Showing posts with label doping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label doping. Show all posts

Saturday, 23 August 2014

Daily Cycling Facts 23.08.2014

Johan Bruyneel
Bruyneel in 2007
Born in Izegem, Belgium on this day in 1964, Johan Bruyneel has been one of the highest-profile figures in professional cycling for almost a quarter of a century - as a rider and as a manager, and for good reasons and bad.

Bruyneel got his first taste of racing glory when he took third place at the Juniors' Trofee van Vlaanderen Reningelst in 1983. Three years after that he won the Amateur Ronde van België, then turned professional with SEFB in 1987 and remained with them until 1989, the year that he won Stages 2 and 9 at the Tour de Suisse. In 1990, riding for Lotto Superclub, he won the Tour de l'Avenir and marked himself out as a man to watch in future Grand Tours; he also rode his first Tour de France that year and - remarkably, for a debutant, finished Stage 17 in second place and was 17th overall. He was not as fortunate at the Tour in 1991 with 35th overall, but he won Stage 12 at the Vuelta a Espana in 1992 and triumphed at the GP des Nations. 1993 was his real break-through year: he not only won Stage 6 at the Tour, but did it at an average speed of 49.417kph - then a record, and since bettered only twice - and was seventh overall. Two years later he won Stage 7, though he would later express disappointment at how he'd won: having launched an attack early on in the stage, he'd found himself desperately hanging to Miguel Indurain's back wheel for much of the parcours before getting the better of him in a sprint. Most riders and fans would claim that simply keeping up with Indurain - especially when the five-time Tour winner was going all-out to win time on his rivals - was sufficiently worthy to make the victory morally his, but Bruyneel apparently felt that since he'd been in Indurain's slipstream for so much of the day he had an unfair advantage in the final sprint to the finish line. At the following Tour he came within centimetres of a career-ending injury when he lost control during a descent on Stage 7, coming off the road and plunging into a ravine. As ever when such things happen, spectators fell silent and for a moment or two, then a few people peered over the edge - just as the rider clambered back up to the road and onto his bike to complete the stage (he abandoned a few days later). He stayed away from the Tour in 1997, then abandoned after Stage 9 in 1998, which would be his last year as a professional rider.

With UCI president Pat McQuaid
Whilst Bruyneel's riding career would be the envy of any cyclist, it was as a manager that he found his greatest success. Immediately after retiring, he was invited to manage US Postal - the team that counted among its number a young American rider who, after showing promise for some years, had finished that year's Vuelta a Espana in fourth place. His name was Lance Armstrong, and he welcomed the new manager's plans to knock the team into shape: US Postal was, according to Armstrong, "the Bad News Bears, a mismatch of bikes, cars, clothing, equipment" and the team was run on an annual budget of "only" $3 million (directeurs sportif and managers of women's professional teams will doubtless be wondering how the team ever made ends meet). At the time of writing, we have reason to doubt the methods Bruyneel used to get his riders race-ready - he is at the centre of a doping investigation that, if he and others are found guilty, could prove to be a greater scandal than the Festina Affair or Operacion Puerto - but there is no doubt at all that when it comes to the logistics and practicalities of running a professional cycling team, he is extraordinarily talented: within a year, US Postal had been transformed from a rag-tag bunch of gifted mavericks into one of the most polished, well-drilled teams ever seen in cycling. Armstrong, of course, went on to win an unprecedented seven consecutive Tours; Alberto Contador won another - his first - in 2007 and the other riders on the team were victorious at a huge number of races during the decade that Bruyneel controlled the outfit.

In 2007, Bruyneel announced that he was going to leave cycling. However, he was then approached by representatives of the Kazakhstan government and offered a position managing the Astana team which, earlier that year, had been accused of running a doping ring and was thrown out of the Tour. Apparently not a man to back down from a challenge (nor, one assumes, a fat cheque), he accepted. Levi Leipheimer and Contador went with him; the team was again blocked from the Tour in 2008, but Contador won the Giro d'Italia and the Vuelta a Espana while Leipheimer was second at the Vuelta and won the Tour of California. Astana was allowed back into the Tour in 2009 and Contador won in superb style with Armstrong, who had decided to return from retirement, taking third; they also won the team classifications at the Tour and the Giro, another Tour of California (Leipheimer), Paris-Nice (Contador) and numerous other races.

With the ONCE team
Bruyneel left Astana at the end of 2009, but he still wasn't ready to retire and became manager of RadioShack, a team part-owned by Armstrong. With eight members of the 2008 Tour-winning Astana squad also making the move (Contador, who had gone to SaxoBank, was the only one that did not) and several very talented riders from elsewhere signed up to the team, RadioShack looked a force to be reckoned with in 2010 and did indeed win an impressive 23 times, but the season was not without setbacks - in May, it was revealed that Bruyneel was being investigated by the Belgian Federation due to an accusation made by Floyd Landis that he ran a doping ring whilst manager of US Postal and, though RadioShack won the teams classification at the Tour (the second time an American team did so; the other being, of course, US Postal in 2009). At the end of the year rumours that RadioShack and LeopardTrek would merge for 2012 were confirmed, though Leopard owner Flavio Becca claimed that his team was taking over RadioShack's sponsors and some of its riders, thus making it sound more like a corporate take-over than a merger. The resulting team was to be called RadioShack-Nissan, its aim was to propel Andy Schleck to a Tour win - and the differences in how Bruyneel and Becca described its birth were the first indication of friction.

Andy Schleck, along with older brother Frank and several other members of the team, performed considerably less well than expected in the first few months of 2012 - only Fabian Cancellara seemed to have good form, but he ended up out of action after suffering a quadruple collarbone fracture at the Ronde van Vlaanderen. Hints began to emerge that the riders were not happy: Andy dropped heavy hints he wasn't happy about Bruyneel's decision to keep the Schleck's preferred directeur sportif Kim Andersen away from the Tour (and even indicated that he would remain in touch within him during the race), while Frank was understandably not impressed to be accused of "letting the team down" when he abandoned the Giro with an injured shoulder. Jakob Fuglsang openly criticised team management and was not selected for the Tour squad as a result; it was later reported that his salary had been with-held as a punishment, and few fans will have been surprised when he announced that he would be leaving for Astana at the end of the year. Before long, there were rumours that the Schlecks would be going too, either to an existing team or to a newly-formed one: a dangerous situation for Bruyneel, because the brothers had done the same before when they left SaxoBank - and had asset-stripped it of good riders in doing so.

The biggest controversy of the year came in May at the Tour of California - as Bruyneel stepped off the plane onto US soil, he was met by USADA officials who served him with a subpoena as part of their own investigation into doping at US Postal. Further details soon became public, revealing that the scale and scope of the investigation was enormous: in addition to Bruyneel, US Postal's official doctor Pedro Celaya, the notorious Dr. Michele Ferrari and a number of other figures were being investigated, including Lance Armstrong. The case has not yet reached its conclusion as important questions, such as how did Armstrong - who was stripped of his seven Tour de France victories, did not bother contesting the decision to do so and eventually confessed to using EPO - manage to avoid being caught out when he had been submitted to so many anti-doping tests still need to be answered.

For the time being at least, though, Bruyneel's career in professional cycling is over: in April 2014, he was banned from having any involvement whatsoever in professional cycling for ten years, and extraordinarily long sanction that reflects the serious nature of the fraud.


Manfred Donike
Born in Köttingen, Germany on this day in 1933, Manfred Donike was a highly successful cyclist during the 1950s and 1960s when he rode for a number of professional teams including Bismarck, Express, Altenburger, Feru-Underberg and Torpedo; with the exception of Feru, which was based in Switzerland, he spent his career with German teams. In 1954 he won the National Amateur Madison Championship with Paul Vadder, he would also win the Elite Professional madison at the Nationals three years later with Edi Gieseler and reached the podium in numerous other races, though not at the Tours de France he rode in 1960 and 1961.

