 1985 and won a total of 21 six-day races) but also performed well in road race sprints, which is why Ti-Raleigh approached him for their Tour de France team when Jaan Raas was unable to compete in 1981 and nobody on the team was able to replace him - the rules at that time permitting teams to take on unsigned riders for a specific race. However, because he was a track rider and would be embarking on a full season of racing that winter, Ti-Raleigh manager Peter Post agreed that Freuler would ride only the flat stages until the race reached the Alps, then would retire. He was with the team when it won the two Team Time Trial stages, then he won Stage 7 too; but he never again rode in the Tour.

He did, however, ride in future editions of the Giro d'Italia, and he did very well indeed, winning Stages 5, 6 and 11 (and Stage 2 at the Tour de Suisse a little later) in 1982; finishing top three four times in 1983 (he won stages at the Giro di Trentini and Giro di Sardegna, plus two at the Tour de Suisse); Stages 2, 7, 8, 11 and the overall Points classification in 1984; Stages 1, 13 and 18 plus second place in the Points classification in 1985; Stage 9 in 1987; Stage 21a in 1988 (and Stage 10 at the Tour de Suisse) and Stages 7 and 11 in 1989 (plus Stages 3a and 5 at the Tour de Romandie and Stage 10 at the Tour de Suisse).


Paul Manning
Born at Sutton Coldfield on this day in 1974, Paul Manning was another rider who performed well on road and track. He seemed to have prefered road early on his career but, when it became apparent that he was going to have his greatest success on track, concentrated on that instead.

Manning's first big victory was at the Duo Normand in 1996, which he rode with Chris Boardman; a year later he won Stage 4b at the Postgirot Open, and in 2000 he won Stages 4 and 6 at the Circuit de Lorraine. That year, he also rode with the British Team Pursuit squad at the Olympics and the World Championships, winning a bronze medal at the first event and a silver at the second - they took another silver at the 2001 World Championships (and Manning won Stage 4b at the Sachsen Tour), a bronze in 2002, then another silver in 2003 (when he became National Individual Pursuit Champion and won Stage 8 at the Herald Sun Tour). In 2004, the British team once again won silver in the Pursuit at the Worlds, but won the gold at the Manchester and Sydney rounds of the World Cup; Manning would win the Individual Pursuit at Sydney and at the Nationals. In 2005 he won the Individual Pursuit at the Manchester round of the World Cup and the team won the gold - then they repeated their success with another gold-winning ride at the World Championships. Still riding road races, Manning was a part of the winning team at the National Team Time Trial Championships and won the Tour of the Peak. A year later, he was with the Pursuit team to win at the Commonwealth Games (where he also won the Individual Pursuit), the Moscow, Manchester and Beijing rounds of the World Cup and at both the National and World Championships, and in 2008 he was there when they won the Team Pursuit at the Copenhagen round of the World Cup, at the World Championships and at the Olympics.

Manning's career is interesting because it coincides with the period during which British track cycling transformed itself from neglected, niche sport to near national obsession status, and turned previously little-known riders into gold medal-winning superstars. Though he retired immediately after the 2008 Olympics, he has continued to contribute to the now enormous success of the British track team, becoming coach of the women's pursuit team - and under his tutelage, they have smashed six world records including at the 2012 Olympics when they won gold, beating the US team in the final by more than five seconds.

Marino Vigna
Marino Vigna. The Vitadello jersey
dates the jersey to 1966 or 1967
Born in Milan on this day in 1938, Marino Vigna was a professional rider between 1961 and 1967. In 1960, he rode with the winning Pursuit team at the Olympics, which were held in Rome that year. Three years later he won Stage 14 in his home province of Lombardy at the Giro d'Italia, and in 1964 he won Stage 2 at the Tour de Romandie. Following retirement from racing, Vigna worked for many years as a coach and later for the Bianchi bike firm, where to this day he still manages relations between the company and the various teams that use its products.

