Saturday 14 September 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 14.09.2013

Nina Davies in 2008
Nina Davies
Born in the Vale of Glamorgan on this day in 1974, Nina Davies became Welsh National Road Race Champion in 2001, then came ninth at the British Championships in 2002 and seventh in 2003.

Like many female cyclists, Davies excels in several disciplines - in 2007, she was Welsh National Cyclo Cross Champion and won six rounds of the Welsh CX Series; the following year she became British Masters National Cross Country Mountain Bike Champion, then won a silver medal at the World Masters Championships.

Sé O'Hanlon
Sé O'Hanlon (commonly - and incorrectly - spelled Shay O'Hanlon) was born in Dublin on this day in 1941 and became one of Ireland's best amateur riders during the 1960s and 1970s. O'Hanlon holds the record for total victories and consecutive victories in the eight-stage Rás Tailteann, having won it for the first time in 1962 and again in 1965, 1966 and 1967 and was, for many years, the dominant rider in the race with a total of 24 stage wins and 36 stages in the leader's jersey. He also won the Tour of Ulster a record four times, in 1961, 1962, 1965 and 1966.

O'Hanlon might well have gone further, but he was a member of the National Cycling Association, one of three rival national federations and one of two that were not affiliated with the UCI - he was, therefore, ineligible to compete in most of the big foreign races, the World Championships and the Olympics. When he retired from competition he became president of the NCA and built bridges with the other federations, eventually enabling them to merge into one UCI-affiliated organisation.

George Mount
In the late 19th and early 20th Centuries, the USA was as besotted with the bicycle as the French and Belgians were. Top riders of the day such as Frank Waller were household names and track racing was, in some areas, more popular than football or baseball: in 1910, Ty Cobb - one of the most successful and legendary baseball stars of all time - went on strike in order to force his Detroit Tigers team to pay him $9,000 per year; eight years earlier track star "Major" Marshall Taylor was able to command an annual salary of $35,000, despite the fact that in some of the more backward parts of the country he was refused entry to velodromes on account of being black.

But the States, more than any other nation, fell head over heels in love with the motorcar. With enormous natural resources, it was able to produce large luxury cars that retailed at prices within reach of the common man; it also had its own oil reserves and could produce fuel more cheaply than the European nations and had the space for wide, open roads. The bicycle was forgotten by all but children, who would exchange it for a car the moment they became old enough to do (as young as 15 in some states), and a few isolated adult eccentrics.

Born in Princeton, New Jersey on this day in 1955, George Mount was no more interested in bikes or cycling than most other Americans. However, in his teenage years he refused his father's demand that he enlisted in the Army, then fighting in Vietnam, and was thrown out of the family home as a result. A series of odd jobs followed as he tried to pay his way, including one as a groom  at a race track, where he would meet one of those eccentrics - race promoter and cycling fan Pete Rich. Rich had an ability to spot potential good form (possibly in horses as well as in humans, hence his presence at a race track) and talked Mount into giving the sport a try, also offering him cheap lodgings in a room above a bike shop he owned and work as a mechanic. Thus Mount found his way into the world of cycling completely by chance.

Rich became Mount's coach, training him at a neglected velodrome in San Francisco, and by 1973 he was good enough to begin competing as a junior. A year later, he won two races; then in 1975 he started to win a lot of races. In 1997, he recalled: "I won a whole lot of races in a row - for a couple of months in 1975, nobody beat me in a bike race, whether it was a criterium, a road race, a time trial. I mean, I won a whole lot of races." In 1976, he was sixth in the Road Race at the Olympic Games - the first American rider to finish in the top 60 since 1912.

Mount's Olympic success vastly increased cycling' popularity among the American public overnight, but the supportive infrastructure he would need in order to develop into a genuine world class rider simply didn't exist in the USA. Fortunately, at around the same time, he met the greatest cyclist in the world, Eddy Merckx (in the US with Patrick Sercu to race in Pennsylvania), and was able to ask his advice. Merckx told him to get to Italy as soon as possible, saying that France was the place to go to win races but Italy was the place to learn about the sport. Mike Neel, another young rider trained by Rich, had already made the move and was able to provide an introduction to a club called Benotto; teliing them, "Hey, I know this kid in the States who could come over and kick all your guys' butts." The team's manager told him to get the kid over to prove it - Mount arrived in 1977 and immediately began beating the Italians on their home turf.

Mount with the 1981 Sammontana team
The USA had a national team prior to 1978, but it was seen by the European teams and fans as a bit of a joke at worst or as a bunch of plucky underdogs at best. That year, Mount rode for them in numerous high-profile European events and, all of a sudden, more often than not, there was a stars and stripes jersey somewhere near the front of the peloton. He was fourth overall at the Tour of Britain and second at the Under-23 GP Liberazione as well as winning the US Red Zinger and Coors Classics, then in 1979 he won a stage at the Circuit Cycliste Sarthe and was fourth overall at the Tour du Vaucluse. In 1981, he was third in the Youth category at the Giro Italia - European fans began to take American cyclists more seriously; more importantly, so did American fans.

Mount retired at the age of just 28, having won around 200 races - he felt that he could have continued racing for at least another five years but that if he did, he'd end up as a burned-out ex-pro earning peanuts in a bike shop; he thought it better to get some qualifications while he was still young and guarantee himself a better future. His legacy is greater even than his palmares - he had blazed the trail later followed by Greg Lemond, who would become the first non-European to win the Tour de France, Levi Leipheimer, George Hincapie, Andrew Hampsten, Kristin Armstrong and all the other great North American cyclists to go to Europe and revolutionise professional cycling from the 1980s to the present, and it is thanks to him that by the end of the 20th Century cycling in the USA was as popular as it had been at the end of the 19th. His nickname was Smilin' George, and he has a lot to smile about.

Francesco Casagrande
Francesco Casagrande
Born in Florence on this day in 1970, Francesco Casagrande turned professional with San Marino-based Mercatone Uno-Zucchini-Mendeghini in 1992, a year after finding international fame by winning the Baby Giro, and remained with the team through its gradual transformation into Saeco until 1997. In his second professional year he came third in the Youth category at the Giro d'Italia; then in 1994 he won seven races including the Giro di Toscana and was second at the National Championships. In 1995, he won five races and finished in third place on one stage at the Tour de Romandie and two at the Giro d'Italia, finishing the latter in tenth place overall, and in 1996 he won Tirreno-Adriatico and the Tour of the Basque Country, also reaching the Giro d'Italia podium after three stages. In 1997, he came second again at the National Championship, then rode in the Tour de France for the first time; he finished eight stages in the top ten, was sixth in the General Classification and third in the King of the Mountains.