Donike's influence on professional cycling has been far greater than his race results suggest, however: after retiring from competition at the end of 1962, he was offered a place at the University of Cologne where he studied chemistry and graduated in 1965 - and then dedicated his life to the fight against doping. In 1972, he perfected the gas chromatography and mass spectrometry method of detecting traces of performance-enhancing drugs and masking agents in samples of riders' urine; it remains the most accurate method available today. Five years later, he became the director of the German Sports University's Institute of Biochemistry.

Donike died of a heart attack aboard an aeroplane traveling between Frankfurt and Johannesburg in 1995, whilst on his way to act as chief of the anti-doping program at a race in Zimbabwe, and the Manfred Donike Institute of Doping Analysis at the German Sports University was named in his honour a short while later. His oldest son, also named Manfred and a successful cyclist in his own right had died of a heart attack two years earlier; his younger son Alexander also enjoyed race success and subsequently worked for the UCI.


Eddie Smart, born in Cardiff on this day in 1946, rode for Wales at the 1966 Commonwealth Games in the kilo, pursuit, scratch, sprint and road races - his best result was 15th, in the kilo. Later, he became co-ordinator for the Welsh federation's track team and assisted annually in the organisation of the Junior Tour of Wales. Smart was killed on the 6th of February in an accident on the M4 motorway; a memorial fund was set up to raise money for the restoration of the Maindy track in Cardiff and a shield commissioned in his honour and named after him is awarded to the most successful Welsh rider each year.

Hennie Top, born in Wekerom on this day in 1956, was Dutch Road Race Champion in 1980, 1981 and 1982 and, in 1985, won Stages 1 and 16 at the Tour de France Féminin. She later became coach to the US National Women's team.

Russell Downing
Russell Downing, born in Rotherham, Great Britain on this day in 1978, won numerous races between 2002 and 2009, then found fame by winning the Tour of Ireland. In 2010, he joined the new Team Sky and became their first victorious British rider when he won Stage 2 at the Critérium International that same year. He went on to win the General Classification at the Tour de la Région Wallonne later that summer and had his contract extended to cover 2011, when he rode his only Grand Tour - the Giro d'Italia, where he finished Stage 18 in eighth place before coming 140th overall. In 2012 he joined Continental team Endura Racing and, so far, has achieved six victories over the season including the prestigious Lincoln International. He also won a silver medal at the National Criterium Championships. Downing is the younger brother of Dean, who is also a successful cyclist; the both rode for NFTO in 2014 - the year that Russell came fourth in the road race at the Commonwealth Games.

Other cyclists born on this day: Kemal Küçükbay (Turkey, 1982); Enrico Poitschke (Germany, 1969); Mike Gambrill (GB, 1935); Janildes Fernandes (Brazil, 1980); Hubert Seiz (Switzerland, 1960); Tulus Widodo Kalimanto (Indonesia, 1965); George Van Meter (USA, 1932, died 2007); Majid Naseri (Iran, 1968); Anatoly Stepanenko (USSR, 1949); Edwin Mena (Ecuador, 1958); Andrea Faccini (Italy, 1966); Cristóbal Pérez (Colombia, 1952); Manu Snellinx (Belgium, 1948); Werner Weckert (Switzerland, 1938); Mouhcine Lahsaini (Morocco, 1985).

Tuesday, 5 August 2014

Daily Cycling Facts 05.08.2014

Gilles Delion
Gilles Delion
Born in Saint-Étienne on this day in 1966, Gilles Delion was seen a one of the greatest hopes of French cycling when he won the Giro di Lombardia, a stage at the Critérium International and the Youth category at the Tour de France in 1990, followed by Stage 7 at the Tour one year later; he tended also to perform well at the Giro di Lombardia and won it in 1990. Mononucleosis had a severe impact on his performance in 1991 and it took him a very long time to recover.

Or so it seemed, in cycling as it was at that time: in fact, Delion recovered at what the majority of doctors would consider to be a normal, natural rate and began racing again in good time, albeit far slower than many other cyclists. What made Delion different was that he loathed cheats, especially dopers, and refused to have anything to do with doping whatsoever. It took him a while to build up his strength after illness for that reason; his opponents could simply increase the dose of EPO and become competitive almost immediately.

In 1996 - right in the midst of what would probably have been his best years had he not have faced rivals he refused to match, he turned his back on cycling forever as an expression of disgust at doping. It was, he said, widespread throughout cycling and all the French teams were involved with it; and as is the case with all the riders who did well in his era without turning to drugs, we must ask ourselves how well he might have done had the playing field been level.

Delion was one of the signatories of "100 pour 2000," a manifesto that called for greater transparency and "humanistic" ethics in sport so that "the human would become the central concern." Among others, from a wide range of sports, to sign the manifesto were Willy Voet, the soigneur at the centre of the Festina Affair, Antoine Vayer who had been the Festina team coach, Christophe Bassons who, like Delion, was an outspoken opponent of doping, and five-time World Champion track cyclist Félicia Ballanger.


May Britt Hartwell, born in Sola, Norway in this day in 1968, won four Junior and thirteen Elite National Track Championship titles between 1984 and 1995.

Santiago Perez
Santiago Pérez, born in Vega de Peridiello, Spain on this day in 1977, won Stages 14, 15 and 21 and came second overall at the 2004 Vuelta a Espana while racing for Phonak. In March the following year, by which time he had switched to Relax-Fuenlabrada, it was announced that he had failed an out of competition anti-doping test in October after the race, testing positive for a homologous blood transfusion (ie, one using somebody else's blood). He was suspended from competition for two years, then returned to the same team (by then renamed Relax-GAM). Pérez  began his professional career with Barbot-Torrie in 2001, in 2011 - when the team was known as Barbot-Efapel - he returned to them, retiring later in the year.

Tim Johnson, born in Middleton, Massachusetts on this day in 1977, is arguably the USA's most successful male cyclo cross rider of all time with six National titles to his name: Junior in 1995, Under-23 in 1999 and 2000, Elite in 2001, 2007 and 2009. He has also won 43 cyclo cross races and numerous road events. In 1999, he came third in the Under-23 Cyclo Cross World Championships and remains the only American male to have stood on the podium at the official UCI Championships (Katie Compton, born in Delaware, has done so three times). Johnson is the husband of Canadian professional cyclist Lyne Bessette.

Other cyclists born on this day: Alejandro González (Argentina, 1972); Giovanni Cazzulani (Italy, 1909, died 1983); Jean Van Den Bosch (Belgium, 1898, died 1985); Saleem Farooqi (India, later Pakistan, 1940); Jean-Pierre Paranteau (France, 1944); Peter Vogel (Switzerland, 1939); Lucien Didier (Luxembourg, 1950).

Monday, 21 July 2014

Daily Cycling Facts 21.07.2014

Stefan Schumacher
Stefan Schumacher
Born in Ostfildern-Ruit on this day in 1981, the German rider Stefan Schumacher has achieved many very good results during his ten years as a professional - but has also been connected to doping numerous times. He began with Telekom in 2002 and remained there for two years but didn't perform well, leading the team to drop him; then he moved on to Lamonta and won a handful of criteriums, a stage at the Bayern Rundfahrt and silver in the National Championships. This earned him a contract with Shimano-Memory Corp for 2005, the year he won Stages 1, 2, 3 and 4 at the Rheinland-Pfalz Rundfahrt. He also fell foul of an anti-doping test for the first time that year, testing positive for the stimulant cathine.

An investigation could find no reason to disagree with Schumacher's explanation that the drug had entered his system via an asthma medicine prescribed to him by his mother, a fully and officially registered physician. She had checked the WADA banned drugs list and the medicine was not on it; he was cleared. All well and good: it appeared justice had been done and a hole in the regulations that might lead to future injustice was closed up. However, two years later he was stopped by police, breathalysed and found to be over the limit for alcohol; he was, therefore, arrested and subjected to a blood test (to confirm the breathalyser result) - and it proved positive for amphetamines. Since amphetamines' physical effects are short-lived, positive out-of-competition tests no longer resulted in an automatic ban; this time the rider claimed he had no idea at all how the drug might have got into his body, once again he escaped punishment and remained with the Gerolsteiner team.