Vigna rode the Giro three times in total, abandoning not long after his stage win in 1963 but returning to finish 73rd in 1965 and 62nd in 1966. He rode Milan-San Remo in 1962, 1963, 1965, 1966 and 1967 (best: 12th, 1965); Paris-Roubaix in 1964 (52nd) and 1965 (40th); Liege-Bastogne-Liege in 1965 (26th) and the Giro di Lombardia in 1967 (12th).


In 2005, Marianne Vos won the Elite European Cyclo Cross Championships on this date.

On this day in 2007, bike component manufacturer SRAM purchased the wheel and component manufacturer ZIPP Speed Weaponry.

More cyclists born on this day: Kārlis Kepke (Russia, 1890); Saleh Al-Qobaissi (Saudi Arabia, 1964); Ernie Crutchlow (Great Britain, 1948); Craig Merren (Cayman Islands, 1966); Severo Hernández (Colombia, 1940); Michal Hrazdíra (Czechoslovakia, 1977); Jerome Steinert (USA, 1883, died 1966); Luca Bramati (Italy, 1968).

Tuesday 5 November 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 05.11.2013

Tommy Godwin
Born in Connecticut on this day in 1920, Tommy Godwin moved to Britain when his British parents returned to their native country in 1932. Desiring extra pocket money, he found a job with a Birmingham grocery shop named Wrensons and was supplied with a heavy bike to carry out deliveries to customers. Other groceries had their own delivery boys, equipped with their own delivery bikes; it was, therefore, entirely natural that unofficial competition took place between them - and Tommy was the fastest (Godwin's namesake, the Tommy Godwin who was born in Stoke-on-Trent in 1912, began cycling in very similar circumstances).

The 1936 Olympics - Arie van Vliet's gold-winning ride in the 1km time trial in particular - showed Godwin that he might be able to build on his natural talent and make some sort of career out of cycling. Three years later he started racing, then set the fastest time over 1km of the 1939 season at the Alexander Sports Ground which was in those days used by the Birchfield CC and is now known as the Perry Barr Stadium and used for speedway and greyhound racing. Immediately, he became "known" - and was invited to attend trials to find British cyclists for the 1940 Olympics.

Tommy's chances of winning a gold medal were ruined because his best years coincided with the Second World War - working as an electrician at BSA (as a reserved occupation, he was not called up to fight), he was able to enter only thirteen events in a three-year period from 1940-1942. However, from 1943 onwards as the Allies began to gain an upper hand, the British Government realised that far from being an unnecessary expense, sport was a highly effective way to improve public moral and encouraged it. More bike races were held; Godwin won the Cattlow Trophy that year, then successfully defended it in 1944 - and later in 1944, he won the 5-mile race at the National Championships. In 1945 he won it again and added the 25-mile (he also won the BSA Gold Column that year at the Herne Hill track, which is still used for cycling races to this day and is one of the oldest velodromes in the world), winning the latter event for a second time in 1946.

Finally, when the Games came to London in 1948, Godwin got his chance to compete at the Olympics and won two bronze medals; one in the 1km time trial and one in the Team Pursuit. It was widely considered that the British riders would have done far better in the Pursuit had it not have been for a row between coaches in the run-up to the Games, but Godwin and team mates Dave Ricketts, Robert Geldard and Wilfred Waters managed to turn things around after just scraping through in the qualifier, improving their time by 17" to win the medal - which gave them a faster time than was set by the gold-winning French team in the final round. Tommy's medal in the time trial is no less remarkable, because he was selected to compete in the race with only two days' notice and no training. Later in life, he would remember how differently Olympic athletes were treated in those days, even at a company such as BSA which, as a manufacturer of bikes, could have made profitable use of his success: "Somebody there said, 'Oh you won a medal,' and I said yes. He said, 'Well, the job we're doing today is so and so.' That was it," he recalled.

Godwin retained his links to cycling all his life and became manager of the British cycling team at the 1964 Olympics, where his efforts were to inspire future four-time World Pursuit Champion Hugh Porter. Later, he became British Cycling's first paid coach, and President of the organisation.

