Saturday 16 February 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 16.02.2013

Brent Bookwalter
(image credit: Fanny Schertzer CC BY-SA 3.0)
Brent Bookwalter, born on this day in 1984 in Albuquerque, USA, became National Time Trial Champion in 2006 and enjoyed widespread popularity at home. He would later come to the attention of the European cycling scene with 2nd and 3rd place stage finishes at the Vuelta Ciclista a Cartagena in 2007. He concentrated on American races for the next two years before returning to Europe for a 2nd place finish in the 2010 Giro d'Italia individual time trial, finishing both the Giro and the Tour de France that year. In 2011, he came 2nd in Stage 2 of the Tour, an indication that he was entering his best years; in 2012 he took a bronze in the National Individual Time Trial Championships, two third place stage finishes at the Tour of Utah and was 78th overall at the Vuelta a Espana.

Anna Szafraniec, born in Myślenice, Poland on this day in 1981, won a silver medal at the 2002 World Championships, became National Road Race Champion in 2011 and was third in the National Cross Country MTB Championships of 2012.

Vincenzo Rossello, born in Stella San Bernando, Italy, on this day in 1923, won Stage 2 at the 1948 Tour de France and Stage 18 in 1949. He won Stage 15 at the 1948 Giro d'Italia and Stage 14 in 1949, and would later came 9th overall in the 1951 and 10th in 1953 and came 3rd in the overall Mountains classification in 1954.

Noël Foré was born in Adegem, Belgium, on the 23rd of December in 1932. He won Paris-Roubaix in 1959, a year his victory in the Tour of Belgium and two years after he won the Dwars door Vlaanderen. Four years later, he added Kuurne–Brussels–Kuurne and the Ronde van Vlaanderen to  palmares that totalled 53 professional wins. He died on this day in 1994.

On this day in 2011, Lance Armstrong announced that he was retiring from competitive cycling "for good." A little over a year later, his record seven Tour de France wins were disqualified amid a huge doping scandal.

Other cyclists born on this day: Don Campbell (Cayman Islands, 1975); Sergio Bianchetto (Italy, 1939); André Aumerle (France, 1907, died 1990); Ulrich Schillinger (Germany, 1945); Torvald Högström (Finland, 1926); Herbert Bouffler (Great Britain, 1881); Peter Muckenhuber (Austria, 1955); Albert De Bunné (Belgium, 1896); Robert Bintz (Luxembourg, 1930); Rupert Kratzer (Germany, 1945); Michal Baldrián (Czechoslovakia, 1970); Werner Stauff (Germany, 1960); Carl Olsen (Norway, 1893, died 1968); Hiroshi Daimon (Japan, 1962); Kazuyuki Manabe (Japan, 1970).

Friday 15 February 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 15.02.2013

Antonin Magne
Antonin Magne, 1904-1983
Antonin Magne, a French cyclist who would win the Tour de France in 1931 and 1934 and become World Champion in 1936, was born in Ytrac on this day in 1904. While riding towards his second Tour win, he would become the winner of the first individual time trial to feature in the race, the 90km route of Stage 21b from La Roche-sur-Yon to Nantes.

Magne was known as an exceptionally shy character, termed "uninterviewable" by the journalist Jean Bobet (who would himself ride the Tour in 1955 and 1957 - and, in case you're wondering, was Louison's younger brother) due to his habit of clamming up whenever a journalist got anywhere near him. However, he could apparently be forceful, as is suggested both by his impressive talent on the bike and by the incident for which he is most remembered and which left the unfortunate René Vietto in tears at the side of the road at the Tour in 1934: Magne had dominated the race from the first stage, wearing the yellow jersey ever since (and would keep it throughout the race), despite disaster struck on the way to the spa town of Aix-les-Thermes during Stage 15 - he rode into a pothole and splintered his wooden front wheel rim. So that he could continue, he took team mate Vietto's wheel, leaving him at the roadside. He discovered a short way further along the road that his frame was damaged too, so he waited for the next rider from his team - Georges Speicher - and took his bike. Vietto, meanwhile, was still back where he'd been left waiting for a team car to give him another a wheel and had become so upset that his chances of winning the stage - and without a miracle, a good finish in the overall General Classification - that he'd started crying. A photographer took a picture which, when published, pulled on the heart strings of the French public who nicknamed him King René, proclaimed him to be the moral winner of the Tour and adored him forever more for his willingness to sacrifice himself. It's a clever bit of propaganda, too; artfully clipped so Vietto looks as though he's all alone in the world, despite the fact that quite a sizable crowd had gathered to look after him. He would make a fortune from the fees he could charge to appear at criteriums in the future.

The next day, Magne broke his back wheel on the fast descent of the Portet d'Aspet. Vietto, trying to make up time, was out in front and didn't see it happen so had carried on. At the bottom of the mountain, an official beckoned him over and relayed the news, informing him that his leader was stuck without support. So Vietto turned around and rode back up to find him, and handed over his bike. Italian Guiseppe Martano, Magne's most dangerous rival, would break his own bike in Stage 17, leaving the Frenchman to finish the Tour without challenge.

So, was Vietto the hero without whom Magne would not have enjoyed his second win? Perhaps, but he rather disgraced himself afterwards with vitriolic attacks on his team leader, during which among other insults he accused him of being a poor rider, and continued to bear his animosity for the remainder of his life. Magne, on the other hand, was grateful for what Vietto had done and thanked him personally. (More on Vietto in two days' time, the anniversary of his birth.)