In 2007, Schumacher recorded abnormal blood values (indication of a red blood cell-boosting drug such as EPO or an illegal blood transfusion). In October 2008, news reports emerged claiming that Schumacher had tested positive for CERA, an EPO-variant, at the Tour de France. This time, there was no way out: early in 2009, he was banned from competition for two years. A few months later it was revealed that he had also tested positive for the same drug at the Olympics - he still denies that he is a doper, but dropped his appeal against the ban in April 2010, at which point he had three months until the backdated ban expired.

Schumacher returned to cycling with the Continental-class Miche team and stayed with them until the end of 2011; in 2012 he switched to Christina Watches-Onfone and won the Tour ta'Malta and Serbian Kroz Srbiju, then remained with them in 2013 and won a stage at the Tour of Algeria and another at Romania's Sibiu Tour.


Francis Moreau
Francis Moreau finished in second place at the GP des Nations in 1994. That same year he was 113th at the Tour de France - his father died during Stage 9, but had left a specific order that his son should not abandon.

Hendrikus Johannes Maria Stamsnijder, born in Enter in the Netherlands on this day in 1954 and known as Hennie, is a retired road and cyclo cross rider who won the Superprestige in 1983, 1984, 1987 and 1989 - a record until Sven Nys' fifth victory in 2005 (Nys has since won six more times). Hennie retired from competition in 1989 to care for his sick son Tom; Tom is now a professional rider himself and has ridden five Grand Tours.

Anthony Malarczyk, born in Newport, Wales on this day in 1975, has assembled an impressive palmares in road cycling and mountain biking including third place in the 2000 Manx Trophy, top ten finishes in the National Time Trial Championships and victory in the Masters age group at the National Mountain Bike Championships. In 2003 he was awarded compensation after an incident during a training ride in 2000 when a driver overtook him, dragged him from his bike and assaulted him.

Cyclists born today: Bert de Waele (Belgium, 1975); Suchha Singh (India, 1933); Viktor Logunov (USSR, 1944); Charles Schlee (born Denmark, took US nationality, 1873); Charles Delaporte (France, 1880); Fabrice Colas (France, 1964); Juan Diego Ramírez (Colombia, 1971); Petar Georgiev (Bulgaria, 1929); Oswald Rathmann (Germany, 1891); Boris Dimitrov (Bulgaria, 1912); Ortwin Czarnowski (Germany, 1940); Colin Davidson (Canada, 1969); Kurt Nemetz (Austria, 1926); Georges Wambst (France, 1902, died 1988).

Friday, 11 July 2014

Daily Cycling Facts 11.07.2014

Tour de France 1998
21 stages + prologue, 3,877.1km.
For the first time, the Tour visited Ireland - the prologue was in Dublin, Stage 1 started and ended in Dublin and Stage 2 ran from Enniscorthy to Cork; then the teams sailed to Roscoff in Brittany for the start of the rest of the race. The number of teams was reduced from 22 to 21 in order to also reduce the number of riders, this having been declared the reason for a large number of crashes in 1997.

British rider Chris Boardman, a time trial specialist, won the prologue and started the race in the maillot jaune for the third time in his career. Erik Zabel took it in Stage 2, then lost it to Bo Hamburger the next day; next it went to the Australian Stuart O'Grady who kept it for three stages until 1997 winner Jan Ullrich got it in Stage 7. Ullrich handed it over to Laurent Desbians the following day but won in back in Stage 9 and, a few days later, looked very much as though he was going to keep it.

Then the race reached the Alps and Marco Pantani blew it apart. 48km from the end of Stage 15, he attacked so hard on Galibier that Ullrich was left reeling, completely and utterly unable to respond to the Italian's power. Pantani even stopped on the way to put on a rain jacket, but still took 8'57" from the man who was no longer his rival and finished the stage as overall leader with an advantage of 3'53" over new second place Bobby Julich (and 5'56" on Ullrich). The following day, Ullrich had to win simply to remain in contention and he did a very impressive job of doing so, leading the peloton over the stage's fifth and final climb; but Pantani stayed with him, and the gap between them remained the same. The German made up time with more superb performances, including his excellent ride in the Stage 20 time trial when he took back 2'35"; but what Pantani had done on Galibier was insurmountable and he won by 3'21" overall.

Pantani was one of the finest grimpeurs in cycling history; had it not have been for the problems he would later face, leading to his tragic death on Valentine's Day in 2004, he might even have topped the achievements of Federico Bahamontes and Charly Gaul. It is, therefore, a great shame that his only Tour victory was overshadowed by the scandals that hit the 1998 race. The first the world knew about a massive investigation into doping was when the Festina team's Belgian soigneur Willy Voet was stopped at the French border in a car packed with enough drugs to open a small but well-stocked pharmacy (he tells his story in his book, Breaking the Chain; a must-read despite suffering a little from Voet being a soigneur rather than a writer). Next came police raids on the teams' hotels, with another huge stash of doping products being seized from the TVM team, then a riders' protest in Stage 17 and the nullification of the stage. It didn't end there and, before long, what became known as the Festina Affair mushroomed into the biggest and most damaging scandal to have ever hit cycling and its effects are still being felt to this day.

Top Ten Final General Classification
1 Marco Pantani (ITA) Mercatone Uno 92h 49' 46"
2 Jan Ullrich (GER) Telekom +3' 21"
3 Bobby Julich (USA) Cofidis +4' 08"
4 Christophe Rinero (FRA) Cofidis +9' 16"
5 Michael Boogerd (NED) Rabobank +11' 26"
6 Jean-Cyril Robin (FRA) US Postal Service +14' 57"
7 Roland Meier (SUI) Cofidis +15' 13"
8 Daniele Nardello (ITA) Mapei +16' 07"
9 Giuseppe Di Grande (ITA) Mapei +17' 35"
10 Axel Merckx (BEL) Polti +17' 39"


Gérard Saint, born on this day in 1935, was a French cyclist who won the overall Combativity award and came ninth in the General Classification at the 1959 Tour de France. e became known as a good all-rounder, despite being unusually large at 1.91m tall for a rider who did as well in the mountains as he did, and was popular among fans because he worked as an unskilled farm labourer before becoming a professional cyclist. He died on the 16th of March 1960 after crashing his Citroen ID into a tree. A stadium in Argentan, the town of his birth, is named in his honour.

Ingrid Haringa, born in Velsen, Netherlands on this day in 1964, began her athletic career as a speed skater. She made her debut in international track cycling at the World Championships of 1991, where she won the Sprint and the Points race; then successfully defended the Points title for the subsequent three years.

Other cyclists born on this day: Davide Malacarne (France, 1987); Artem Ovechkin (USSR, 1986); Jacques Michaud (France, 1951); Gérard Saint (France, 1935); Adolf Heeb (Liechtenstein, 1940); Miloslav Kejval (Czechoslovakia, 1973); Julio Sobrera (Uruguay, 1927); Ingrid Haringa (Netherlands, 1964); Edgardo Pagarigan (Philippines, 1958); Roland Lacombe (France, 1938, died 2011); Cossi Houegban (Benin, 1964); Johan Kankkonen (Finland, 1886, died 1955); Franz Lemnitz (Germany, 1890, died 1942); Ion Cosma (Romania, 1937).

Tuesday, 24 June 2014

Daily Cycling Facts 24.06.2014

Henri Pélissier
The Tour de France began on this date three times - 1923, 1962 and 1976. In 1923, the race covered 5,386km in 15 stages, an average stage length of 359km. 139 riders set out from Paris to begin the first stage, but the race was all about one man: Henri Pélissier.