From 1950 until the middle of the 1980s, Godwin owned and ran a cycling shop; in 2010, when the Herne Hill track came close to closure after 119 years, he was instrumental in efforts to save it. That year, he was rediscovered by the British public after being interviewed as part of the BBC's "London 2012: Two Years To Go" television programme - instantly likable as he always was (and with his two Olympic medals to show to the cameras) he was at long last given the national hero status he had always deserved. In 2012, the year of the Games, he was chosen to be a torch bearer during the Relay, carrying it on a 300m stretch through Solihull on the 1st of July. Four months and two days later on the 3rd of November, he died at the age of 91.


Ben Swift
Ben Swift
Ben Swift, born in Rotherham on this day in 1987, won the Tour de Picardie in 2010 and was World Scratch Race Champion in 2012. Beginning his cycling career at the age of 12 with Mossley CRT in 1999, he immediately made a mark and, less than four years later, was second in the Scratch at the Under-16 National Championships. In 2004, he became Junior National Points race Champion, then Junior National Scratch race Champion a year later - when he also competed in the Elite Scratch and won bronze.

In 2007, Swift launched his professional road racing career with Barloworld, a now-defunct British-registered team backed by a South African brand management firm, showing potential as a climber by winning the King of the Mountains at that year's Tour of Britain. In 2008, he came fourth in the Under-23 World Road Race Championships, which attracted the attention of Katusha to whom he signed for 2009. Katusha realised that, despite his success at Barloworld, Swift was not going to be a climber (as was confirmed by low placings on the mountainous stages at that year's Giro d'Italia, but very good placings on flat and hilly stages in numerous races); instead, the team's coaches began to remodel his training regime to resemble that of an all-rounder.

Swift leading a sprint at the Tour de Romandie
In 2010, despite his contract with Katusha still being in force, he moved to the new British team Sky (the transfer, kept secret for some time, was revealed when the Wielerland cycling stats website obtained a photo of him training in Sky kit). Before long, Sky's coaches decided he wasn't cut out to be an all-rounder either - because he showed far too much potential as a sprinter. He won Stage 2 at the Tour de Picardie in a nine-man sprint, and won the Points jersey - also known as the sprinter's jersey - too (and the General Classification). In 2011, Swift won Stages 2 and 6, both bunch sprints (with some of the finest sprinters of all time, including Robbie McEwen and Mark Renshaw), and was fourth overall; he would also ride his first Tour de France that year and finished Stage 15 in sixth place (the stage was won by Mark Cavendish, who would also ride for Sky in 2012).

In 2012, Swift became the first ever British World Scratch race Champion and won silver in the Points and Madison. He was fourth at the National Road Race Championships, won two stages and the Points classification at the Tour of Poland and finished Stage 2 in third, Stage 18 in second and four others in the top ten at the Vuelta a Espana. In 2013, he won bronze at the National Individual Time Trial Championship - not bad for a rider who once said ""My weakness is in the time trial - I don't like doing them and I'm not really that good at them," but perhaps not so surprising for one seems to have what it takes to do well in any discipline.

Matthew Harley Goss
Goss at the 2013 People's Choice Classic
Born in Launceston, Tasmania on this day in 1986, Matthew Goss is another highly successful young sprinter. Like Swift, Goss first made his name on the international cycling stage with his results on the track, but he had already had a taste for road racing success as far back as 2002 when he won the Novices race at the Australian National Club Championships. A year later he proved himself to be one of the country's up-and-coming track stars with second place in the Junior Scratch race at the National Championships; in 2004 he won Junior Madison (with Miles Olman) and the Junior Team Pursuit (with Olman, Simon Clark and Michael Ford) at the World Championships, and the Points race and Road Race at the Commonwealth Youth Championships, adding the Launceston International Classic road race later in the season. In 2005, his final year as an amateur and now taking part at Elite level, he rode with Nathan Clarke, Stephen Rossendell and Mark Jamieson to win the Team Pursuit at the National Championships, also taking silver in the Points race at the same event.