Óscar Freire
Óscar Freire
(image credit: Petit Brun CC BY-SA 2.0
Óscar Freire, born in Torrelavega, Spain, on this day in 1976, became one of the cycling world's most admired sprint specialists and won three editions of Milan-San Remo - one of only seven riders to have done so since the race began in 1907. He may have achieved even more were it not for the injuries, illnesses and accidents that have punctuated his career with many races missed due to recurring spinal problems. He and Julien Dean were shot with an air rifle during Stage 13 of the 2009 Tour de France - a pellet hit him in the thigh and he finished the stage in 117th place. Dean was hit in the index finger while a third shot missed the peloton (perhaps coincidentally, Nicholas Roche had been involved in a similar incident a few days before and reported that he had been shot in the back of the leg. However, doctors who examined the bruise left by the impact believed he'd been hit by a piece of an exploding ice-maker machine).

In addition to the above, Freire suffered even more than most Tour riders with a series of saddle sores. He also developed respiratory problems, undergoing surgery on his nose and sinuses which kept him away from the Tour in 2011 and caused him to announce that he would retire at the close of the season unless he won the World Championships (which has been his first major win back in 1999; he spent his prize money on having an elevator fitted in his grandmother's apartment, ensuring status as one of the nice guys of the peloton and massive popularity among fans - and with his grandmother, one assumes). He didn't win, but apparently decided that his ninth place was sufficient indication that he still had a future on the bike and, when Rabobank declined to extend his contract, started looking for a new team. Katusha took him in after he chose them over Lotto-Belisol, Omega Pharma-Quickstep and several other teams that showed interest and, right from the start of the season, he showed signs of having fully recovered from the health problems of the previous year, beginning with a stage victory at the Tour Down Under. After winning another stage at the Vuelta a Andalucia, he embarked on a highly successful Classics campaign that saw him take seventh place at Milan-San Remo, second at the E3 Harelbeke, fourth at Gent-Wevelgem, twelfth in the Ronde van Vlaanderen, second in the Brabantse Pijl (where he led a group of chasing riders battling for second place after Thomas Voeckler's solo break had already won) and fourth in the Amstel Gold Race. He then finished in the top ten on two stages at the Tour de Suisse and was seventh on Stage 5 at the Tour de France before repeating his earlier claim that if he didn't win the World Championships he would retire.

This time he was tenth; According to a report in Spanish newspaper El Pais, he was approached after the race by Euskaltel Euskadi with a deal that would have seen him become a member of the team without having to actually race or train so that the team could use the UCI points he'd have brought with him to help secure a World Tour licence, a claim denied by Euskaltel manager González de Galdeano who insisted that although his team had shown interest in taking Freire on, it had done so some months prior to the Worlds and had then raised the possibility of him joining as a coach rather than a rider when he made it clear to them that he was going to retire. At the time of writing it seems that his words carried more weight than previously and it appears he has retired for good.


Max Sciandri, born in Derby on this day in 1967, is one of Britain's most successful cyclists, having won the Giro della Romagna twice (1989, 1990), the Grand Prix Pino Cerami (1990), the Tour of Britain (1992), Giro del Veneto, Grand Prix de Fourmies, Coppa Placci and Tour of Luxembourg (all 1993), Wincanton Classic and Grand Prix de Fourmies (1995), the Giro del Lazio (2000), two stages at the Giro d'Italia (Stage 3 in 1992 and Stage 16 in 1994) and Stage 11 at the 1999 Tour de France. In retirement, he became a directeur sportif of the BMC ProTeam.

On this day in 2011, Tour winner Alberto Contador, widely considered the best cyclist of his generation, was cleared of doping by the Spanish Cycling Federation. His case would later be taken to the Court for Arbitration in Sport by the UCI and, following a lengthy investigation, he was handed a back-dated two year ban and stripped of numerous victories, including Grand Tours.

Other cyclists born on this day: Jens Fiedler (Germany, 1970); Volodymir Gustov (Ukraine, 1977); Marc de Maar (Netherlands, 1984); Zanele Tshoko (South Africa, 1993 - keep an eye on this one, folks, she's going to be good); Ken Frost (Denmark, 1967); Willi Knabenhans (Switzerland, 1906); Adrie Voorting (Netherlands, 1931, died 1961); Jan Pijnenburg (Netherlands, 1906, died 1979); Sigfrid Lundberg (Sweden, 1895, died 1979); Arthur Essing (Germany, 1905, died 1970); Bernard Leene (Netherlands, 1903, died 1988. Fact: Leene was a very prominent member of the Dutch Resistance during the Nazi Occupation); Oksana Kashchyshyna (Ukraine, 1978); Michael Steen Nielsen (Denmark, 1975); Serhiy Kravtsov (USSR, 1948); Blayne Wikner (South Africa, 1972).

Thursday 14 February 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 14.02.2013

Cadel Evans
Born in this day in 1977 in Katherine, a town and important Aboriginal community in the Northern Territory of Australia, Cadel Evans spent much of his childhood living in Armidale, New South Wales where he developed a love for skateboarding and which, he says, helped to shape him as an endurance athlete due to its altitude of almost 1000m. Towards the end of his teenage years, he began mountain biking and immediately showed potential, winning silver medals at the 1997 World Championships.

Cadel Evans
(image credit: Ludovic Péron CC BY-SA 3.0)
He had also displayed notable ability on the road, including winning a bronze medal in 1995 Junior Time Trial World Championship - the beginning of a process that would lead him to manager Tony Rominger and the now-notorious Michele Ferrari and which, by 2000, saw him switch allegiances and become a full-time road racer. He turned professional with Saeco in 2001 (having been a professional with the Volvo-Cannondale MTB squad) and won his first major victor, the Tour of Austria, that same year. As might be expected of a rider as promising as him, switched teams regularly as he rose up through the ranks, riding for Mapei the next year. At Mapei, he came under the guidance of the legendary trainer Aldo Sassi; the man who helped him transform from a world-class mountain biker to a world-class road cyclist. He entered his first Grand Tour, the Giro d'Italia, with them and finished 14th overall - not bad at all in a race that most debutantes don't finish. Earlier in 2001, he'd won the King of the Mountains at the Tour Down Under, as he would again the next year.