Casagrande switched to Cofidis for the 1998 season, getting the year off to an excellent start with third place overall at the Tour de Romandie, a stage win at the Tour Méditerranéen, second place at the Classique des Alpes and numerous other good results. He went to the Tour de France again but seemed not to have his previous form, finishing only two stages in the top 50 before a crash in Stage 10 put him out of the race. Then, in August, it was revealed that he had failed a doping control at Romandie. He denied using drugs and requested that his B-sample be analysed; when it too turned out positive Cofidis sacked him.

He made his return with Vini Caldirola-Sidermec in June 1999 and won the Tour de Suisse, his best result so far, then added victory at the Clásica San Sebastián. The following year, still with the same team, he won the Waalse Pijl and Stage 9 at the Giro and did well on a sufficient number of other stages to take the leader's jersey, which he wore all the way to the penultimate stage before losing it to Stefano Garzelli and settled instead for the King of the Mountains; later winning the bronze medal at the Wirld Championships. That placed him in a position to negotiate a better contract with another team, so he started 2001 with Fasso Bortolo and won the Giro del Trentino before returning to the Tour de France where he was unable to break into the top 100 before abandoning. In 2002 he won another Giro del Trentino, then went back to the Giro d'Italia and looked to be on course for a good result until Stage 16, when he was accused of deliberately pushing Colombia-Selle-Italia's John Freddy Garcia into the railings running alongside the road, causing him to crash and suffer injuries that required 20 stitches in his face. Casagrande denied doing so, saying he would not even think of doing something "that stupid." However, race officials and team managers insisted that was what they had seen happen, and he was ejected from the race for "aggressive riding."

Casagrande would never win another stage race after 2002, though he won some stages and a couple of one-day races in 2003. In 2004 and 2005 he stood on numerous podiums but failed to win anything, then announced his retirement on the 1st of May.


Volodymyr Rybin, born in Kreminna, Ukraine on this day in 1980, was World Points Race Champion in 2005.

Born in Paris on this day in 1924, Dominique Forlini won Stages 6 and 15 at the 1954 Tour de France. With Georges Senfftleben (with whom he also teamed up to win several six-day races in the 1950s), he was European Madison Champion in 1955.

Veelers at the Eneco Tour, 2009
Tom Veelers, born in Oostmarsum, Netherlands on this day in 1984, won the Under-23 Paris-Roubaix and Stages 5, 6, 8 and the General Classification at the Olympia's Tour in 2006. In 2011, he was second overall at the Tour de Wallonie-Picarde. Veelers began his professional career with Rabobank's Continental team in 2005, then switched to Skil-Shimano (now Argos-Shimano) in 2008; he has been with them ever since.

On this day in 2006, the USA Cycling Federation revealed that it had been supplied with information by the UCI linking Tyler Hamilton to Operacion Puerto. The UCI requested that action be taken; the Federation referred the case to USADA for investigation.

Other cyclists born on this day: Gary Foord (Great Britain, 1970); Chetan Singh Hari (India, 1936); William Fenn (USA, 1904, died 1980); Joe Becker (USA, 1931); Peter Weibel (West Germany, 1950); Kim Refshammer (Denmark, 1955, died 2002); Johannes Knab (West Germany, 1946); Connor Fields (USA, 1992); Robert Maveau (Belgium, 1944, died 1978); Yelena Dylko (Belarus, 1988); Luis Brethauer (Germany, 1992).

Friday 13 September 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 13.09.2013

Robert Millar
Born in Glasgow on this day in 1958, Robert Millar began cycling during childhood and rose to the very top; becoming Britain's all-time most successful Grand Tour rider until Chris Froome (who was born in Kenya but has a British passport) came second at the 2011 Vuelta a Espana and Bradley Wiggins won the 2012 Tour de France. He is also one of the most intriguing and, when he chooses to be so, entertaining characters in the history of cycling.

Short, lightly-built and highly intelligent, Millar  is often portrayed as having consciously reacted against what biographer Richard Moore calls Glasgow's "big man" tradition, a culture especially linked with the road Gorbals slums in which individuals skilled at fighting are held up as examples of what a man should strive to be. However, Millar himself rejects this; his family were working class but had done well for themselves through the application of hard work and pursuit of education. He also vociferously rejects the myth that he first came across the Tour de France on a television in a shop window - it was the late 1960s and, as Millar points out, the vast majority of people had a television by that time.

Nevertheless, with few other employment opportunities available to young people locally, Millar went to work in a factory when he left school; his intelligence was spotted immediately and he was awarded an engineering apprenticeship and placed on the firm's management training program. Yet Miller dreamed of wider horizons (and was undoubtedly bright enough to realise that much of Britain's manufacturing industry would have vanished long before he reached retirement age): a keen cyclist since childhood, he knew that his body shape and power output gave him a natural advantage when climbing. Single-minded almost to a fault, he trained harder than many professionals, riding for mile after mile into headwinds that would keep the majority of riders indoors, and in 1979 he escaped - he had received an invite to join the legendary amateur team Athletic Club Boulogne-Billancourt, which had already earned a reputation for finding riders from nations other than France and Belgium, developing them into world-class athletes and turning them loose on the cycling world. Millar's determination, focus and - soon after he joined the club - results rapidly convinced team manager Claude Escalon that he had found a future great; but Millar's peculiar habits - thought by those who understood him to have stemmed from shyness and an intense need for privacy and by those who didn't as stemming from an unpleasant personality (in fact, both are true; Millar was shy and did need privacy, but he could also be extremely rude and dislikable - he was once so rude to a female airport official that Allan Peiper, a Peugeot team mate, told him he would "knuckle him" if he ever heard him speak that way to anyone again) - won him very, very few friends.