2005 saw Goss start to concentrate on road for the first time since the early days of his career and brought him victory in Stage 1 at the Tour of Japan, followed by two further wins at the Australian Ulverstone and Devonport criterium races. He would enjoy more success in 2006, winning the Under-23 GP Liberazione and a stage at the U-23 GP delle Regione, two stages at the Vuelta Ciclista a Navarra and, most notably, Stage 3 at the Baby Giro, which brought him his first professional road racing contract with Team CSC for 2007. Having spent most of the season adjusting to the top level of the sport (but still grabbing some impressive second places along the way), he won Stage 3 at the Tour of Britain.

Goss remained with CSC - by then called CSC-SaxoBank - through 2008 and then 2009, when it became SaxoBank. He won Stage 2 at the Tour of Britain, the Herald Sun Classic and Stage 1 at the Herald Sun Tour in 2008, then came third at Gent-Wevelgem in 2009 before going on to ride his first Grand Tour - the Giro d'Italia, where he was fifth on Stage 6, seventh on Stage 7 and fourth on Stage 9; he would also win Stages 3 and 5 at the Tour de la Région Wallonne and was first at Paris-Brussels. In 2010 he moved to HTC-Columbia, a team with a well-deserved reputation for turning promising youngsters into world-beaters, and during his two seasons with them he won Stage 9 at the Giro d'Italia and the GP Ouest France (2009) and Stages 1, 4 and the General Classification at the Bay Classic, Stage 1 and the overall Points classification (plus second in the General Classification) at the Tour Down Under, Stage 2 at the Tour of Oman, Stage 3 at Paris-Nice, first place at Milan-San Remo, Stage 8 at the Tour of California, second place on Stage 6 at the Tour de France and then second again at the World Road Race Championships just behind the man who has been named the greatest sprinter of all time, Mark Cavendish.

At the 2009 Eneco Tour
Like a large percentage of Australia's finest cyclists, Goss signed to the new GreenEdge-AIS team for 2012. With them, he won Stage 3 at the Giro d'Italia and was second on Stage 5, then sixth on Stage 13 - after which he withdrew from the race in order to be able to concentrate on the Tour de France, where he came third on Stages 2, 6 and 20 and second on Stages 5 and 18 at the Tour de France (and was fourth on Stage 4), earning third place in the Points competition with 268 - it was notable that second-placed André Greipel had picked up only 12 more points, and that Goss would have been second had he not have been docked 30 points for dangerous riding that nearly took down green jersey winner Peter Sagan during Stage 12.

GreenEdge became Orica-AIS for 2013. Goss remained onboard and won Stage 2 at Tirreno-Adriatico, but with the exception of his shared victory in the Stage 4 Team Time Trial at the Tour de France, his season was otherwise without victory. Nevertheless, numerous podium places including at the Tour Down Under and the Giro d'Italia show that he is still a very worthy adversary in a sprint finish.


Maarten Tjallingii
Maarten Tjallingii is a Dutch rider with one of the most unusual names in professional cycling (somewhat disappointingly, it's pronounced exactly as spelled - Tcha-ling-gee). Born in Leeuwarden on this day in 1977, Tjallingii started his cycling career as a mountain biker and came third at the prestigious Groesbeek race in 1998, then began to make inroads into road racing.

Maarten Tjallingii
He showed promise in his amateur days with third place overall and a stage win at the 2001 Tour du Faso, which he would win outright two years later after winning Stage 1 and taking second on Stages 3, 7 and 11. In 2006, with Skil-Shimano, he won Stage 1 and overall at the Ronde van België, then Stage 7 and overall at the Tour of Qinghai Lake, and in 2007 he was second overall at the Ronde van België. Then, for no obvious reason and as they sometimes do for professional cyclists who had previously seemed destined for the top, the wins stopped coming: he did not enjoy another victory until 2012 - though third place in the 2011 Paris-Roubaix, the most brutal race in cycling, was an impressive achievement and showed why it was that Rabobank had continued to pay his wages since he signed to them for 2009.