Pélissier entered his first Tour in 1912 and came second overall in 1914 before the First World War brought the Tour to a temporary halt. When the conflict eventually came to a halt he returned to cycling and won Paris-Roubaix (in the same year that it became known as l'Enfer du Nord, the Hell of the North), then entered the Tour. That year, he got into an argument with the other riders and ending up leaving the race in a huff, which can be seen as the beginning of his strange relationship with the Tour - he hated it, and ever afterwards rode to prove a point. In 1920, he started well but was penalised two minutes when officials saw him throwing away a punctured tyre, a violation of the rule stating that every rider had to finish a stage with all the equipment he'd had at the start, and he once again left in an angry mood. It seems that race director Henri Desgrange and Pélissier never did get on, but now their dislike began developing into active hate: Desgrange claimed that the rider had never had the strength to be a Tour winner. "Pélissier," he wrote in L'Auto in 1921, "doesn't know how to suffer. He will never win the Tour." In response, Pélissier stayed away from the race for the next two years and apparently had absolutely no intention of ever going back.

However, at that time he was winning all of the most prestigious races and became a popular hero; so in 1923, following a long run of foreign victories that threatened to reduce French interest in the race, one of Desgrange's employees suggested that he apologised to Pélissier so he'd return and win. Desgrange refused point-blank, and said in his newspaper that the rider was now too old to ride the Tour. Pélissier entered as soon as he read it. There was a new rule that year - while exchanging bikes with team members was still not allowed, riders were permitted to obtain help from team managers in the event of an accident; this was at least partly in response to Fermin Lambot's victory the previous year, which many people felt came about due to the mechanical failures suffered by rivals rather than on account of his own skill. Another new rule brought in time bonuses, with the winner of each stage having two minutes subtracted from his overall time. There was also a new category of rider - whereas in the past there had been sponsored riders and independents, there were now first class sponsored riders; second class sponsored riders who were judged to not be as good as the first class riders but nevertheless had sponsors (not unlike the domestiques of today, though the concept was strictly forbidden at the time as Desgrange wanted ever rider to ride solely for himself and was extremely opposed to team tactics; and tourist-routiers, who were much the same as independents.

Robert Jacquinot
Robert Jacquinot (Peugeot-Wolber), who had won Stages 1 and 3 and worn the maillot jaune for three days the previous year, won the first stage; closely followed over the finish line by a little-known Italian rider named Ottavio Bottecchia who also wanted to win the General Classification - he was on the same team as Pélissier, but in this race they were sworn enemies rather than team mates. Bottecchia then won Stage 2 and became the first Italian to wear the maillot jaune (in 1924, he would become the first Italian to win the General Classification). Pélissier had a puncture 105km from the finish line in Stage 3, which increased his overall time, but with help from brother Francis he made it back and won; thus benefiting from the two-minute time bonus - afterwards, he'd lost only 37". He looked as though he might be about to take over the lead, but then on Stage 4 he had another puncture and Romain Bellenger took yellow; having fixed it, he threw away the tyre and earned himelf another two-minute penalty (his reaction to this hasn't been recorded, but it's probably safe to assume he wasn't pleased).

The Tour reached the Pyrenees in Stage 6. Jean Alavoine won on both days in the mountains, but Bottecchia easily outclassed the rest to get the maillot jaune and then keep it for four days. On Stage 10, in the Alps, Pélissier noticed that Bottecchia had underestimated a climb and was pushing too high a gear. In those days, bikes had two gears - a small sprocket on one side of the rear hub and a larger one on the other; the gear being selected by stopping, removing the wheel, flipping it over and then continuing. He seized his chance and Bottecchia, knowing that he'd lose even more time by changing gear, could not follow. Pélissier may have been five years older than his rival, but experience and clever tactics count - he won the stage and the yellow jersey.

On Stage 11, the Pélissiers avoided tactics altogether and used the simple technique of just being the strongest, fastest men on the course - they rode away from the peloton and only Bellenger could remain within ten minutes of them. Alavoine had an accident and abandoned, which put Bottecchia in second place overall; but by now Pélissier had a 30' advantage and the Italian didn't stand a chance of making it up on the remaining flat stages. Desgrange, for all his faults, was gracious; not least of all because L'Auto's daily sales rose for the first time to more than half a million during the race and topped a million the day after Pélissier won. In it, he glorified his old enemy:
"The mountains seemed to sink lower, sunk by the victorious thrust of his muscle. More than a score of times on the most vicious gradients, hands on the tops of the bars, he looked down at the valley bottoms, like an eagle staring at his prey."
Pélissier, meanwhile, paid a tribute of his own: "Bottecchia will succeed me," he said. Jacquinot also had a good race - despite providing further proof that experience can outdo youth when he used up so much energy that he fell exhausted into a ditch, his determination to get up and keep going combined with his two stage wins (1 and 5) and superb performance on the Tourmalet won him an invite to join Pélissier and Bottecchia on the Automoto team, which he accepted.

Jacques Goddet
In 1962, the Tour consisted of 22 stages and covered 4,274km without a rest day, and for the first time since 1929 it was contested by trade teams, sponsored by commercial firms, rather than by national teams; however, the rules stated that teams must not be "too international" and at least six riders on each (from ten in total) had to be of the same nationality or, if that was not possible, the team had to be split 5/5 between no more than two nationalities. Another notable change was that the mountains were now categorised into Category 1 (the hardest, with most points on offer) down to Category 4 (the easiest for which points were awarded). Later, Hors Categorie ("beyond categorisation") would also be added. Jacques Goddet - who had enjoyed ultimate control over the Tour since Desgrange was forced to give up his directorship due to ill health - found that he now had an equal. The race had grown so vast that L'Equipe, which had been formed by the owners and editors of L'Auto when it was shut down for suspected collaboration with the Nazis after the war, could no longer run it alone; Émilion Amaury, owner of the Parisien Libéré, became a financial backer and installed Félix Lévitan as co-director. In the end, a compromise was reached - Goddet, who had more experience in running sporting events, looked after the organisation of the race itself and Lévitan looked after the finances. This was the very beginning of the Amaury Sport Organisation, which now owns the Tour, the Vuelta a Espana, the Critérium du Dauphiné, Paris–Roubaix, Liège–Bastogne–Liège, La Flèche Wallonne and Paris–Tours as well as numerous other events - representing a wide variety of sports - around the world.

Rik van Looy dons the maillot jaune in
1965
The race started that year in Belgium and Rik van Looy, then World Champion, was determined to win the first stages in his own country. He lost Stage 1 to the German Rudi Altig, which was bad enough, but then he got lost and took a wrong turning on Stage 2a and André Darrigade won instead - which earned van Looy plenty of ribbing because it happened in Herentals, his home town. Fortunately, his Flandria-Faema-Clément team then won the Stage 2b time trial and restored some of his pride. Meanwhile, things weren't going well for Raymond Poulidor and Federico Bahamontes either; they were widely considered to be the only men capable of keeping Jacques Anquetil from a third victory, but they were already eight minutes behind in the General Classification. Anquetil's mood was unknown: recently, his Helyett-Hutchinson team had recruited his old rival Raphael Géminiani as a manager, and Anquetil had not been happy - going so far as to request that the sponsors got someone else to act as manager during the Tour (before long, they became allies and even friends; which is how they managed to work together and use a little bit of cheating to beat Bahamontes in the Alps in 1963).