Millar was with the ACBB for only a year, his third place in the 1980 Amateur World Championship winning him a contract with Peugeot-Esso-Michelin for 1980. He had won the British National Championship in 1980 too, but when he returned to take part the following year seemed to care little whether he won or not, taking fifth place - this, along with the ease with which he settled into French life and found a French wife, was an early indication that he was cutting himself off entirely from his background. His results in French races that year and the next were superb, with second place in the Tour du Vaucluse and the Tour de l'Avenir and podium places in several others; he was, therefore, selected for Peugeot's Tour de France squad in 1983 - and he won Stage 10, ending with the difficult Bagnères-de-Luchon climb, before finishing in 14th place overall despite losing 17' in a crash during the third stage. Perhaps more importantly, he was third in the King of the Mountains.

In 1984, Millar was second on Stage 2b, ending at the summit of Mont Ventoux stage, at Paris-Nice, putting him briefly into the overall lead (he finished in sixth at the end of the race). In the Tour de Romandie he was fifth overall and won Stage 2 and the overall King of the Mountains, but all of these were as nothing compared to his Tour de France performance: he won Stage 11, in which the race made its first ever visit to the Guset-Neige ski resort in the Pyrenees (it has been back only twice - in 1988 and again in 1995), then became the first (and to date, only) British rider to win the King of the Mountains. He was also fourth overall, beating Tom Simpson's 1962 sixth place for what was then the best ever result by a British rider.

Millar was hotly tipped to win the Vuelta a Espana in 1985 by fans, pundits and other riders alike. Sean Kelly won Stage 10 while Millar took over the General Classification lead, retaining it into the final stage which he began with a 10" advantage over second place Francisco Rodriguez and 1'05" over third place Pello Ruiz Cabestany. Then he punctured at the start of the Cotos climb. As is the case in the Tour de France, the final stage in the Vuelta is usually considered to be ceremonial and the riders do not compete for the overall victory; however, with two riders that close, Millar could easily have lost even if they refused to take advantage of his situation. With a near-superhuman effort, he caught them up on the stage's third climb at Los Leones where Rodrigue, Cabestan and others in their group congratulated him on his historic victory. For some reason, none of them told him that Pedro Delgado - also an excellent climber and, as a local boy, familiar with the descents where other climbers might lose time - had attacked while Millar's puncture was being sorted out and was enjoying the support of another rider named José Recio. By the time Millar found out, Deglado had more than seven minutes on him.

Millar was stuck on his own with no team mates nearby. That he was able to finish only 36" behind the Spaniard is remarkable and proof of is extraordinary talent, but the race had been won by another rider using distinctly unsportsmanlike tactics - "It's rotten, the whole peloton was against us. It seems a Spaniard had to win at all costs," said Peugeot manager Roland Berland (whom Millar would later criticise for failing to arrange support). Fans from Britain and many other nations, including some from Spain, termed it "The Stolen Vuelta" and still know it as such to this day; Millar swore that he would never again race in Spain. Later in the year he went back to the Tour de France and came 11th overall and third in the King of the Mountains; soon afterwards he went back on his vow to never return to Spain after seeing an opportunity to get some sort of revenge - he won the Vuelta a Catalunya, taking over the race leadership and not allowing Recio, who had held it earlier in the race, to get anywhere near it.

Having raced in Catalunya, Millar had no reason not to compete in the Vuelta a Espana in 1986 and did so after switching teams to Panasonic. Earlier in the season, he had been second overall at the Tour de Suisse; he won Stage 6 at the Vuelta but was second once again - this time, at least, victor Alvaro Pino did so without recourse to skulduggery. He began the Tour that year on fine form and became a very real threat to Greg Lemond, who despite the apparent attempts at sabotage by Bernard Hinault, would become the first American and non-European to win the race that very year. Many good climbers have also been good time trial riders; Millar, despite cutting his teeth on the British racing scene where time trials have always been more popular than elsewhere (largely as a result of a ban on mass-start road racing that lasted from the late-19th Century until after the Second World War), was not one of them - yet he finished the Stage 9 TT in ninth place, placing him in a good position from which to launch his assault on the Pyrenees. As was expected, he gradually moved up the General Classification list all the while the race gradually moved up the mountains, finishing Stage 13 with its finish line located at 1,800m in Superbagnères in second place behind Lemond and moving into fourth place overall. Lemond was a fast climber, but ultimately he was an all-rounder - with one more stage in the Pyrenees, four in the Alps and one in the Massif Central, it looked very much as though the Scottish climbing specialist might build an advantage the American would not be able to overcome. But then, as the race began drawing to a close, Millar fell ill. He was 112th in the Stage 20 time trial, taking more than ten minutes to get around the 58km parcours than winner Hinault; the following day he gave up on the Puy de Dôme.

1987, the year of the Marmalade Massacre
Millar didn't enter the Giro d'Italia until 1987, the edition that has gone down in history as the year of the Marmalade Massacre. One of the most controversial episodes in Grand Tour history, the Massacre began when a vicious row broke out between Stephen Roche and his Carrera team leader Roberto Visentini. Roche beat Visentini in the Stage 1b time trial, then became race leader when Carrera won the Stage 3 time trial; he then defending the leader's journey until Stage 13 when it passed back to Visentini. However, realising that he stood a better chance of winning overall than Visentinidid, Roche ignored the team manager's order not to attack on Stage 15 and took back the lead. He was joined at the time by a group of Carrera riders, but the next day - after receiving threats from and being spat on by the furious tifosi - all the Italian riders in the team abandoned him, riding for Visentini instead; only Millar (who was still with Panasonic, but evidently felt some sort of Celtic solidarity) and the Belgian Eddy Schepers stayed with him. Visentini was so angry at what he saw as their treachery that he tried to push Schepers off his bike (an incident curiously not seen by any race officials, so he escaped punishment despite later admitting to and even bragging about the incident). They rode either side of Roche throughout the stage, protecting him while other non-Italian riders, angered by Visentini's arrogance and violence, prevented him from attacking. On the final climb, the Marmalada, Roche won; Panasonic's Erik Breukink was second and Millar was third. Millar later won Stage 21 and came second overall, winning the King of the Mountains; Roche won overall, then won the Tour de France and the World Championship and became the second man in history to win the greatest triumph in cycling, the entirely unofficial Triple Crown for which there is no trophy, title nor prize money.