2004 brought another Tour of Austria win, then in 2005 he entered his first Tour de France and came a remarkable 8th overall. That was improved to 4th in 2006, along with a third Tour Down Under mountains award and the Tour de Romandie, then honed down to 2nd in 2007. This was the point at which it became apparent that, somewhere in the near future, there was a Tour win with his name on it. It wan't to be 2008 or 2009, though the Points Classification at the Critérium du Dauphiné was a effective way to prove he could sprint as well as climb, and it couldn't be 2010 when Alberto Contador and Andy Schleck decided between themselves who was going to win when they were away together up in the mountains (the decision being made, in Contador's favour, with a little help from a slipped chain in Stage 15).

Then 2011 came round. Contador, whilst able to show that he's still the world's best climber, had been left reeling by an ongoing doping investigation and Bradley Wiggins, a favourite due to his earlier win at the Critérium du Dauphiné (in which Evans came 2nd) was forced out after a crash left him with a broken collar bone. That left Schleck - a rider far, far better at climbing, but nervous on a difficult descent as we saw on the slippery route into Gap from the Col de Manse when the Australian took a full minute from his rival. Schleck clawed back time with an incredible solo break on the Galibier a few days later, a ride hailed as one of the finest stage wins in years, and one perhaps intended to win him the race. But, with a superhuman effort, Evans managed to keep the advantage lower that Schleck would have liked. A win the next day on Alpe d'Huez might have sealed things in Schleck's favour, but it wasn't to be - the mountain, for some reason, seems to be one of the few that doesn't suit him. By the Stage 20 time trial, Schleck's advantage was down to 57" and while he's made heroic efforts to improve in the discipline, he'd have needed a miracle to keep it from Evans.

At the Tour of Germany, 2005
(image credit: Juergen Wohlfahrt CC BY-SA 2.5)
The rest, of course, is history. Evans rode even better than expected, finishing the stage a mere 7" behind winner Tony Martin and gave himself a 1'34" lead. Schleck would need to be content with another 2nd place overall, his disadvantage too great for the race to be won in the final stage into Paris even had he have been the sort of rider sufficiently disrespectful of tradition to attempt to take back the race. Evans had become the first Australian to win the Tour, finally completing a course of events set in motion by Don Kirkham and Ivor Munro right back in 1914. Aged 34, he was also one of the five oldest ever winners

In 2012, Evans began the Tour among the favourites - partly because of his 2011 victory, but also because an unusually flat parcours made the eventual outcome heavily reliant on the time trials. However, his poor  performances in two of the mountain stages left him unable to challenge and Bradley Wiggins, who had taken the yellow jersey in Stage 7, remained leader for the rest of the race, and he finished in seventh place overall. This would not be the season's only disappointment - after getting off to a promising start when he won a stage and the General Classification at the Critérium International and the Points competition at the Critérium du Dauphiné (in addition to third in the General Classification), he suffered a noticeable loss of form after the Tour and managed only 80th place in the Road Race at the Olympics, then cited "inadequate recovery and fatigue" as the reasons behind his decision not to compete in the Individual Time Trial. Shortly after the Games, he announced that he would be sitting out for the remainder of the season in order to concentrate on recovering his fitness for 2013.

Evans is known for his philanthropic philosophy, donating Aus$50,000 to charities, including the Amy Gillett Foundation set up in memory of the cyclist who was killed in a road accident in 2005. He is also a vocal supporter of the Free Tibet movement, saying "I don't want to see a repeat of what happened to [Australian] Aboriginal culture happen to another culture."

Gianni Bugno
Gianni Bugno, born on this day in 1964 in Brugg, Switzerland,  displayed all the signs of a cyclist who was destined to become one of the great Grand Tour riders - he began winning important races immediately his professional career began, including Stage 18 at the 1988 Tour de France and another at the Giro d'Italia a year later. Then he won the World Cup, two Tour stages, Milan-San Remo and both the overall General Classification and the Points competition at the Giro in 1990. He was World Champion in 1991 and 1992, coming 2nd and 3rd in the Tour those same years.

Unfortunately, he had one serious problem - his career coincided with that of Miguel Indurain and the wins, despite Indurain's claim that Bugno was his biggest threat - that would otherwise have been his were always just out of his reach. For the last five years of his career, he seems to have stopped trying and contented himself with stage wins (two at the Giro, two at the Vuelta a Espana) and overall victory at other races such as the Tour of Flanders, the Tour Méditerranéen and a National Championship.

Today, he is still involved in cycling. However, unlike the majority of retired cyclists who want to remain a part of the scene, he apparently still has a taste for adrenaline and now pilots the helicopter that follows the Giro to film footage for the RAI television station.

Maurice de Waele
The Belgian Tour de France winner Maurice de Waele died on this day in 1952, aged 55 years. He had come 2nd behind Nicolas Frantz in 1927 and 3rd behind Frantz and André Leducq the year before his win, and for a while it looked as though it wasn't goint to happen in 1929 either. He had been the race leader from the start to Stage 7 when two punctures caused him to lose enough time for Frantz, Leducq and Victor Fontan to move ahead of him (and, by the end of the stage, record equal elapsed times; thus leading to the only situation in the history of the Tour when three riders all wore the yellow jersey on the same day).

However, he refused to give up and rode so hard that when Fontan was forced out with a broken bike (and had attempted to continue on a replacement with the broken one strapped to his back because the rules of the day demanded a rider finish with - but not, apparently on - the bike with which he started) he had 75 seconds on Frantz and more on Leducq. Then, he suffered more punctures and lost the lead again, leaving Frantz leader on the road (ie, overall leader for a period during a stage) - but Frantz was unlucky and had punctures too, so de Waele regained the lead and won the stage. Riders were required to repair punctures themselves; having been permitted to accept help the previous year.