In Stage 6, a large and powerful breakaway escaped the peloton and began to look as though it might make it; neither Altig, who had taken back the yellow jersey when he won Stage 3, nor Anquetil could get anywhere near it. Fortunately their team mate Ab Geldermans had gone with the break and, as the strongest man in it, they were confident enough that he would be able to take over the lead, so neither of them had to exhaust themselves by chasing. In Stage 8a, the same thing happened; this time Mario Minieri won the stage (Minieri's only victory before this had been a stage in the Tour of Sicily three years earlier, so nobody begrudged him nor showed much concern) and Darrigade got himself back into yellow. Anquetil wasn't especially concerned about that, either, because Stage 8b was an individual time trial; which he won, as expected by himself and most other riders, without problems. Another break got away the next day, this time another Italian named Antonio Bailetti (who had won Stage 4 at the Giro d'Italia earlier in the year) was first over the line and the maillot jaune passed to the Belgian Willy Schroeders, who was coming to the end of his career and kept it for three days.

Tom Simpson.
Behind him is Rudi Altig
(World Championships, 1965)
A large crash on Stage 11 took several riders out of contention, among them van Looy who went to hospital with kidney damage. Then, later in the stage, something remarkable and unexpected happened: Schroeders couldn't ride well in the mountains and the stage was won by Frenchman Robert Cazala, who had also won Stage 6 but he wasn't fast enough to take the overall lead, which went instead to Tom Simpson - the first British rider ever to wear the maillot jaune. It couldn't last, of course, especially as Stage 13 was a mountain time trial and there was absolutely no way that anyone other than Bahamontes was going to win that. Jozef Planckaert was second and took the yellow jersey, but Simpson was encouraged and rode better than ever before.

The night after Stage 13 finished, the German rider Hans Junkermann fell ill. Tour doctor Pierre Dumas was summoned and, in time, the rider felt a little better the next morning. He was on the start line after his team's request that the race be delayed by ten minutes was granted; but after only a few kilometres he dropped off the back of the bunch and, too ill to continue, abandoned. A short while later, another rider did the same, followed by another and then another. In total, twelve men abandoned, all with the same symptoms. Two more stated their intention not to continue after the stage. Dumas was not a cyclist and had never been interested in the sport until he became Tour doctor, which meant that the ways of the old doctors who turned a blind eye to doping meant nothing to him. He was not at all convinced by the explanation given by all fourteen riders and their teams, who claimed food poisoning caused by bad fish, so he started digging. After asking around, he discovered that all of them had been to visit the same Belgian soigneur in the evening after Stage 13, before Junkermanns became ill. He also checked up on the hotels in which the riders had stayed and discovered that not one of them had fish on the menu that night. The riders were not at all pleased by his probing and threatened a protest the next day, but were talked out of it by the journalist Jean Bobet (the brother of three-time Tour winner Louison) who had been a successful rider in his own right and as such was uniquely trusted and respected by them - for now, anyway; he was later involved in the making of a film titled Vive le Tour! which poked some rather barbed fun at them over the incident, and they never trusted him again.

Vive le Tour!

Approaching the Alps, Anquetil was not in the lead; however, he was in a position where he could still make a bid for victory. One thing was worrying him, though - Bahamontes, the best climber in the world. Anquetil could also climb and as the king of the time trial had little doubt that he'd win the final race against the clock in Stage 20, but Bahamontes could time trial too. On other words, the eventual outcome all boiled down to one thing: was he a better time trial rider than Bahamontes was a climber, and was Bahamontes a worse time trial rider than Anquetil was a climber? He couldn't answer that, so he resorted to something else in which he excelled - trickery. On Stage 14 he attacked hard and kept going, forcing his rival to chase. It was a big risk that could very easily have cost them both the race, but it worked - Bahamontes, being a skinny climber, exhausted himself; he lost fifteen minutes that day and was no longer a contender.

A third victory for Maitre Jacques
Stage 18 was expected to be where the action would happen and the winner - or at least, a selection of riders from whom the winner would be selected - would be revealed. Reality turned out to be rather different and for the first four hours the peloton traveled at an average speed of 25kph, then a series of punctures put paid to attempted attacks. Rather than the high-speed battle fans anticipated, it was by all accounts highly boring - so much so that Emile Daems, who was a sprinter rather than a climber, was able to win. On Stage 19 Raymond Poulidor, who had begun the race with one hand in plaster, felt good and was advised by his manager to make the best of it by attacking. He started the stage ten minutes down in the General Classification and he ended it in third place overall, which alerted Anquetil to the fact that he had a new enemy for the future.

Of course, Anquetil was never in real danger - the Stage 20 time trial still had to be ridden. He knew he'd win, but he did so in crushing style; beating Poulidor by 5'01" and Planckaert by 5'19". With only the flat Stage 21 and the largely ceremonial final stage into Paris left, the race was his and nobody even bothered trying to take it from him. Tom Simpson, in sixth place overall, had the best ever finish by a British rider; it would remain so for many years after his death on Mont Ventoux at the Tour five years later, until Robert Millar came fourth in 1984.

In 1976 the Tour again consisted of a prologue and 22 stages, this time with two rest days; three of those stages were split, two of them into two parts and one (Stage 18) into three short road sub-stages, and the total distance was 4,017km. From time to time, the overall winner has been awarded various gifts in addition to money; among them have been works of "art" of questionable aesthetic and monetary value - this year, an apartment near the sea was on offer.

With the exception of 1973, it was the first Tour Eddy Merckx had missed since 1969, and he had won each of them - the official reason he stayed away that year was that he'd been advised to do so by his doctor on account of a saddle sore, but the real reason is that he'd come second in 1975 and knew he wouldn't win it this time around either. He had hoped to return for a glorious and record-breaking sixth victory in 1977, but came sixth. The truth was his best days had gone, and he should have quit while still at the top like he'd always said he would.

Bernard Thévenet
The absence of Merckx left Bernard Thévenet as main favourite, but as has happened so many times in the Tour events took an unexpected turn - right from the prologue in Saint-Jean-de-Monts it was obvious that his form was not that of a potential winner. Joop Zoetemelk, Luis Ocaña and Lucien van Impe replaced him as most popular choices. The Belgian Freddy Maertens won the prologue and the first stage, then the Stage 3 time trial and Stage 7 which earned him the yellow jersey all the way until the end of Stage 8. The General Classification contenders were not concerned, however, because the route took them directly from the Alps to the Pyrenees for a solid week of climbing in the high mountains rather than the two ranges being separated by flat stages, as is usually the case, and they knew that the time they gained there could not easily be made up by the rest of the peloton later in the race.

When they got there, in Stage 9, a large breakaway escaped and started speeding off towards the finish line; but since there were no strong climbers among them and the stage ended on the Alpe d'Huez the favourites still remained unconcerned - which proved wise, because Zoetemelk won and  van Impe, who ended up with an 8" advantage overall, took the maillot jaune. Zoetemelk won Stage 10 too after he was the fastest over the Col d'Izoard, but van Impe and Thévenet gave him a tough time and ended only a second behind in the General Classification. Relatively unknown Spaniard José Viejo was allowed to get away the next day with nobody giving chase due to his lowly position overall, a move that brought about his biggest claim to fame - he crossed the finish line with a lead of 22'50" over the second place Gerben Karstens, which remains the largest stage-winning margin since the Second World War.

On Stage 12, Thévenet's Peugeot team began putting the tactics that they hoped would win them the race into action, sending Raymond Delisle to win the stage and take the yellow jersey. Régis Ovion won Stage 13 but then failed an anti-doping test, so Willy Tierlinck of Gitane-Campagnolo took his place with Wladimiro Panizza (Scic) being upgraded to second place - the rest of the field was left as they were so, 36 years later, third place remains unfilled.

Lucien van Impe
Van Impe had worked out what Peugeot meant to do by Stage 14 and realised that Gitane needed a plan of their own. Fortunately, the team had recently taken on Cyrille Guimard as directeur sportif and Guimard, who had been a very successful cyclist in his own right (and was French cyclo cross champion that same year), was the absolute master strategist. His advice was to attack, but van Impe decided this probably wasn't the best way forward and hung back, telling team assistants that Zoetemelk would soon exhaust himself. The assistants repeated Guimard's advice, telling them that it had since been re-issued as an order; but he told them that the only way he'd consider changing his plan was if Guimard personally told him to do so. This was relayed back to the Guimard, following in the team car, who immediately ordered the car to catch up and pull alongside the rider. When it did so, Guimard leaned out of the window and told him in no uncertain terms that if he didn't do what he was told, the driver would be ordered to run him over. Van Impe attacked, it worked, and Zoetemelk had to chase - without assistance from his team, who seemed unable to respond.