Millar's last Tour, 1993
Millar and Roche moved to the Fagor team in 1988 and the Scotsman took third place at the Critérium International and at Liège-Bastogne-Liège - the best Classics result of his career. He came sixth overall at the Vuelta, won by another Irishman Sean Kelly, then began another Tour de France. During 14, he and Philippe Bouvatier lost time after either misinterpreting directions signaled to them by a gendarme or, as many fans still believe, being deliberately misdirected so that the French favourites could make up time; later in the race Millar uncharacteristically cracked badly on a climb - that he then abandoned during Stage 17 indicates that he was again unwell. A year later he was fourth in the King of the Mountains and tenth overall at the Tour but won the Tour of Britain; in 1990 he was second at the Tours of Britain (which he might have won had be not have crashed in the final stage), Romandie and Switzerland and won the Critérium du Dauphiné but once again did not finish the Tour de France, leaving in anger due to his belief that his Z-Tomasso team mates were giving all their support to Greg Lemond (who supplied the team's bikes, as well as being lead rider) and ignoring him. He was second again in Romandie in 1991, but finished the Tour de France in 72nd place; in 1992 and 1993 he was 18th and 24th respectively, proof that 1991 was a sign that his best years were gone rather than just a bad season, and they would be his final Tours. Having made a return to British racing to win the National Championship in 1995, he retired when his Le Groupement team fell apart shortly before the Tour, its main sponsor having withdrawn from cycling after being accused of being a pyramid scheme. To this day, Millar says that he suffered from bad management and was over-raced in preparation for the Grand Tours and describes schedules that are magnitudes busier than anything a potential Tour winner would face today. Had things have been otherwise, it seems entirely reasonable to believe that he would have been our first Grand Tour winner, almost thirty years before Bradley Wiggins.

While Millar was and still is a man who needs privacy and a quiet life away from reporters and photographers, he was enormously popular in Britain and came closer to becoming a household name than any rider since Tom Simpson - this was partly due to his successes (some of which have not yet been equaled - he remains the only British rider to have won the King of the Mountains in the Tour or the Giro as well as the only British rider to have finished top three in all three Grand Tours) but also because he was something of a loner, which appealed greatly to British cycling fans who, in many cases, grew up surrounded by football fans and without opportunity to discuss their beloved sport with friends (as was certainly the case for this writer). Yet when he was at the height of his fame in 1985, he starred in a TV advert for Kellogg's Start breakfast cereal; in retirement he would make an effort to repay fan's support, writing admirably impartial and often amusing product reviews for magazines and managing the Scottish team at the Tour of Britain, then known as the PruTour after main sponsor Prudential. In time it all became too much, so he disappeared. Rumours abounded as to where he might be or what might have happened to him with theories covering every possibility including imprisonment for an unknown crime, involuntary incarceration due to mental illness and a mystery death. Journalists sought him out, in one case concocting a story based on nothing at all other than a photograph in which the wind had blown the front of his t-shirt out from his chest that claimed he had undergone gender correction surgery. Fortunately, for all his shyness and dislike of publicity, Millar was a robust character who cared little for what others thought of him - he made it perfectly clear that he was completely unconcerned about that story and anything else anybody wrote about him.

Over the last couple of years, Millar has come out of hiding. Though public appearances remain exceedingly rare, he has forged new links with the world of cycling, including race analysis for Cycling News' 2011 Tour de France coverage in which he proved that at his understanding of the sport is as sharp as ever. Further access to his thoughts in the future would be very welcome; if he chooses otherwise, we as fans should respect his decision.


Sonia Huguet, born in Saint-Avold on this day in 1975, became French National Champion in Points racing in 1996 and Road Racing in 2003. In 2004, she won La Flèche Wallonne Féminine.

Shinichi Fukushima, born in Nagano Prefecture on this day in 1971, became National Road Race Champion in 2003. In addition to winning numerous Far Eastern races, he is one of the few Japanese riders to have made an impact in Europe, beginning with second place at the Prix d'Armorique in 2001. . In 2002 he was third at the Circuit de Saône-et-Loire, in 2006 he won Stage 1 at the Vuelta Ciclista a León and in 2010 he became National Champion for a second time. Fukushima signed to the Belgian Marlux-Ville de Charleroi team but remained with them for only six months, riding for Japanese teams until 2010 when he joined the South Korean Geumsan Ginseng Asia; then in 2011 he went to the Malaysian Terengganu and remains with them at the end of the 2012 season.

Sven-Åke Nilsson, born in Malmö, Sweden on this day in 1951, win the Tour de l'Avenir in 1976 and went on to achieve excellent results in a series of prestigious races, though he never quite managed to break through into the elite list of riders who have won those races. In 1978 he was 11th overall at the Tour de France; in 1979 he won Stage 4 and was second overall at Paris-Nice, then third at the Critérium International and the Amstel Gold Race. In 1980 he was second at La Flèche Wallonne and seventh overall at the Tour de France (and fourth in the King of the Mountains); then at the 1981 Tour he was eight overall and fifth in the King of the Mountains and at the 1982 Vuelta a Espana he won Stage 10 and was third overall.

Rie Katayama, born on this day in 1979
Brian Fowler, born in Christchurch on this day in 1962, became National Road Race Champion of New Zealand in 1988 and successfully defended his title one year later.

Other cyclists born on this day: Dieter Grabe (East Germany, 1945); Rie Katayama (Japan, 1979); Crystal Lane (Great Britain, 1985); Yury Yuda (Kazakhstan, 1983); Stanley Chambers (Great Britain , 1910); Kriengsak Varavudhi (Thailand, 1948); Oscar García (Argentina, 1941); Thierry Laurent (France, 1966); Koldo Fernández (Euskadi, 1981); Hernán Patiño (Colombia, 1966); Ivan Tsvetkov (Bulgaria, 1951).

Thursday 12 September 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 12.09.2013

Dan Albone
Albone aboard an Ivel racing bike
Born in Biggleswade, Great Britain on this day in 1860, Dan Albone spent his childhood living with his parents at the Ongley Arms Inn where, when he was nine years old, he was given a boneshaker bicycle - which was the very cutting edge of bike technology at that time and must have been a considerable financial outlay for whoever it was that bought it for him (presumably his parents), suggesting that he must already have earned a reputation for be gifted with mechanical objects. Four years later, having come up with a series of improvements, he designed and built a bike fitted with suspension and began winning races on it.