His 2012 victory was the Profronde van Almelo, but might not have been his only success that year - fifth at the National Individual Time Trial Championship and 22nd place on Stage 2 at the Tour de France suggest he had good form; however, following a crash in Stage 3 - after which he rode 40km to the end of the stage, left him with a broken hip and he did not start the next day. It was followed in 2013 by another respectable finish - 18th place - at Paris-Roubaix and then victory at the World Ports Classic. Rabobank, following the exposure of Lance Armstrong as a drugs cheat, declared that it no longer wished to be associated with Elite cycling (after some consideration - and a little persuasion from the world's most successful cyclist Marianne Vos, who it definitely did want to continue sponsoring - it decided it would continue to support women's Elite cycling) and the former Rabobank became Blanco temporarily, until new sponsor Belkin took over. Tjallingii, who is now 36 years old, will continue with them in 2014. He is one of a very small number of vegetarian professional cyclists.

Koos Moerenhout
Jacobus "Koos" Moerenhout, who was born in Achthuizen, Netherlands on this day in 1973, began his cycling career as a trainee with the US-based Motorola team in 1994 having won a handful of amateur victories including, in 1994 prior to signing his trainee contract, overall at the Tour de la Province de Liège and Stage 1 at the Tour of Austria.

In 1996, Moerenhout moved up a level to Rabobank's Elite squad and won the Circuit Franco-Belge; then in 1997 he won Stage 8 at the Rheinland Pfalz Rundfahrt. In 1998 he was entered for the first time in the Tour de France and, while he finished better than top thirty on just one stage - sixth, Stage 13 - finished in 44th overall, a very respectable place for a rider making his Grand Tour debut and one that makes it something or a surprise that he remained a domestique for his entire career, these being the results of a man who might have had the potential to finish a Grand Tour in the top ten. In 1999 he won Stage 4 at the Tour of the Basque Country before departing Rabobank for Farm Frites, with whom he would remain through its various incarnations en route to becoming Davitamon-Lotto in 2005. Early in 2000 he won Stage 1 at the Tour Down Under, then raced the Giro d'Italia (abandoned) and Tour de France (77th overall), winning a silver medal at the National Road Race Championships in between.

Moerenhout didn't have a good year in 2001, but finished the Vuelta a Espana in 72nd place in 2002. In 2003, he rode the Giro and the Tour again, finishing the former in 53rd place and the latter in 128th. He score more podium places at the Tours of Qatar and Austria early in 2004, then came second again in the National Championships before taking 100th place overall at the Tour de France. In 2005, when he concentrated largely on the Vuelta, he showed some of that same potential he'd showed in his first Tour de France with his best ever Grand Tour result, 12th overall. A year later, riding for Phonak, he was 62nd at the Tour, then in 2007 he returned to Rabobank and came 70th at the Giro and 42nd at the Vuelta - but won the National Championships in between.

He would remain with Rabobank for the rest of his career, riding three more Grand Tours: the Tour de France in 2008, where he was 34th overall and came closer to a stage win than ever before with fourth place on Stage 11; the Vuelta in 2009 (the same year he won the road race at the National Championships again, and was second in the Individual Time Trial) and, finally, his seventh Tour de France in 2010, where he finished Stage 19 in sixth place and came 52nd overall.

Moerenhout maintained close links to cycling and to Rabobank after retiring, serving as one of the team's managers. He is married to Edith Klep, who was also a professional cyclist and took second place at the Sparkassen Giro in 2001.


Giuseppe Ogna, who was born on this day in 1933 at Sant'Eufemia della Fonte in Italy, rode for Bianchi from 1957 to 1961 and then for Ignis from 1962 to 1968. He was Amateur National Sprint Champion in 1954, Amateur World Champion in the same discipline in 1955 and then became Elite National Sprint Champion in 1958. Ogna also rode in Tandem events and was Amateur National Champion (with Celestino Oriani) in 1954, then rode with Cesare Pinarello at the 1956 Olympics and won a bronze medal.

Claudio Iannone, born in Argentina on this day in 1963, became National Road Race Champion in 1990.