Zoetemelk responded well, getting to within 50" of his rival by the end of the stage, but by that time van Impe had caught up with an early breakaway group containing Luis Ocaña who remembered all too well that during his epic battles with Merckx a few years previously Zoetemelk had always refused to help him. Now he saw his chance for revenge, and he began helping van Impe. Working together, they got faster and faster and Zoetemelk was unable to keep up - he lost three minutes overall. The stage had been ridden so fast that almost half of the riders remaining in the race finished outside the time limit and the organisers had to waive the elimination rule so that the rest of the race wouldn't become boring. Van Impe and Zoetemelk dueled with one another right to the end, gaining a few seconds here and losing them there, but the winner was decided that day. Thévenet abandoned in Stage 19, but the next year he returned with better form and won.


Robbie McEwen
Robbie McEwen, 2010
Born in Brisbane on this day in 1972, Robbie McEwen joined the Australian Institute of Sport in 1992 and was immediately spotted by coach Heiko Salzwedel as having the potential to become a world-class sprinter. Salzwedel knew his stuff - McEwen, in his best years, was the best in the world.

McEwen picked up his first decent results before turning professional, including a stage win at the Tour de l'Avenir in 1994 and the National Championships, at Elite level, accompanied by seven stage wins in total in 1995; which earned him a contract with Rabobank for 1996. Most riders win little, if anything, during their first professional year as they learn to cope with the rigours of competitive cycling at a level beyond what they've previously experienced, but not McEwen - he won two races and seven stages that year, including another at the Tour de l'Avenir. In 1997 he rode his first Tour de France and finished six stages in the top ten, though he was only 117th overall. He was top ten in six more in 1998, but more importantly this time around he was top three in two of them and came fourth in the overall Points competition, which functions as a "race within a race" contested by sprinters. 1999 was not so good with 122nd overall, but he won his first stage - Stage 21, on the Champs Elysées.

In 2000 he went to the Giro d'Italia for the first time but left after Stage 13, then returned to the Tour and finished top ten six times again; this time, however, his other results got him to second place on Points. He stayed away in 2001 (and won 20 races elsewhere), then won Stages 4 and 10 at the Giro before abandoning. At the Tour he won Stages 3 and 20; his four other top ten finishes proving to be enough to win him the Points competition for the first time - the first Australian to do so.

He would enter the Tour again in 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2010; in 2003 he was second in the Points competition, in 2004 he won it for the second time, in 2005 he was third on Points and in 2006 he won three stages and a third Points competition. In 2007 he won the first stage through Kent in the UK, against all odds and expectations as he crashed badly 20km from the finish line; Lotto-Adecco gave a fine display of team work in getting him back to the front and into a position where he could win the sprint by a bike length. Sadly, his Tour ended in the Alps - he missed the cut-off in Stage 8 and was eliminated from the race.

McEwen racing for GreenEDGE, 2012
Sprinters do not tend to get as many years at the top of their game as other types of rider, the time in which the human body can turn out as many watts as they do being limited to, in most cases, only a few years. For McEwen, the turning point was 2007: when he returned in 2008 he was noticeably not as fast as he had been and less able to deal with the climbs than before - he was top ten four times, but his results elsewhere put him 122nd overall and eighth on Points. 2010, his twelfth and final Tour, was better with seven top ten finishes getting him to fifth overall in the Points competition. In five of those stages, he was fourth - sure evidence that, while he was still one of the best in the world, a new generation of younger men had taken over and Mark Cavendish was their king. He had the sense to bow out of cycling's greatest and toughest race then.

McEwen never went back to the Tour, but he wasn't quite done yet. He continued competing through 2011 and got more good results, including an overall victory at the Circuit Franco-Belge after winning two of its four stages, then in 2012 he accepted a contract with the new Australian Pro Team GreenEDGE, though with their understanding that he was going to retire at some point that season. He called it a day after the Tour of California, during which the climbs had hurt him more than ever before; after being awarded the Most Courageous jersey he told fans: "This was a good race to pick as my last because I suffered so much this week I won't miss it."


Marla Streb
Mountain biker Marla Streb was born in Baltimore on this day in 1965 and came to cycling late aged 28, by which time she'd earned a Masters' degree in molecular biology. It all began with a cycling holiday in Europe, accompanied by her friend Mark Fitzgerald; whom she would later marry. Discovering that she was fast, she made up her mind to starting racing when they returned home. Primarily known as a downhill racer (she's been National Champion twice), Streb has also won numerous cross-country events.


Mary McConneloug, born in San Francisco on this day in 1971, was US National Cross Country MTB Champion in 2003, 2005, 2007 and 2008.

Sam Harrison, born in Risca, Wales on this day in 1992, had little interest in cycling until he heard some friends talking about the velodrome in Newport. They told him racing there was fun and he decided to join them on their next visit - and that was the start of a career that has led to six National titles, one World title and a BBC Young Sports Personality of the Year award.

Other cyclists born on this day: José Pauwels (Belgium, 1928); Ruben Forsblom (Finland, 1931); Eigil Sørensen (Denmark, 1948); Moritz Milatz (Germany, 1982); Oscar Schwab (USA, 1882, died 1955); Gabriel Curuchet (Argentina, 1963).

Saturday, 21 June 2014

Daily Cycling Facts 21.06.2014

The Tour de France has started on this date twice, first in 1925 and then again in 1966. The 1925 edition consisted of 18 stages, at that time the most ever, but the overall distance was increased by only 5km to 5,430km - still much longer than today's Tours, but a significant decrease in the average stage length which would lead to a much longer race and a reduction to 17 stages the following year. It also marked the return of sponsored trade teams with respectable budgets for the first time since the First World War. Rules were changed, too - there was no longer a time bonus for the winner of each stage and any rider deemed to have said or done anything likely to damage the Tour's image was to be banned the following the year, this having been inspired by comments Henri Pélissier made to the journalist Albert Londres after a row with organisers. 130 men started, split between two groups - 39 rode with trade teams, the rest were independent touriste-routiers who paid their own way during the race (some slept in hotels and ate in restaurants, others slept in hedges and ate anything they could catch, beg or steal). There was a great deal of variation in team size with the largest, J.B. Louvet-Pouchois, consisting of eight riders including Eugène Christophe, Albert Dejonghe and Hector Heusghem; the J.Alavoine-Dunlop "team" began the race with just one rider, Jean Alavoine.

Bottecchia was, shall we say, not the finest example of
Italian manhood to have ever swung a leg over a bike.
However, the maillot jaune has magical powers over the
female tifosi and they swarmed across the border to throw
roses in his path - extra police had to be drafted in to Evian
to keep them under control. Frantz too received massive
support after three special trains were organised to bring his
fans from Luxembourg to the race
Ottavio Bottecchia had won with comparative ease in 1924, despite being knocked off his bike by a dog, once Pélissier stormed off home in the wake of an argument involving jerseys - only Nicolas Frantz presented any sort of challenge, but too late in the race to deprive him of victory. He was a favourite this year too but he knew that he was in for a tougher race because of Adelin Benoit, a 25-year-old Belgian who had won the National Championship for independent riders two years previously and had been adding good results ever since. Pélissier was back too, but he was 36 and would abandon with knee problems, never to return to the Tour. The Italian got off to a good start by winning the first stage and had the maillot jaune for two days, but then Benoit's second place 5'38" behind Louis Mottiat on Stage 3 allowed him to take it away. Frantz won the next two stages but was unable to take the lead, then Benoit had a puncture in Stage 6, Automoto-Hutchinson attacked and got Bottecchia to the line first. He won Stage 7 too, briefly winning the jersey back, but when the race reached the mountains Benoit won Stage 8 and once again took the lead. However, he had been lucky; mountains were not his speciality and when Frantz won Stage 9 the jersey was returned to Bottecchia who, with the assistance of Lucien Buysse, kept it.