You can't buy an Ivel for £16 now
Albone took an apprenticeship at a local engineering firm when he left school; then when he was 20 started a company of his own, Ivel Cycle Works, based at the same premises as his parents' inn, where he created the Ivel Light Roadster, a racer and a tricycle, all of which were in high demand among the cyclists of the day. He built bikes for himself as well as for other riders and they were put to good use - having been one of the founding members of the legendary North Road Cycling Club in 1885, he began racing more seriously and won two events that year, then around 180 over the course of his career. That same year, John Kemp Starley revealed the famous Rover Safety Bicycle, the ancestor of all modern bikes, to the public; Albone was there to see it unveiled. He then produced his own improved version, considered by some to be a far superior machine to the Rover - among its fans was George Pilkington Mills, winner of the first Bordeaux-Paris race and the pre-eminent British cyclist of his generation, who used on to set a new 24-Hour World Record at 474km in 1886. He also developed the first safety tandem and a bike child seat and introduced the first frame with pump mounts; however, when a recession in the early 1890s badly hit cycling manufacture, the company went into voluntary liquidation.

Albone's genius was too great to be limited to one form of transport alone. Before Ivel closed, he used his knowledge of bike wheels to invent a new type of wheel for pony-pulled traps (a light, two-wheeled wagon). Previously, they had been fitted with heavy wooden wheels similar to those used on farm carts, Albone developed a type similar to bike wheels with metal spokes and rims, ball-bearing hubs and pneumatic tyres. He then redesigned the trap too, making it far lighter, faster and more comfortable, and they sold in large numbers. Towards the end of the century he began producing a car fitted with a 3hp Benz engine, then a motorbike.

Albone towards the end of his life
Ivel bikes are exceedingly rare today, the majority of them - in common with most bikes from the period - were either melted down for the war effort or simply rusted away. Albone is better known, therefore, for his tractors - or agricultural motors as they then known, the term tractor not becoming common until years later. Such machines had existed for more than a half a century by 1900, but they were enormously heavy steam-powered traction engines that would sink into soft ground if used to pull a plough (instead, they used a belt to pull a plough back and forth across a field while parked up at the side); also enormously expensive, many farmers continued to use heavy horses as their ancestors had done since medieval times. Internal combustion engines were also used on farms but, due to their unreliability and low power, only to power stationary equipment; so Albone designed  a much lighter vehicle and powered it with an engine made by Payne & Co. of Coventry. He filed the patent in 1902, then set up a new company named Ivel Agricultural Motors and displayed his machine at the Royal Agricultural Show the following year - it won a silver medal that year, then again in 1904.

Albone married Elizabeth Moulden in 1887. Two years later they had their first child, a boy named Stanley, then eleven years after Stanley's birth their daughter Alwyne Patricia was born. Albone died on the 30th of October 1906, from a stroke while at work, and is buried in Biggleswade Cemetery. The Ivel Agricultural Motor was revolutionary at the time of its release, and more than a century later still looks similar to a modern tractor overall (despite having three wheels), but following Albone's death it suffered from a lack of development and the company slipped into decline. It vanished forever after being bought by receivers in 1920.

Charles Laeser
Charles Laeser, who was born in Geneva on this day in 1879, won the National Track Stayers Championhip and turned professional in 1903. 1903 was also the year of the inaugural Tour de France; Laeser took part riding for La Française, one of the few foreigners among the 60 cyclists gathered gathered at the Café au Reveil Matin in Montgeron near Paris on the 1st of July to begin the race.

He did not finish Stage 3; however, in the early Tours a rider who abandoned was allowed to rejoin the race and continue competing for stage wins, though not for the overall General Classification, so four days later he started Stage 4 - that year's shortest stage at a mere 268km. Hippolyte Aucouturier looked the likely winner when he was spotted near the finish line and far ahead of the rest, but he was then also spotted drafting behind a car and the judges disqualified him. Laeser, meanwhile, was miles down the road and still trying to catch a group of six riders leading the race, as he had been for most of the stage. He could not, and they finished a full fifty minutes ahead of them' However, the riders did not set off all at the same time - Laeser had started an hour ahead of anyone in the lead group: thus he became the first foreigner to ever win a stage at the Tour de France.


Oscar Camenzind, born in Schwyz on this day in 1971, won the Swiss Road Race Championship and was second at the Tour de Suisse in 1997, then won the World Road Race Championship and the Giro di Lombardia as well as fourth place at the Giro d'Italia in 1998. In 2000, he won the Tour de Suisse outright and a year after that he won Liège-Bastogne-Liège. In 2004 he was third at the National Championships, but later that year he tested positive for EPO. He made a full confession before being taken to court in an effort to force him to reveal who had supplied the drug to him; he refused, saying that he was afraid of reprisals.

Bryce Lindores was born in Australia on this day in 1986 and lost his sight a week before his eighteenth birthday in an accident caused when a rope between his truck and a car he was towing snapped. Two years later, he began tandem cycling; after only six months he won the bronze medal at the IPC World Championships, then two years after that another bronze at the 2008 Olympic Games. Lindores was selected to represent his country at the 2012 Games, but could not compete after his sighted pilot Mark Jamieson was refused an entry visa to the United Kingdom on account of a criminal record for sexual offences.

Dag Otto Lauritzen, born in Grimstad on this day in 1956, won the Norwegian Road Race Championship in 1984, Stage 14 at the Tour de France in 1987 (his only Tour success in seven attempts) and was third at the Ronde van Vlaanderen in 1989.

Kevin Seeldreayers, boen in Boom, Belgium on this day in 1986, won the Youth category at Paris-Nice in 2009. A professional since 2007, he remained with Quickstep until 2011 when he moved to Astana.

Other cyclists born on this day: Zeng Bo (China, 1965); Mauro Trentini (Italy, 1970); Arvis Piziks (Latvia, 1969); Rafał Majka (Poland, 1989); Maciej Paterski (Poland, 1986); Hylton Mitchell (Trinidad and Tobago, 1926); Albert Wyckmans (Belgium, 1897, died 1995); Adolfo Alperi (Spain, 1970); Olle Wänlund (Sweden, 1923, died 2009); Omar Ochoa (Guatemala, 1971); Ignacio Astigarraga (Euskadi, 1936).