By Stage 10, de Waele was not feeling well and got gradually worse until he collapsed in Stage 15. His team, Alcyon, approached the organisers and requested that the next stage be started an hour later, which was granted. Then - with flagrant disregard for the rules that stated each rider, no matter what team he rode for, had to ride for himself alone - they came together and through combined effort somehow kept him upright and moving forward at a speed sufficient for him to finish the stage in 11th place, losing 13 minutes but remaining in the overall lead. Gradually, he improved over the following stages and miraculously retained the leadership all the way to the end of the final stage.

Henri Desgrange, who had instigated the "every man for himself" rule, was predictably furious; later telling journalists "My race has been won by a corpse!" As a result, he abolished trade teams and introduced national teams the following year - a rule that remained in place until 1961 when trade teams were reintroduced (though national teams would make an "experimental" reappearance in 1967 and 1968 as organisers attempted to prevent strikes, as had happened in 1966 when riders showed their displeasure at newly-introduced anti-doping tests).

Marco Pantani
Today is, as all cycling fans know, also the anniversary of the death of Marco Pantani, who was found in a Rimini hotel room after suffering heart failure and a cerebral œdema caused by cocaine poisoning.

Pantani, 1970-2004, on the Alpe d'Huez
(image credit: Hein Ciere CC BY 3.0
Pantani, who was 32 when he died, was a bad boy - he failed several anti-doping tests during his career, but conveniently for him in the days before a reliable test for EPO had been developed, leaving doctors reliant on the rather shaky stop-gap haematocrit reading method (one reading of 60.1% is highly suspicious for even the most rabid of his many fans, meanwhile). However, there is plenty of evidence to suggest that even without EPO he'd have been one of the greatest climbers in the sport's history which, combined with his colourful character and appearance and a near-miraculous recovery after he collided head-on with a car in the Milano-Torino, ensured enormous popularity with the fans and with other riders.

A personality such as his meant there were arguments too, of course: the most famous being the one that flared up during the 2000 Tour de France when Lance Armstrong apparently eased off the pace to make him a gift of winning on Mont Ventoux. Ventoux has been known as the mountain that can kill since Tom Simpson met his death there in 1967, and it very nearly finished off Eddy Merckx in 1970 too - it's serious business and, as Armstrong would later be informed in no uncertain terms (according to his book Every Second Counts), "nobody makes a gift of Ventoux." Pantani felt patronised - he had ridden as strongly as Armstrong as they approached the top and would have preferred to have won it on his own merit (as he did the following day). The situation was not helped at all when Armstrong insulted the Italian by calling him Elefantino, a nickname referring to his rather prominent ears that he was known to detest.

The Galibier monument
(image credit: Italian Cycling Journal)
From 2001 onwards, Pantani seemed demoralised by the ongoing accusations that he was doping and began to show signs of depression. Comeback attempts were made at various points in the next two years, but the fire had gone. In 2003, he booked himself into a private clinic to receive treatment for alcoholism, substance addiction and nervous disorders.

Most addicts weaken and "blow out" at least once during the road to recovery, then go back to the hard task they've set for themselves - some recover, some never do. Racing cyclists are not people who do anything by halves. Pantani was no exception, and his blow out was a major one: he barricaded himself into his room and seems to have experienced some sort of drug-induced insanity before eventually succumbing to acute cocaine poisoning.

Pantani was deeply flawed, but his status as a hero is in no doubt - almost a decade after his pitiful death, he remains one of the most popular riders in the history of cycling and his name is frequently still seen among those of today's stars painted on the roads at the three Grand Tours. There is an annual race, the Memorial Marco Pantani, named after him and each year one mountain stage of the Giro d'Italia is dedicated to him. In June 2011, a monument to him was unveiled on the Col du Galibier. Another stands on the Colle della Fauniera, a pass in Piemonte that has become known as the Colle Pantani.


Albert Dejonghe who would win Paris-Roubaix in 1922, then Stage 4 at the Tour de France the following year before finishing in 5th place at the 1925 Tour and 6th in 1926, was born in Middelkerke on this day in 1894.

Giuseppe Guerini was an Italian cyclist born in Gazzaniga on this day in 1970. While he has an impressive palmares stretching right back to his days as an amateur in 1988, he will be remembered as the cyclist knocked off his bike when a German photographer jumped in front of him to get a shot not far from the Alpe d'Huez finish line of Stage 10 at the 1999 Tour de France and apparently forgot that objects seen through the viewfinder are closer than they appear, failing to get out of the way so the rider collided with them. Though he fell heavily, Guerini was unhurt and got back on his bike - and won the stage.

Other cyclists born on this day: Ray Jones (Great Britain, 1918); Michael Færk Christensen (Denmark, 1986); Anders Lund (Denmark, 1985); Dirk Baert (Belgium, 1949); Mario Escobar (Colombia, 1940); Mark Whitehead (USA, 1961, died 2011); Willy Debosscher (Belgium, 1943); Frédéric Lancien (France, 1971); Matthias Lange (Germany, 1963); Linas Balčiūnas (Lithuania, 1978); Nicolas Owona (Cameroon, 1952); Tim Veldt (Netherlands, 1984); Oleksandr Symonenko (Ukraine, 1974); José Pacheco (Portugal, 1942); Juan Martínez (Spain, 1962); Sergio Godoy (Guatemala, 1973); Friedrich Neuser (Germany, 1932); Radovan Fořt (Czechoslovakia, 1965); Thorleif Andresen (Norway, 1945).

Wednesday 13 February 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 13.02.2013

Freddy Maertens
Freddy Maertens, born on this day in Nieuwpoort, Belgium in 1952 was the rider who did the unthinkable in 1981 - at the World Championships in Brno, he beat Beppe Saronni and Bernard Hinault.