Buysse was rewarded by being allowed to win Stages 11 and 12 (he'd also been promised half the money Bottecchia earned in the race), though in the latter both men missed a control post (riders were required to sign a log, proving they'd stuck to the parcours and not taken any shortcuts) and were penalised ten minutes. Nevertheless, at the end of the stage Bottecchia had a 27' advantage over nearest rival Frantz, and when the Luxembourger lost a further 37' due to a puncture on Stage 14 his race was over. Bottecchia won in 219h10'18", Buysse was 54'20" slower for second place. Bottechia also won the meilleur grimpeur, an award given by L'Auto to the rider judged to have performed best in the mountains before the introduction of the King of the Mountains competition in 1933, but it would be his last Tour victory - he returned in 1926 but abandoned in the Pyrenees; then in 1927 he was found lying unconscious by the side of a road not far from his home in Peonis and died eleven days later.

In 1966, the Tour covered 4,303km over 22 stages - much longer than modern editions, but considerably shorter than 1925 (in 1925, the average stage length was 301.6km, in 1966 195.6km. Many people make the mistake of believing that this is an indication that the riders in the early 20th Century were a much tougher breed than post-Second World War, but they forget that average speeds - 24.775kph in 1925, 36.76kph in 1966 - have risen dramatically. Also, in 1925 the riders had a rest day almost every other day; in 1966 they had only two).

Poulidor, the man who saw the future
The riders, well-used to bad weather, harsh mountains and the occasional corrupt official and/or belligerent fan, faced a new ordeal - for the very first time in 1966, they had to submit to drugs tests. Rumours spread before the first test was carried out and, unhappy about it, all the riders except for one made themselves scarce after Stage 8 when the testers were supposed to arrive. The one rider who remained was Raymond Poulidor, who despite connections to Bernard Sainz (the notorious "Dr. Mabuse") never tested positive during his career. Perhaps a little wiser than most, Poulidor knew that this was the future of cycling the future and that even if he escaped the testers' clutches this time they'd be back, many times. As a result, he holds the honour of becoming their first subject, and his memory of the occasion reveals how amateurish the procedure was at the time:
"I was strolling down the corridor in ordinary clothes when I came across two guys in plain clothes. They showed me their cards and said to me ...
"You're riding the Tour?" - "I said: 'Yes'."
"You're a rider?" - "I said: 'Yes'."
"OK, come with us."
I swear it happened just like that. They made me go into a room, I pissed into some bottles and they closed them without sealing them. Then they took my name, my date of birth, without asking for anything to check my identity. I could have been anyone, and they could have done anything they liked with the bottles."
The testers managed to catch a few other riders, some of whom refused to provide samples; next day, riders staged a protest by getting off their bikes and shouting abuse - mostly general abuse directed at anybody who would listen, but much of it directed at Tour doctor Pierre Dumas (whom, they claimed, should be tested for wine and aspirin in case he was using those drugs to cope with the demands of his job) and some directly targeting Poulidor for submitting himself to the test. "After that, they did me no favours in the peloton," he later remembered.

Rudi Altig won the first stage in much the same way that he won so many of his track victories,  getting his head down and hammering away at the pedals until it was time to stop and get back off the bike again, and the small lead he gained proved unexpectedly sufficient to keep him in the maillot jaune for ten stages; at which point the race reached the Pyrenees. Meanwhile, Jacques Anquetil was steadily improving his time, hotly pursued as ever by Poulidor who was even more furious than usual with his great rival in the wake of a Stage 2 crash, which Anquetil - who looked like a gentleman, but wasn't one - used as an opportunity to attack. Poulidor made it back to the main group but was understandably not at all happy, Anquetil called him a cry-baby and said he needed to "learn how to stay upright on his bike."

Jan Janssen, Lucien Aimar and a small group they'd recruited to help took a serious bite out of Anquetil's time during Stage 10 from Bayonne to Pau, while Tommaso de Pratook the stage win and earned his one and only day in yellow. Guido Marcello Mugnaini, who had come fourth overall the year before, won the next day but without taking the leadership, allowing Jean-Claude Lebaube his own single day in yellow; then Altig took Stage 12. By this time, the small lead he had in the first few stages had long been eroded away and so as the race left the mountains for two stages and a time trial on the flatlands, the lead passed into the hands of his countryman Karl-Heinz Kunde who kept it for five stages.

In Stage 16, Julio Jiménez (who had won the King of the Mountains at the Tour and Vuelta in 1965) got away from the peloton, forcing Janssen, Poulidor, Anquetil, Aimar and others to chase. They couldn't catch him and he won the stage but without enough time to get the maillot jaune, which went to Janssen. The next day, a group of riders tried the same trick and managed to build up a sizable lead on the two early descents so that Janssen, Anquetil and Aimar once again had to expend energy by chasing them down. Then Poulidor escaped too, and Anquetil - used to always beating the Eternal Second but weakened by bronchitis brought on by bad weather in earlier stages - was having none of that, so he chased. Poulidor was never as good as his rival he retained his form for far longer, despite only being two years younger; Anquetil exhausted himself and abandoned the next day, never to return to the Tour. The break was caught but Aimer discovered he had the strength to keep going, taking Janssen by surprise and finishing with the lead - Janssen tried to get it back in Stage 18, but Aimar and matched him move-for-move; he won back some time, but to no avail and Aimar won the race (and some years later, he became an excellent example of why a retired professional cyclist has to stop eating like a pre-retirement professional cyclist). Janssen's time was good enough for second place, however, an he became the first Dutch rider to achieve a podium place in the General Classification. Two years later, he won outright.


Jacques Goddet
The memorial to Jacques Goddet, high up on
Tourmalet
Jacques Goddet, the second director of the Tour de France after a prostate operation and illness left Henri Desgrange too sick to continue (he would die four years after Goddet took over), died on this day in 2000. Goddet is credited with modernising and developing the race from its quaint beginnings to the world's largest sporting event (one of his first changes was to permit the use of derailleur gears which became standard on all bikes two years later after the Tour was won for the first time on a bike fitted with one), but even a brief history of the man cannot be complete without a look at his wartime activities. While he permitted the L'Auto presses to be used to produce pro-Resistance materal and pamphlets, his anti-Nazi credentials come under serious doubt: firstly, he seems to have personally supported Philippe Pétain who would become Chief Marshall of Vichy France (and who was sentenced to death after the war for treason and collaborating with the Nazis, though the sentence was reduced to life imprisonment on account of age) and produced some 1,200 articles in support of him.

Of course, Goddet may have been effectively signing his own death warrant had he have refused permission for this to happen; it has also been argued that a controlling interest in L'Auto's shares was owned by a consortium of German businessmen, in which case Goddet would have had very little say in the paper's editorial direction and might not in fact have personally supported Pétain at all. Far more damning meanwhile is the fact that before the war he had hired out his Vélodrome d'Hiver to be used for fascist meetings and then, when France was occupied, permitted it to be used by the Nazis for the temporary imprisonment of 13,000 French Jews who remained there in horrible conditions before being transferred to concentration camps - only 300 of them survived the war. It is possible that his hand was forced by those German businessmen, of course. It's also possible that he was not a Nazi sympathiser but was an antisemite; the two do not necessarily go hand-in-hand (there have been many left-wing antisemites in history and it works both ways - Oskar Schindler saved 1,200 Jewish lives, but he was a supporter of other Nazi policies and joined the party of his own free will).  After the war, L'Auto (which, incidentally, had been established as an anti-Drefus paper after the Army captain - who was Jewish - had been falsely convicted of trumped-up charges fueled at least partly by the rampant antisemitism of the times) was forced to close for continuing to publish during the Occupation, as were many other newspapers and magazines. Goddet responded by creating L'Equipe, the paper that is still printed today and is one of the first points of call for Tour-related news, but due to his association with L'Auto could not be listed as being a part of it even though he had an office at the paper's headquarters until the final years of his life.