Cyclists born on this day: Martin Mortensen (Denmark, 1984); George Artin (Iraq, 1941); Paula Gorycka (Poland, 1990); Bruno Pellizzari (Italy, 1907, died 1991); Marcos Mazzaron (Brazil, 1963); Bob Broadbent (Australia, 1904, died 1986); Spyros Agrotis (Cyprus, 1961); Liu Xin (China, 1986); Lyndelle Higginson (Australia, 1978); Richard Pascal (Cayman Islands, 1967 - not to be confused with French rider Pascal Richard); Geoffrey Burnside (Bahamas, 1950).

Monday 4 November 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 04.11.2013

Dirk Demol
He may not have won Paris-Roubaix the most glorious way,
but win it he did - Dirk Demol's pavé
Dirk Demol, born in Kuurne, Belgium on this day in 1959, won Paris-Roubaix in 1988 after breaking away on the cobbles just outside Roubaix from a lead group made up of relatively unknown riders that had itself broken away from the peloton 27km into the race. He then stayed out in front all the way without challenge.

It was, however, not a glorious victory. When he left the lead group, Thomas Wegmuller of KAS-Canal 10 went with him but then got a plastic bag entangled in his gears just as arrived at Roubaix. The team car came to his aid and a mechanic was able to remove the bag, but his gears still didn't work. Knowing that if he stopped to change bikes Demol would sprint away to certain victory, Wegmuller decided to carry on; Demol took full advantage of this by wheel-sucking him all the way to the velodrome and then accelerated away to win.


Born in Kuldīga, Latvia on this day in 1939, Emīlija Sonka won the Road Race at the 1964 World Championships at Salanches in France. She beat Galina Yudina, also riding for the USSR, and Rosa Sels of Belgium.

Uwe Peschel, who was born in Berlin on this day in 1968, won the National Individual Time Trial Championship in 2002 and was second at the World Individual Time Trial Championship a year later.

Born in Oyannax on this day in 1960, Éric Barone is a French cyclist who has set a number of downhill speed records and, at the time of writing, holds the World Records on gravel (172kph; set on Cerro Negro volcana, Nicaragua in 2002 - Barone crashed shortly after reaching the record speed and was badly injured) and on snow (222kph; set at Les Arcs, France in 2000).

Other cyclists born on this day: Wesley Kreder (Netherlands, 1990); John Otto (USA, 1900, died 1966); Lal Bakhsh (Pakistan, 1943); Evgeniya Radanova (Bulgaria, 1977); Leo Karner (Austria, 1952); Luis Díaz (Colombia, 1945); Jamie Wong (Hong Kong, 1986); Vasileios Reppas (Greece, 1988); Róbert Nagy (Slovakia, 1972); Lauri Aus (Estonia, 1970, died 2003); Federico Ramírez (Costa Rica, 1975); Ken Caves (Australia, 1926, died 1974); Ferenc Pelvássy (Hungar

Sunday 3 November 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 03.11.2013

Brian Robinson
Today, British cyclists have made their mark forever on cycling's greatest race the Tour de France - Tom Simpson was the first to play the media and become a star, then became an even bigger star when he died on Mont Ventoux; Barry Hoban won eight stages; Robert Millar came fourth and won the King of the Mountains; David Millar earned time in all the different classification leaders' jerseys; Cav shattered Hoban's record with 23 stage wins, set a host of records, was declared the greatest sprinter the Tour had ever known and became a pin-up and then in 2012 Bradley Wiggins became the first British winner in the 109 year history of the race. Brian Robinson, born in Huddersfield on this day in 1930, wasn't the first Briton to enter the race (that had been Charles Holland and Bill Burls, who took part and failed to finish when Robinson was six years old in 1937) but he was the first to become a true Tour rider and the first to finish the race; in so doing blazing a trail that all those who came after him would follow.