That was just one of the many successes in his 14-year professional career. He'd already been National Amateur Champion (1971) and come second in the World Amateur Championships (1972) when he turned professional in 1973 - and that year, he won the Four Days of Dunkirk and the Scheldeprijs Flemmish Classic, took second place in the Tour of Flanders and the Worlds and managed an incredible 5th place finish at Paris-Roubaix, a race that few experienced professionals have any chance of finishing, never mind those in their first year. In his second year, he won the Flanders Championship, the Tour of Luxembourg, the Vuelta a Andalucia and a nice selection of stages in various races. As though that wasn't enough to prove to the world that a major new talent had arrived, the next year he won the Fours Days of Dunkirk, Gent-Wevelgem, Paris-Brussels, Paris-Tours, the Ronde van België, another Vuelta a Andalucia and seven stages at the Critérium du Dauphiné. He began showing promise on the track too.

In 1976, he topped even the previous year. He proved his track credentials by winning the Six Days of Dortmund with Walter Godefroot and won victory after victory on the road - he won the Amstel Gold Race, the Rund um den Henninger-Turm, Züri-Metzgete, Gent–Wevelgem, the Grand Prix des Nations, the Four Days of Dunkirk, Brabantse Pijl, the Flanders Championship, the Trofeo Baracchi (with Michel Pollentier), the Critérium des As and became World Champion. Grand Tour glory was, apparently, heading his way; as proved to be the case in 1977 at the Vuelta a Espana which he won by nearly three minutes, grabbing Stages 1, 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11a, 11b, 13, 16, 19 and the Points Classification for good measure. Earlier in the year, he'd entered the Giro d'Italia and won Stages 1, 4, 6a, 6b, 7 and 8a. Plus most of the races already mentioned above and some more too. To really top it off, he received the Super Prestige Pernod International award - given annually to a cyclist who has achieved outstanding performance - for both of these years.

He seemed to slow down a little in 1978 when he was just 26, an age at which most cyclists begin to enter their peak. Slowing down is, of course, a relative thing: for Maertens, it meant settling for the Omloop Het Volk, the Four Days of Dunkirk, the Prijs Vlaanderen, the Tour du Haut Var and the Six Days of Antwerp (with Danny Clark), Stage 7a at the Critérium du Dauphiné and Stages 5 and 7 and the overall Points competition at the Tour de France - more than enough to fill an entire career's palmares for most professional cyclists, but a quiet year for Freddy. 1979 was worse: with just Stages 1a, 3, 12a, 13 and 22 and the Points Classification at that year's Tour, it was obvious that his best years had passed, though another World Championship stopped the year from becoming a total waste. Believed to be suffering from a mystery ailment, he travelled to the USA on the advice of his doctor Paul Nijs. His plane landed at New York, where he disembarked, and then flew on to Chicago. On the way, it suffered a mechanical fault leading to one engine breaking away from the wing. All 271 passengers still on board were killed.

Maertens was primarily a sprinter, a forerunner to Mark Cavendish in that once he had the finish line in his sights he was virtually unstoppable. Yet unlike Cavendish, he also had something of the rouleur about him - he could win stages, but he could keep going at a good rate on just about any stage he faced. So why didn't he win more Grand Tours?

There are two main reasons. The first, as noted by those of his opponents who were alert enough to take him in as he flashed past them, was that Maertens tended to push an unusually big ring - when they were in one gear, he was in one two or more higher. That'll make you go faster, provided you have the strength to avoid grinding to a halt, but over time it'll ruin your legs. Secondly, he admitted in retirement that he had used amphetamines in many of his races while maintaining that several of his major races had been ridden "clean;" the latter claim, since amphetamine testing was effective at the time, we can assume to be true with a reasonable amount of certainty.

Maertens in 2008
(image credit: Thomas Ducroquet CC BY-SA 3.0
Sadly, things would go badly wrong for Maertens once his career was over. He invested his winnings - which he estimates to have been £1.6 million, not including bonuses, retainers and all the other perks professional cyclists bring in - unwisely, some of it going to shady businessmen and a large amount into a disastrous nightclub named Flandria (owned by one of his earlier sponsors) which, having sucked in vast piles of cash, eventually burned to the ground. The Flandria company went bankrupt three years later, leaving Maertens without income - he says now that he wasn't paid for a year, which meant the government went after him for taxes. In the end, he and his wife Carine had to turn to his parents or face living on the streets. He had little luck in finding work and the couple faced many very difficult years.

Today, he works as a curator at a bike museum. It doesn't pay much, but it's enough to live on - and at least he can be sure that the income will be regular. After all, cyclists and fans from around the world will always want to visit it - its most valuable exhibit is one of the greatest cyclists of all time.

Michel Pollentier
Michel Pollentier
(image credit: Le Cyclisme en Photos)
Michel Pollentier, winner of the 1977 Giro d'Italia, was born on this day in 1951 in the West Flanders town of Diksmuide. That was his only Grand Tour win, but he achieved good results in the Tour of France, where ha came 7th with one stage win (21b) in 1974, won Stage 13 in 1975 and came 7th with a win in Stage 16 in 1976, and in the Vuelta a Espana in which he came 4th with a win in Stage 6 in 1977, 3rd in 1979, 2nd in 1982 and won Stage 6 in 1984. He also won the Tour de Suisse in 1977, the Critérium du Dauphiné in 1978 and the Tour of Flanders in 1980, along with many other races.

He won the Alpe d'Huez stage in 1978 Tour, but would later be disqualified after he was caught attempting to cheat a drugs test. The rider in front of him seemed to be having trouble providing a urine sample, arousing the suspicions of the doctor in charge of the test and causing him to look more closely. He noticed that the rider was hiding a clear tube in his hand as he tried to give the sample and demanded that the man pull up his jersey, which revealed that the tube snaked up his side to a condom filled with someone else's - drug-free - urine held under his armpit, the idea being that by squeezing the tube he could appear to be urinating (the process is described in full gory detail in Willy Voet's book Breaking The Chain). The doctor then demanded that Pollentier also pulled up his jersey and discovered that he was fitted with the same device.