Mark Bell
Mark Bell, 1960-2009
Mark Bell was born in Birkenhead, near Liverpool, on this day in 1960. His talent was plain to see from a very young age - when he was just ten years old he finished a 10 mile (16.1km) cyclo cross race in 33 minutes, wearing his football strip and school shoes. By 14, he was representing the North of England in the English Schools Cycling Association three-day event, competing against an international field.

Bell's amateur career was nothing short of spectacular, with some 200 victories. In 1979, he joined the Athletic Club de Boulogne-Billancourt and rode alongside Robert Millar, Scotland's greatest ever cyclist. He began to show talent on the road at about the same time and in 1981 became National Road Champion and won two stages in the Milk Race, as the Tour of Britain was then known. He became the first foreign winner in the history of the Étoile de Sud in 1983 and then a year later rode in the Olympics - that race, however, proved to be a disaster. He had been told that the course was flat, whereas in reality in included one very challenging hill and for all his talents, Bell was most definitely not a climber. He abandoned the race.

Having turned professional in 1985 to join the Falcon team, he came third in the National Road Race competition. He joined Team Raleigh the following season and won it; his superb sprinting ability showing itself when, as race official and future British Cycling president Brian Cookson remembers, "he simply rode away from some of the greatest names in the sport." He also came second in the Tom Simpson memorial that year, then joined Emmelle-MBK before retiring at the end of the 1988 season.

Life after retirement was not at all kind to Bell. He suffered from poor health and became an alcoholic, which made some of his medical issues worse. In 2008, he said that he "was on top of" his alcoholism, meaning that he had made an effort to bring it under control and, at the time, was managing to do so, like all alcoholics never knowing whether this the end of the war or just another battle. He also revealed that he was suffering from damage caused by deep vein thrombosis in his left leg and required a shoulder joint replacement due to osteomyelitis, an infection of the bone marrow. Sadly, his body gave out before he did and he died on the 30th of January 2009, aged 48.

Toni Merkens
Toni Merkens, born in Cologne in this day in 1912, began his career in cycling as an apprentice to Fritz Köthke who, at that time, was one of Germany's top frame builders. By his early 20s he had begun to make an impact on racing, especially on the track, and became National Amateur Sprint Champion in 1933, 1934 and 1935. He won a gold medal for the 1,000m Sprint at the 1936 Berlin Olympics in extremely dubious circumstances - he had clearly been seen to grab the Dutch rider Arie van Vliet's clothing, pulling him back and forcing him into second place; but the German judges ignored it. It was only when the Dutch team launched an official complaint' leaving them no choice but to act, that they penalised him 100 Reichmarks.

Before the war, Merkens was a popular rider in England.
He's seen here at Herne Hill in 1936, in third place behind
Dennis Horne (1) and Jack Sibbit (2). The identity of the
German in fourth place is unnown
As soon as the Games came to an end, Merkens turned professional; then won the Track Stayers National Championship in 1940 and the Sprint title a year later. The Nazis had originally kept German athletes out of the war, especially successful blond ones such as Merkens who were valuable as the posterboys of master race propaganda, but by 1942 they were facing a shortage of new recruits; Merkens was drafter into the Army and sent to fight the Russians on the Eastern Front. On the 20th of June 1944 - two years after his draft, one day before his 32nd birthday - he was struck by a piece of shrapnel from an exploding shell and died shortly afterwards.

Merkens' own political beliefs seem to be unknown and we can no more condemn him for being a Nazi than we can say for certain that he wasn't one - his apparent willingness to assist in the great Fascist propaganda exercise that the 1936 Games became suggests he may have had leanings that way, but at that time the German public had yet to discover just how evil the regime was. Secondly, many cyclists with no political leanings at all opposed the Nazis because they banned the six-day races that provided much of a track rider's income; and we should also ask why someone with such obvious symbolic value as Merkens was sent to the dreaded Eastern Front which saw some of the worst fighting and conditions of the war. Nevertheless, we can be glad that he was one of only a very few cyclists to have competed in a jersey emblazoned with a swastika.

Hein Verbruggen
Hein Verbruggen, looking - as he quite often
did - rather like a schoolboy who can't quite
believe he's got away with his latest mischief
Born in Helmond, Netherlands on this day in 1941, Hein Verbruggen's rise through the cycling world was a sign of the times - never an athlete himself, his career had been in business management before an interest in cycling led to the presidency of the Dutch Federation, then to the UCI.

In 2008, investigative journalists from the BBC uncovered documents apparently showing that under Verbruggen, the UCI had received payments equal to approximately US$5 million from Japanese race organisers, which the broadcaster claimed was a bribe or reward for backing the inclusion of keirin in the Olympics. Verbruggen continues to deny the claims, and the UCI ignored the BBC's requests for an explanation. In 2010, Floyd Landis - then undergoing a doping investigation - claimed that Verbruggen had  accepted a bribe worth US$100,000 from Lance Armstrong to submerge a failed anti-doping test said to have occurred in 2002, also saying that there would be no documentary evidence of the payment. However, the UCI - now under Verbruggen's successor Pat McQuaid - was able to produce documents showing that they had in fact received two payments, one to the tune of US$25,000 from Armstrong personally which was used to develop new anti-doping controls for junior races and one of US$100,000 paid by Armstrong's management company that had been used to purchase a Sysmex blood testing machine. That the UCI was so open in admitting that it had in fact received the payment Landis alleged, provided evidence proving it had and then also proved a second payment that had not been previously been mentioned was seen by some to be indication that nothing dishonest had taken place, even though McQuaid is on record as stating that in his opinion Verbruggen's decision to accept the payments was a mistake, but others wondered if it might have been a risky double-bluff. Verbruggen, the mysterious payments and the UCI in general are once again under the spotlight now that the lid has been lifted on the increasingly murky goings-on that took place during the era of Lance - with McQuaid's tenure drawing to a close and candidates for the presidency promising a new era of openness, we may finally be about to find out the full details of what really took place.


Simon Richardson, born in Bristol on this day in 1983, came second at the National Under-23 Cyclo Cross Championship in 2004 and won the 2005 National Cross-Country Mountain Bike Championship before switching to road racing. In 2009 he won Rás Tailteann and in 2012 he was fourth at the tough Lincoln International GP.

José Maria Yermo, who would become famous simply as Yermo, was born in Guecho, Spain on this day in 1903. He originally competed in athletics and set new National records for the long jump and triple jump, then turned to soccer and played for the national team five times. After that, he became a cyclist and represented Spain at the World Championships and the 1928 Olympics.

John Kenneth Middleton, born in Coventry on this day in 1906, competed in the same Olympics as Yermo and won a silver medal as part of the second-placed team in the Team Road Race. He died on the 24th of January, 1991.

Other cyclists born on this day: Per Christiansson (Sweden, 1961); Rolf Morgan Hansen (Norway, 1961); Yermo (Spain, 1903, died 1960); Valdemar Nielsen (Denmark, 1879, died 1954); Zbigniew Woźnicki (Poland, 1958, died 2008); Tadashi Ogasawara (Japan, 1955); Bruno Götze (Germany, 1882, died 1913); Ilmari Voudelin (Finland, 1896, died 1946); John Middleton (Great Britain, 1906, died 1991); Luigi Consonni (Italy, 1905, died 1992); Fernand Gandaho (Benin, 1968); Juan Sánchez (Spain, 1938).