Wednesday 11 September 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 11.09.2013

Kathy Watt
Kathy Watt
Born Kathryn Ann Watt in Australia on this day in 1964, Kathy Watt is the daughter of marathon runner Geoff Watt, who died of exposure when she was five years old. Kathy initially followed her father into running and won a National Championship racing as a Junior, only taking up cycling to maintain fitness whilst recovering from tendon problems. She very rapidly discovered that she was much better at cycling than at running; in 1990 she won gold in the Road Race at the Commonwealth Games and came third overall at the Giro Donne.

In 1992, Watt became Elite National Road Race Champion for the first time - she would hold the title again in 1993, 1994 and 1998), and she also won the gold medal for the Road Race at the Olympics that year. In 1994, she won another Commonwealth Games Road Race gold and came second overall at the Giro Donne, in 1995 she was third at the World Individual Time Trial Championships and seventh overall at the Tour de France Féminin and in 1996 she won the National Time Trial title. In 1996, she became involved in a legal row with the National Cycling Federation which had chosen her to compete in the Pursuit event at that year's Olympics, then rescinded and gave the place to Lucy Tyler-Sharman, whom she had beaten at the National Track Championships in February after the US-born Australian track specialist suffered an asthma attack. Watt's Olympic place was not without conditions - the Federation had stipulated that, should another rider record a world-class time in the run-up to the Games then that rider would replace Watt. Tyler-Sharman subsequently did so, recording a time five seconds faster than Watt's National Championships personal best and only 0.2" behind the World Record; nevertheless, after an unusually fast hearing the Court for Arbitration in Sport found in Watt's favour and she was reinstated. She finished the event in eighth place.

Watt won the Oceania Championships Time Trial in 1997, then entered a period in which she seemed condemned to stay on the lower steps of the podium with a series of second and third places up until her retirement in 2000, inspired partly by another selection row in which she was unsuccessful. However, three years later she returned with the intention of competing in the 2004 Olympics; but then retired again when she didn't qualify - and then made another comeback in 2005, when she won the Chrono Champenois-Trophée Européen, this time intending to qualify for the 2006 Commonwealth Games, where she was second in the Time Trial. She won the National Time Trial Championship for a second time that year too, then in 2007 she won the Road Race at the Oceania Games and Stages 1, 2, 3, 4 and the General Classification at the Tour of Perth, before adding numerous podium finishes and a few further victories to her palmares over the following two years until her eventual retirement in 2009, when she was 45 years old.

Graeme Obree
Born in Nuneaton on this day in 1965 but raised in Scotland, Graeme Obree was one of the few British cyclists to approach household name status in Britain before Cavendish, Wiggins and Team Sky became superstars. This was largely due to Britain's love of eccentric inventors and to the record he set on a bike that newspapers misleadingly claimed to have been made out of old washing machines.

Obree's first official race was a 10-mile individual time trial, in which he competed wearing a pair of school shorts, an anorak and Doctor Marten boots. He assumed that the start and finish line were in the same place and, having passed the start line on his way back in, had got off his bike and was getting changed into fresh clothes when a race official pointed out his error; he got back on and finished with a time of 30' - not a bad result for a first attempt. He has suffered from bipolar disorder for most of his life and made the first of his three suicide attempts while still a teenager; during the 1990s he took an overdose of aspirin, using dirty water from a puddle to swallow the pills. However, even when in a problematic situation he is sometimes able to think big: when his bike shop failed and he was being pursued for outstanding college fees (and had started sniffing welding gas), he decided upon an unusual way of getting himself out of difficulty - he would set a new Hour Record. He says that, from the day the idea first came to him, he always told himself not that he would attempt the record, but that he would break it.

Obree in the "preying mantis" position
aboard Old Faithful
He did not use a conventional bike, instead designing and building one of his own with an unusual frame and handlebar set-up that allowed him to adopt a position, which became known as "preying mantis," more like that of a downhill skier than a cyclist. opening up his lungs. The bottom bracket was narrower than standard, keeping his knees tucked in for greater aerodynamic efficiency, the fork was one-sided and the chainstays were elevated; the handlebars were narrow and connected to a 0mm reach stem of the old-fashioned quill type. There was also a healthy dose of Obree eccentricity - the tyres were "one banana" wide and the wheels span on with taken from a washing machine, its designer reasoning that since the device they came from had been designed to rotate at 1,200rpm they would be better quality than typical bike bearings. For some reason, this proved highly appealing to journalists, who then ignored the rest of the bike and began the "made of old washing machine parts" myth; he later said that he wished he'd never mentioned it because people took less interest in the numerous other innovative features of the bike and his achievements aboard it.

He named it Old Faithful, and it was far from the prettiest bike ever made - in fact, were it not for the three-spoke carbon fibre wheels and the 53x13 (110"), it looked rather like a Raleigh folding shopper bike from the 1970s. On the 16th of July in 1993, he took it to Hamar Olympic Hall velodrome in Norway and made his attempt at beating the record set by Francesco Moser's nine-year-old 51.151km record - and failed to beat it by a kilometre. But Obree, despite his illness, does not give up easily once he's set out to do something. He had booked the velodrome for 24 hours and so, rather than going home, he decided he would make another attempt the following morning. Lacking the budget to employ a support team with highly trained masseur, he came up with a typically Obreean method to prevent his muscles seizing up over night - he drank several pints of water before going to bed, thus ensuring that he would wake up within a couple of hours needing to visit the lavatory. When he did, he stretched and then drank more water to make sure he'd wake up again. Then, on the 17th, he went back onto the track and recorded 51.596, taking the record.

It lasted for only six days - on the 23rd, Chris Boardman rode 52.270km on the track at Bordeaux, using a bike with a carbon fibre frame and tri-bars. Meanwhile, Francesco Moser was working towards a new Veteran's Hour Record with a new bike that allowed him to copy Obree's "preying mantis" position; on the 15th of January 1994 he did it at altitude (thus in thinner air, creating less resistance) in Mexico City.