According to Oliver Dazat's book Seigneurs et Forcats du Velo (Lords and Slaves of the Bicycle), Pollentier revealed that he had experienced problems coming off the drugs he had taken while cycling, possibly intending to provide a warning to younger riders. Dazat says that the rider told him, "I've never hesitated to confess that I spent three weeks under the surveillance of Dr Dejonckheere at the St-Joseph clinic at Ostend and that after treatment... I stayed under his control for another two years. Why hide it? It's impossible to come out of a situation like that without the help of a doctor."


Cyclist, writer and comedian Hugh Dennis was born on this day in 1962. Dennis rode the 2007 Étape du Tour, an annual race that follows one stage of the Tour de France that is open to amateurs and held a fortnight before the race proper. He says that he started in 2,600th place among the 8,000 cyclists to take part and finished 3,600th among the 4,000 that completed the stage.

Other cyclists born on this day: René Enders (Germany, 1987); Lesya Kalitovska (Ukraine, 1988); Marco Cimatti (Italy, 1912, died 1982); Wazir Ali (Pakistan, 1928); Simon Lillistone (Great Britain, 1969); Barbara Heeb (Switzerland, 1969); Zundui Naran (Mongolia, 1967); Khosrow Ghamari (Iran, 1968); Ron Stretton (Great Britain, 1930); Carlos Alberto Vázquez (Argentina, 1934); Jos Boons (Belgium, 1943, died 2000); Bùi Văn Hoàng (South Vietnam, 1943).

Tuesday 12 February 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 12.02.2013

Maryline Salvetat
Maryline Salvetat
Born today in 1974 in the French town of Castres, Maryline Salvetat has been National Under-19 Road Race Champion on two occasions (1991, 1992), National Cyclo Cross Champion four times (2002, 2004, 2005 and 2007), World Cyclo Cross Champion (2007) and National Time Trial Champion (2007).

Salvetat has also been highly successful in stage racing with three top three stage finishes and second place overall at the 2006 Tour de France Féminin and third place overall at the 2007 Route de France, Along the way, she's won the GP de France (1996), a Trophée des Grimpeurs (2006) and a string of important cyclo cross races as well as a silver medal at the 2005 National Mountain Bike Championship.

A qualified medical doctor, Salvetat has revealed that she saw female riders doping during her career, including at the 1999 Tour de France Féminin.


Ellen Hunter, born in Wrexham, Wales, on this day in 1968, is a cyclist who found fame acting as sighted tandem pilot to the paralympian Aileen McGlynn. Together, they broke the world record times for 200m in 2004, the Kilo in 2006 (when they also became World Champions) and in 2007. Prior to the 2004 Olympics, Hunter broke her back in an accident at the Herne Hill Velodrome and was told she stood little chance of ever being able to ride a bike again; following a six-week stay in hospital she recovered sufficiently to compete at the Games.

On this day in 2010 Clara Hughes - the only Canadian athlete to have won medals in both the Summer and Winter Olympics and one of the most successful Canadian cyclists of all time - was Canadian flag bearer at the opening of the Winter Olympics in Vancouver.

Geert Omloop, also born on this day in 1974, is a Belgian professional from Herentals. He was National Road Race Champion in 2003.

Brendon Cameron was born on this day in 1973 in New Zealand. He won bronze in the Team Pursuit events at the Commonwealth Games in 1994 and 1998 but has been more successful as a coach, training his partner Sarah Ulmer to a gold-winning ride and new world record in the Individual Pursuit at the 2004 Olympics.

Melinda McLeod, born on this day 1993 in Australia, is a professional BMX rider widely recognised as one of the best jump riders in the world. She has won three gold medals at the World BMX Championships, enough to make her the most successful Australian BMX rider of all time.

Other cyclists born on this day: Vanja Vonckx (Belgium, 1973); Pablo Hernández (Colombia, 1940); Flor Marina Delgadillo (Colombia, 1972); Kurt Schweiger (Austria, 1934); Georges Paillard (France, 1904, died 1998); Pedro Rodríguez (Cuba, 1950); Kurt Einsiedel (Germany, 1907); Andrew Weaver (USA, 1959); Vilija Sereikaitė (Lithuania, 1987); Makoto Iijima (Japan, 1971); Mehrdad Zafarzadeh (Iran, 1962); Leon Richardson (Antigua and Barbuda, 1957); Helmut Wechselberger (Austria, 1954); Peter Crinion (Ireland, 1939).

Monday 11 February 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 11.02.2013

Eric Vanderaerden
Eric Vanderaerden
(image credit: Eric Houdas CC BY-SA 3.0)
Born on this day in Lummen in 1962, retired Belgian cyclist Eric Vanderaerden won the prologues of both the Tour de France and Vuelta a Espana during 1983, his first year as a professional. A string of victories in one-day races seemed to confirm his future potential for a cycling-besotted nation that was eager to find a successor to its favourite son, Eddy Merckx.

One year later, he became National Champion and won Stages 10 and 23 at the Tour de France, along with more one-day successes including the prestigious Paris-Brussels. 1985 was even better with wins at Ghent-Wevelgem, the GP Eddy Merckx, the Tour of the Netherlands, the Tour of Flanders and Stages 13 and 19 at the Tour de France, during which he wore the yellow jersey for two days. He improved even more for 1986 when he won  a series of smaller races topped off by the Three Days of De Panne and - the icing on the cake - the Points Classification at the Tour. 1987 brought his second wins at the GP Eddy Merckx and De Panne in addition to victory at Paris-Roubaix, the toughest and most prestigious of the Classics.

Then, something happened to Vanderaerden in 1988. Nobody, least of all the rider himself, knows what it was; but it was the beginning of the end. He still won races, including a third Three Days of De Panne (which he'd win twice more) that year and the Tour of Ireland a year later, plus there would be a Stage 17 win at the Vuelta a Espana in 1992; but the big wins stopped coming.