Robinson was born into a cycling family, his father and older brother being members of the Huddersfield Road Club. He was permitted to join them for strictly non-competitive club rides from the age of thirteen and became a member when he reached the minimum age of fourteen; however, his father didn't allow him to begin racing for another four years. His father relented: Robinson's first attempt was a 25-mile individual time trial on a hilly parcours in March 1948 when he was seventeen and he completed in 1h14'50", a very respectable time for any rider making his debut, but he had already fallen for the glamour of European racing by this time and dreamed of a future in mass-start stage events - unfortunately, at that time the British League of Racing Cyclists (formed by Percy Stallard to establish and promote mass-start road racing in Britain) was still waging war with the National Cycling Union (which had banned mass-start road racing in Britain ever since the late 19th Century, fearing police would ban all bicycles from public roads). Robinson was an NCU member and was thus limited to the few NCU mass-start events that took place, all of them in very restricted circumstances such as on roads in public parks during the hours when the park was closed; he raced many times at Sutton Park in Birmingham where races had to stop before 09:30 when the public were allowed in.

Road racing was not banned on the Isle of Man, which as a self-governing nation had its own cycling union, and after taking third place in the Road Time Trials Council's National Hill Climb Championships and fifth in the NCU's mass-start closed circuit championships the previous year, Robinson went there in 1951 to come seventh at the prestigious Manx International. It wasn't banned in Ireland either; that same year he won Dublin-Galway-Dublin. In 1952 he entered the Route de France as part of a joint NCU/Army team whilst completing his mandatory national military service and did well, taking fifth place overall until the race reached the Pyrenees with three days to go - "I'd never seen mountains like that before" he said afterwards, having fallen into 40th place. That summer he and older brother Des were selected for the British team going to the Olympics; Brian finished in 27th place and Des in 26th. Jacques Anquetil, who would go on to become the first man to win the Tour five times and is still considered by many to be the greatest cyclist France has ever produced, was 12th; a month later at the World Championships Robinson raced against him again and they tied for eighth place. In 1954, having finished his national service, he signed to a team sponsored by Ellis Briggs as an independent; he was second overall in the Tour of Britain and won Stage 6 at the Tour d'Europe, a race held that year and again two years later before vanishing.

Later in 1954, Robinson was invited to join Hercules, a team that had originally been set up to break cycling records with riders including Eileen Sheridan but had later been approached by Derek Buttle who had been racing in France since 1952 with a plan to set up a road racing team. He accepted and, in 1955, he formed part of the first British team in the history of the Tour de France (Holland and Burl, back in 1937, had ridden for a British Empire team that included a Canadian rider). With many members of the team having little or no experience of racing in Europe and none at all of a Grand Tour, the race soon proved itself to be much, much harder than any of them had expected: only Robinson and Tony Hoar could finish, and Hoar was Lanterne Rouge. Robinson, meanwhile, proved himself - he was a respectable 29th, yet Hercules were not encouraged by his success to continue their racing program and the team dissolved at the end of the 1955 season. The following year, he demonstrated that he really was a rider able to take on the best Europe had to offer by performing well at the Vuelta a Espana (where he rode with a Swiss-British team led by le pédaleur de charme, 1951 Tour victor Hugo Koblet), then went to the Tour with a mixed-nationality team that included Charly Gaul, who had been third overall in 1955. Robinson finished Stage 1 in third place before taking 14th in the overall General Classification; Gaul, who won two editions of the Giro d'Italia and one of the Tour in spectacular style and who is still considered by many to have been the greatest climber cycling has ever seen, beat him by just one place.

If anyone now doubted that British cyclists couldn't hold their own at the very top of their sport, they were about to have their illusions shattered because early in 1957, having become the first british rider to sign a contract with a top continental team, Saint Raphael-R. Geminiani, Robinson beat Louison Bobet by almost a minute to win the Nice criterium. A short while later he took second and third place stage finishes at Paris-Nice, then he came third at Milan-San Remo ("by far the greatest achievement by a British roadman in a single-day race since the halcyon 19th-century days of George Pilkington Mills and the Bordeaux–Paris," said Cycling magazine). He crashed out of the Tour that year, but in 1958 he was second behind Arigo Padovan on Stage 7 - until Padovan was relegated to second after judges declared him to have twice tried to force Robinson into the crowd during the final sprint and, for the first time and more than half a century after the Tour began, a British rider had won a stage. It has been said that Stage 7 was the least important stage of the 1958, and those who say so are correct: the Pyrenees and - more important still - the Alps, where the TV crews that were for the first time that year broadcasting live from the mountain stages captured for posterity the incredible climbing abilities that won Gaul his Tour, were still far away and the General Classification contenders were saving their legs for the time trial the next day (and riders needed to think even more carefully than usual about when and where they spent energy, because in 1958 there were no rest days). Yet as far as British cycling fans - and fans of British cycling; an ever-growing number of whom, thanks to Robinson and Simpson (who was offered a contract with Saint Raphael the following year on Robinson's recommendation) and all those who followed the trail they blazed, are not British - it is one of the most important stages in the history of stage racing.