Obree and Boardman had become rivals. Obree beat the Englishman in the Pursuit at the World Track Championships in 1993 and won the title; but it wasn't enough: their rivalry came from the Hour Record, and that's where it would be settled. Most riders, backed up by a big-name bike manufacturer, would set out on their mission to regain the Record on a brand new, top-secret machine following many millions of dollars' worth of research - Obree simply made a few minor adjustments to Old Faithful (including bolting a pair of shoes onto the pedals so that his foot wouldn't slip off, as had happened at the World Championships). Then he got himself into the right mental state and, on the 19th of April, went to the same Bordeaux track used by Boardman to set his own record. Obree rode 52.713km, beating Boardman by 443m.

Less than five months later, Obree's record was broken by Miguel Indurain. The UCI now became concerned that innovative new bike designs were making it too easy for old records to be broken, thus the "preying mantis" position was banned in 1994, Obree being informed of the ban hours before he was due to use Old Faithful on the Pursuit at the World Championships. This, he felt (and, according to many, with some justification) was unfair; he refused to adopt a conventional position and was disqualified from the race. He responded by redesigning Old Faithful's handlebars to allow a new position known as "superman," with his arms out in front over the front wheel (Boardman used the position when he set his 1996 record at 56.375km); this two was banned after he won the Pursuit at the Worlds in 1995.

Obree's brother, Gordon, died in a car accident late in 1994, sparking off a new cycle of depression that coincided with his debut as a professional rider. He signed to Le Groupemont for the 1995 season but team manager Patrick Valcke was unable to understand his illness, firing him for what he saw as "lack of professionalism" - however, this may in fact have been fortunate from Obree's point of view because, shortly before the Tour de France that year, the team collapsed with its sponsor backed out cycling amid accusations that it was a disguised pyramid scheme. Obree says there was another reason he was sacked: having been selected to ride the Tour, he discovered that to have any chance at all of keeping up with the competition, he was going to have to dope - which he point-blank refused to do under any circumstances. "I feel I was robbed by a lot of these bastards taking drugs," he says, then adds: "I also hate the way that people think anyone who has ever achieved anything on a bike must have been taking drugs."

A prone bike. Obree's design is longer and lower and will be
fitted with a light-weight, aerodynamic shell
His illness became progressively worse over the coming years and, in 2001, he was discovered unconscious after attempting to hang himself in a barn near to stables where a horse belonging to his family was kept. It was at this point that his bipolar disorder was revealed to the world, his wife Anne - a nurse - attempting to explain the condition. In 2011, having split up from Anne, Obree revealed during a newspaper interview that he is homosexual and said that confusion prior to realising it had been a major cause of his depression and suicide attempts. He had come out to his family in 2005; almost two years after coming out in public he remains one of the very few sportsmen to have been brave enough to do so - and has doubtless been a source of inspiration and encouragement to many others. He seems happier now, and his intelligence makes his engaging and entertaining in interviews. In 2011, he revealed that, aged 47, he was setting out to beat the World Human-Powered Vehicle (HPV) Land-Speed record, using a prone bike (upon which the rider lies in a flat-out position) that he first thought up while lying in the bath and is building himself. Parts of it are made from old saucepans.

Lucien Buysse
Lucien Buysse
Born in Wontergem, Belgium on this day in 1892, Lucien Buysse entered the last Tour de France before the First World War in 1914 with Alcyon-Soly but didn't finish the race. He survived the War, then returned to cycling with Legnano-Pirelli in 1919 and rode another Tour; once again, he did not finish. He didn't enter for the following three years but finished the 1920 Paris-Roubaix in third place, then in 1923 he went back to the Tour with older brother Marcel's M. Buysse-Colonial team, won Stage 8 and finished in eighth place overall. In 1924 and 1925 he rode with Automoto purely to support Ottavio Bottecchia, for which reason he frequently described as having been the first domestique in Tour history. He came third in 1924, then second in 1925.

In 1926, the Tour was reduced to 17 stages, there having been 18 in 1925 - however, it was most definitely not easier. For a start, riders would face the Alps twice, on the way out and the way back in and again, and Henri Desgrange (who believed that the ideal Tour would be one in which only one rider finished) hadn't cut a stage for their benefit - he did it to increase the average stage length. What's more, the parcours followed the nations borders more closely than ever before or since; making this the longest Tour in history at 5,745km (for comparison, the 2012 edition is 3,497km). Bottecchia, having won the previous two editions, was most fans' favourite, but many others fancied Alcyon's Adelin Benoit who had surprised everyone with a stage win and five days in the maillot jaune in 1925. A classic battle was expected, but as tends to be the way in the Tour it turned out far better than anyone had hoped. Right from the first stage unexpected things happened, beginning with a perfect solo break by Buysse, accompanied by another brother named Jules (there was a Michel, too), which lasted until the end of the stage where he won by thirteen minutes. Stage 2 ended with a bunch sprint won by little-known Belgian rider Aimé Dossche, who had picked up his first professional contract with Automoto at the the start of the year but seems to have switched to Christophe (which, like Automoto, was co-sponsored by Hutchinson at that time) before the Tour; so the GC remained virtually unchanged. Then in Stage 3 Gustaaf van Slembrouck managed to grab a lead that kept him in the maillot jaune for six days.

During Stage 3, Buysse received news that his infant daughter had died (some historians say she died before the Tour) but, after thinking things over, decided to honour his family's request that he continue and try to win a stage that could be dedicated to the memory. Stage 4 was perhaps too soon and went to Félix Sellier instead; Stage 5 to Adelin Benoit. Another little-known Belgian named Joseph van Daam won Stage 6 after judges declared that Sellier had broken race regulations (van Daam would win two more later on, so he was much more famous when the race ended), then Nicolas Frantz won Stage 7; since Frantz had finished fourth in 1925 and showed enormous promise, instantly made him a favourite too. Van Daam won Stage 8, this time on his own merit, then Frantz took Stage 9. The race had truly begun now, with a new challenger making things difficult for Bottecchia and Benoit.


Tour director HenriDesgrange, ever since he'd been convinced that it was possible to send the race over the high mountains without the riders dying, rebelling or being eaten by bears (something that, perhaps unfortunately in the eyes of some fans, has yet to happen in the Tour) and that in fact the public enjoyed the race more when it was an heroic spectacle, was always on the look-out for ways to make the parcours more difficult. Stage 10 went far beyond anything from previous years - and, say the ever-dwindling number of people who were there to see it, since. In terms of distance, it wasn't the longest stage that year - ten stages were longer, the longest 433km - but its 326km took the riders over some of the toughest roads in France, and they set out at midnight to be in with a chance of finishing by the following afternoon. Matters were not improved by a storm on the Col d'Aspin, but the Buysse brothers were made of stern stuff: while the rest of the peloton survived, they attacked hard and Lucien won after riding for seventeen hours. He had taken the maillot jaune, but better still he could dedicate the hardest stage in the history of the Tour to the memory of his daughter.