Many have suggested that the constant comparisons to Merckx wore him down in the end, the realisation that he was never going to equal The Cannibal's palmares causing him to become disheartened. Yet it seems odd that his success in smaller races continued, as entering a depression would have been more likely to end his victories altogether. It seems likely therefore that he was simply not destined to be the hero that his country wanted him to be and he retired in 1996, just one of the many riders who performed highly enough to get fans' hopes up and then proved to be human after all.

Sébastien Hinault
Sébastien Hinault came 3rd in the Novices' National Championships right back in 1990 but didn't turn professional until 1997 when he was taken on by GAN. His first couple of years were quieter, but anyone who paid attention - and there were many, simply because of the young rider's surname - could see that there was potential: he managed seven top twenty finishes in his first Tour de France, after all. Most riders don't even finish their first Tour de France.

Sébastien Hinault
(image credit: PB85 CC BY-SA 3.0)
That surname, which perhaps made it inevitable that Sébastien would become a famous cyclist... well, actually it provided no indication of future greatness encoded into his Breton DNA. Sébastien, despite being born in St-Brieuc on this day in 1974, less than 7km from Le Blaireau's birthplace at Yffiniac, is not related to the five-time Tour de France winner Bernard. It's probably safe to say he ended up heartily sick of being asked.

2000 to 2002 were not quite so good, though first place at the Tour du Finistère will have been welcome, but from 2003 he began to win stages at the bigger races. The first was Stage 4 at the Tour of Poland, followed by Stage 4 at the Tour of Germany a year later. 2006 was his best year to date with victories for Stage 8 at the Tour de Langkawi, Stage 4 at the Tour de Picardie and Stage 4 at the Tour du Limousin. 2007 was another dip with a single win, then he got his first Grand Tour stage win for Stage 10 at the Vuelta a Espana and an overall General Classification triump in the Tour du Limousin. Six top ten finishes came in the next Vuelta then his talent began to fade a little as he entered his 12th professional year, though not so much that he couldn't still pull in some good results: in 2012, he won two races and finished four stages at the Tour de France (best: fourth, Stage 13). At the end of the year, Hinault announced that he would be leaving AG2R-La Mondiale and stepping down from WorldTour cycling; in 2013 he will race for proContinental IAM Independent Asset Management.

Eleonora van Dijk
Ellen van Dijk
(image credit: My Women's Cycling Tumblr (Sarah Connolly))
Eleonora van Dijk - known as Ellen - was born in Harmelen, Netherlands, on this day in 1987. She began her athletic career as a speed skater and still holds the 5000m track record; as a cyclist she became National Champion in the Newcomers class in 2003, then in Juniors the next year before adding a bronze at the World Championships in the same class later in the season. She won Stage 2 at the Tour Féminin en Limousin in 2006 before becoming Individual Pursuit National Champion and winning Stage 1 at the Tour of Chongming Island in 2007.

2008 brought her first World Championship title, for the Scratch race, a gold in the Under-23 class at the European Championships and Stage 2 at the Tour de l'Aude Cycliste Féminin. She won another gold for the Under-23 Individual Time Trial at the 2009 European Championships and Stage 6 in the Holland Ladies' Tour of 2010. 2011 was a good year with the overall General Classification and a stage win at the Ladies' Tour of Qatar (a race that often reveals cyclists who are going to do well in the big European races within a few years), Stage 2 at the Holland Ladies' Tour and further track success. In 2012 with Specialized-Lululemon she was fourth overall at the Tour of Qatar, second at the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad, won Stage 2 at the Gracia Orlova, became National Individual Time Trial Champion and won the Lotto-Decca Tour; she also competed in three disciplines at the Olympics and was instrumental in helping Marianne Vos win the Road Race.


Piotr Wadecki, once ranked the second best cyclist in the world, was born on this day in 1973 in Elblag. Poland. He has been National Road Race Champion twice, National Time Trial Champion once, won the Peace Race, the Course de la Solidarité Olympique (twice) and a number of other races. He has also taken part in the Tour de France and the Giro d'Italia, but Grand Tours proved not to suit him - his best result was 17th for Stage 7 at the Tour in 2002.

David Weller, born in Jamaica on this day in 1957, became the first athlete from his country to win an Olympic medal in any event other than track and field when he was awarded bronze for the 1,000m Time Trial at the 1980 Games in Moscow. At the time of writing, he also remains the only Jamaican to have done so.

Denis Verschueren was a Belgian rider born in Berlaar on this day in 1897. He won some excellent results during the 1920s and 1930s, including two National Interclubs Champioships (1926 and 1929), the Tour of Flanders in 1926, Paris-Brussels in 1926 and Paris-Tours in 1925 and 1928. He died at the age of 57 on the 18th of April in 1954.

Aleksandr Khatuntsev, twice World and once European Under-19 Team Pursuit Champion, once European Under-23 Team Pursuit Champion, twice winner of the Tour of the South China Sea and once winner of the Five Rings of Moscow, the GP Moscow and the Boucles de l'Artois, was born on this day in 1985 in Voronezh, USSR.

Other cyclists born on this day: Orlando Castillo (Colombia, 1967); Daniel Ducreux (France, 1947); Tereza Huřiková (Czechoslovakia, 1987); Héctor Chiles (Ecuador, 1971); Egon Scheiwiller (Switzerland, 1937); Flemming Gleerup Hansen (Denmark, 1944); Luis Barrufa (Uruguay, 1946).