In 1959 Robinson won Stage 20. It was, once again, not a very important stage - the final Alpine stage had been the day before and Federico Bahamontes, who was the only rider able to even get near to Gaul when conditions suited the Luxembourger, had as good as won overall already. The other big names, competing for second and third place in the General Classification, were not concerned when Robinson broke away; however, with only two stages to go plenty of domestiques and also-rans would have been looking to grab any limelight that was available. That Robinson won by 20'06" - second place was taken by Arigo Padovan of all people - is therefore an impressive result. He continued racing for another three years, winning a stage at the GP du Midi-Libre and the Tour de l'Aude in 1960 and the General Classification at the Critérium du Dauphiné in 1961. 1962 passed without victory, then he was third at a criterium in Chaumont; he retired from competition at the age of 33 but still rides today.

John Tomac
John Tomac
If anyone can be said to have lived their life in cycling, it's John Tomac. Born in Michigan on this day in 1967, Tomac began BMX racing when he was 7 and had won a National Championship by his mid-teens; then after moving to California in 1986 he took up mountain biking and won races in that discipline too. Before long, a combination of race results and personality had made him one of the most famous riders in the world - Mongoose, the bike company for whom he had ridden throughout his professional career, marketed a "John Tomac Edition" mountain bike in 1987 and he starred in one of the first mountain biking videos that same year.

Between 1988 and 1991, Tomac also competed in road racing, winning the National Criterium Championship in his first year as a professional before going on to compete in several prestigious European events including Paris-Roubaix and the Giro d'Italia without notable success, leading to a decision to concentrate on mountain biking after 1991. Towards the end of the decade he formed a partnership with Doug Bradbury, the founder of the Manitou MTB suspension company, and set up Tomac Cycles. He no longer owns the brand - which passed through the hands of the American Bicycle Group conglomerate before being bought by Joel Smith, a businessman who had made his name in mountain biking as brand manager with components manufacturer Answer - but still takes an active role in running it and is involved in the design of new bikes.


Jules Rossi, who was born in Acquanera di San Giustin, Italy on this day in 1914 and went to France to live with relatives when he was orphaned at the age of 6, became a professional rider with Alcyon-Dunlop in 1935. He remained with them for most of his career, which lasted for sixteen years; in 1937 he became the first Italian to win Paris-Roubaix (unless - as is possible - Maurice Garin was still Italian when he won), in 1938 he won Stage 6a at the Tour de France and then first place at Paris-Tours after maintaining an average speed sufficient to also win him the Ruban Jaune.

Bobbie Traksel, born in Tiel, Netherlands on this day in 1981, won the 2010 Kuurne-Brussels-Kuurne after battling through weather so bad that 169 of the riders to start the race abandoned.

Other riders born on this day: Arnaud Labbe (France, 1976); Udo Hempel (Germany, 1946); Maxime Bouet (France, 1986); Anneliese Heard (GB, 1981); Chris Jenner (New Zealand, 1974); Armin Meier (Switzerland, 1969); Oscar Zeissner (Germany, 1928); Javier Suárez (Colombia, 1943); Tacettin Öztürkmen (Turkey, 1913); Alan Bannister (Great Britain, 1922, died 2007); Georges Lutz (France, 1884, died 1915); Børge Mortensen (Denmark, 1921); Peder Pedersen (Denmark, 1945); Joann Burke (New Zealand, 1969); Clarence Kingsbury (Great Britain, 1882, died 1949); Galip Cav (Turkey, 1912); Mario Margalef (Uruguay, 1943).