Sunday 10 February 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 10.02.2013


Gunn-Rita Dahle Flesjå
Gunn-Rita Dahle Flesjå
Born in Bjørheimsbyg on this day in 1973, Gunn-Rita Dahle Flesjå is a Norwegian mountain biker who turned professional in 1995 - having preferred tack running, football and ice skating during childhood, she had started cycling only a few months previously when she was invited to take part in a ride organised by a local club - and came to dominate women's cross country mountain biking worldwide. Her first notable victory came whilst she was still an amateur in 1995 when she won the National Cross Country Championship, then she came fourth in the Cross Country at the Olympics a year later before taking back the National Championship title in 1997. She successfully defended it in 1998, when she also second in the World Championship, and again in 1999, when she was also second in the World Cup and made a move into road racing - where she immediately made her mark with second place at the Sea Otter Classic, Thüringen-Rundfahrt and Tour de Bretagne.

Having had a quiet year in 2000, Dahle Flesjå continued to perform exceptionally well off road and on with another win at the National Cross Country Championship and third place at the National Individual Time Trial Championships, then in 2002 she won both the European and World Cross Country titles followed by the European Championship and World Cup in 2003. However, everything she has achieved prior to 2004 paled into relative insignificance: in that year, she won the National, European and World Cross Country Championships, the Cross Country World Cup, the World MTB Marathon Championship and a gold medal for the Cross Country race at the Olympics. 2005 was every bit as good - she successfully defended all her National, European and World Championship titles and won another World Cup; in 2006 she won the European MTB Marathon Championship, the World MTB Marathon and Cross Country Championships and the World Cup for the fourth consecutive time.

With an admirer, 2012
Despite expectations, she did not retain any of her titles in 2007 and scored only a couple of second and third place finishes - what she had initially believed to be a minor stomach complaint turned out to be a complex viral infection that took some months and a long course of antibiotics to clear and left her unable to train until October. Though still suffering from the infection for much of 2008 she was able to win the World Cross Country and Marathon Championships; she had hoped to perform well at the Olympics too, but a crash three days before the race left her with a broken rib and severe bruising. She took time out in 2009 to give birth to her son Bjørnar, then returned in 2010 to take second place at the European MTB Marathon Championship and tenth at the European Cross Country Championship. In 2011, at the age of 38, she won the European Cross Country title for the sixth time; then for a seventh in 2012.


Jacky Durand
Jacky Durand
(image credit: Sławek CC-BY-SA 2.0)
The French, as we all know, have not had a winner in their beloved Tour since 1985 when the great Bernard Hinault won his last - and for a nation that has made cycling its national sport, that hurts. However, in the mid and late 1990s it looked for a while as though Jacky Durand would restore their pride.

Durand's career was somewhat sullied by his unfortunate tendency to cheat. He received a one-month ban for doping in the 1996 Tour de la Côte Picarde and was kicked out of the 2002 Tour de France after being caught getting a tow from a team car - several riders claimed to have seen him doing the same in 2001.

Born in Laval in 1967, Durand became known for his aggressive style of riding and ability to attack at any point in a race. However, like many riders with those characteristics, he could be hot-headed and frequently attacked to early, exhausting himself in superhuman solo breakaways that could prove disastrous for his final standing - in fact, he did this so often that Vélo magazine started printing a monthly Jackymeter, recording the number of kilometres he clocked up in solo breaks throughout the year.

Sometimes, it worked - and when it did, he could ride his opponents off the road; as proved to be the case at the 1992 Tour of Flanders when he became the first French winner for 36 years (as an outsider, his success earned him the admiration of the Belgians as well as the French). It also worked in one-day races, such as National Championships, which he won in 1993 and 1994.

Unfortunately, while it meant he could grab the occasional stage here and there in longer races, it was never going to be a wise plan in a three-week Grand Tour. It netted him a few stage wins here and there (Stage 10 in 1994, prologue in 1995 - partly through luck as he'd set out before it started to rain, but he kept the yellow jersey for two days, Stage 8 in 1998), but didn't help him at all in the overall General Classification - he abandoned the race soon after his victory in 1994 and was lanterne rouge in 1999 even though the same year brought the second of his Combativity classification wins that, in the end, proved to be the finest achievement of a rider who was simply too unruly, too wild to threaten the GC contenders. It may have been the worry that he would never be reined in and put to productive use that led to his retirement in 2005 when he received no offers during transfer season.

Naturally, the spectators adored him.


Frederiek Nolf, born on this day 1987 in Kortrijk in Belgium, died on the 5th of February of a heart attack as he slept between Stages 4 and 5 at the Tour of Qatar. Due to his age, suspicions immediately arose that he'd been doping - EPO is frequently linked to heart attacks as it thickens the blood, putting more strain on the heart as it pumps harder in an effort to keep blood flowing around the body. However, no evidence of EPO or any other doping product was ever found and his death is generally assumed to have been caused by an undiagnosed heart defect, a tragically common cause among young athletes who might not have previously exhibited any symptoms due to their high level of fitness. Nolf was a close friend of Wouter Weylandt, who would be killed in a crash at the Giro d'Italia two years later.

Marty Nothstein was an American track (and later, road) cyclist born on this day in 1971 who achieved more than 70 victories during his professional career. His nickname, "The Razor," was frequently attributed to his ability to cut through the pack, but those who followed his career from the early days insist it began due to his tendency to win by razor-thin margins. He retired in 2006 and now competes in drag racing.

Other cyclists born on this day: Nathan Williams (USA, 1988); Kim Eriksen (Denmark, 1964); Nemesio Jiménez (Spain, 1946); Bobby Livingston (USA, 1965); Gaston Alancourt (France, 1888, died 1964); Sergio Tesitore (Uruguay, 1967); Siegfried Denk (Austria, 1951, died 1982); Somkuan Seehapant (Thailand, 1946); Gang Dong-U (South Korea, 1978); Gunn Rita Dahle-Flesjå (Norway, 1973); Fernando Correa (Venezuela, 1961); Ainārs Ķiksis (Latvia, 1972); Won Chang-Yong (South Korea, 1973); Oleg Grishkin (USSR, 1975).