Buysse on Tourmalet
When he won Stage 11 two days later, he gained a lead of more than an hour over his nearest rival. From now on, he was able to stay tucked safely away in the peloton, conserving his energy and simply making sure that he finished (which didn't prevent him winning the meilleur grimpeur, a prize for the best climber from the days before the King of the Mountains competition). Frantz won two more stages once the race returned to the flatlands, but he didn't have a hope of getting anywhere near the leader now and had to be content with second place. As they crossed the finish line in Paris behind stage winner Dossche, the gap between them was 1h22'25" (Buysse's overall time was 238h44'25" - around two-and-three-quarter times as long as Cadel Evan's 2011 winning time); a far greater memorial to his daughter than a stage win.

Buysse retired in 1933, by which time he was 41 years old - still a young man by today's standards,  but well into middle-age by those of the time. He lived for almost half a century more, dying at the age of 87 on the 3rd of January in 1980.



Lieuwe Westra, riding at the time of writing for Vacansoleil-DCM, was born in Mûnein, Netherlands on this day in 1982. Having been a regular inclusion in the top ten placings since turning professional in 2006, 2012 has been the best year of Westra's career to date with one stage win, third place in the Points competition and second place overall at Paris-Nice, second place at the Dreidaagse van De Panne, second place at the Tour of Belgium, victory at the National Independent Time Trial Championship and first place overall at the Post Danmark Rundt. 2013 was also a success with a stage win at the Tour of California and victory at the National Time Trial Championship.

Roberto Chiappa, born in Terni, Italy on this day in 1973, was Under-19 World Sprint Champion in 1991, Amateur World Tandem Champion in 1993. World Military Sprint Champion in 1994, Italian Keirin Champion from 2004 to 2008 and National Sprint Champion from 2004 to 2010.

Matthew Gilmore, born in Gent, Belgium on this day in 1972, has held one World Track Championship title, five European Track Championships titles and one from the National Championships - the Australian National Championships, having raced with an Australian licence during the first years of his career on account of his father, 1967 Australian National Road Race Champion Graeme Gilmore. Graeme married Tom Simpson's sister; Matthew is, therefore, Tom's nephew.

Dainis Ozols, born in Smiltene, Latvia on this day in 1966, won the Irish Rás Tailteann in 1989, the Regio Tour and a bronze medal for in the Road Race at the Olympics in 1992, the Circuit Franco-Belge in 1993 and was National Independent Time Trial Champion in 1997, 1998 and 1999. Every now and then, a rider comes along who, for no apparent reason, completely confuses race announcers, reporters and on-screen graphics technicians.Ozols was one of them; his name was, more frequently than not, given as Ozolos and occasionally with other surplus letters, while his nationality was often incorrectly listed as Lithuanian or Polish.

Other cyclists born on this day: Willi Fuggerer (Germany, 1941); Christophe Le Mével (France, 1980); Karen Matamoros (Costa Rica, 1982); Suleman Ambaye (Ethiopia, 1935); Vitool Charernratana (Thailand, 1942); Marc Willers (New Zealand, 1985); René Andring (Luxembourg, 1939); Miguel Mora (Spain, 1936, died 2012); Mariano Piccoli (Italy, 1970); Patricio Almonacid (Chile, 1979); Claude Magni (France, 1950); Denis Pelizzari (France, 1960); Roman Čermák (Czechoslovakia, 1959); John Thorsen (Australia, 1957).

Tuesday 10 September 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 10.09.2013

Filippo Pozzato
Pozzato leads Boonen, Oude Kwaremont,
Ronde van Vlaanderen 2012
In 2000, three very promising young riders on Mapei's development team reached a point at which they were ready to be unleashed upon the racing world. They became known as the Classe di '81, after the year in which they were born, and they would go on to rank among the most successful riders of the next decade and beyond - they were Fabian Cancellara, Bernhard Eisel and Filippo Pozzato, who was born on this day in Sandrigo, Italy.

Pozzato had already enjoyed considerable success as an amateur, having stood on the podium at the Junior World Championships four times and once at the Youth Olympics. He spent 2000 and 2001 adjusting to the new, higher level of competition with which he was now faced, then in in 2002 he won fourteen races and came second at the Elite National Road Race Championship. A year after that, riding for Fasso Bortolo since Mapei backed out of cycling, he won Tirreno-Adriatico and was again second at the Nationals; then in 2004 he won Stage 7 at the Tour de France. Overall, however, he enjoyed few wins during his time with the team, a fact he blamed on personality clashes with manager Giancarlo Ferretti.

The Mapei team had been co-sponsored by QuickStep, a Belgian manufacturer of laminate flooring materials; Pozzato returned to them when he joined the QuickStep-Innergetic team in 2005. He rode the Giro d'Italia that year and finished two stages in the top ten, then in 2006 he achieved the greatest victory of his career up to that point when he won Milan-San Remo, one of the Monument classics that, after the three Grand Tours and the World Championships, are the most prestigious races in cycling. Having switched to Liquigas for 2007 he won the Omloop het Nieuwsblad - not a Monument, but one of the most important and challenging classics in the eyes of many riders and fans alike. He then switched to Katusha in 2009 and won the E3 Harelbeke, thus proving that his Omloop victory was down to more than mere luck and disproving the old belief that Italian riders couldn't perform well in the Northern Classics. He remained with Katusha until the end of 2011, winning Stage 12 at the Giro in 2010 before having a quiet season the following year.

For 2012, he stepped down to the ProContinental ranks with a contract at the British-registered Farnese Vini-Selle Italia: he was sixth at Milano-San Remo and the Dwars door Vlaanderen, ninth at Gent-Wevelgem and second at the Ronde van Vlaanderen Monument that year, but the latter result was not earned without controversy after he clung on to eventual winner Tom Boonen's wheel at several key points in the race, including on the approach to the finish line. This was not the first time he'd been known to use such a tactic which, while not forbidden by the rules, is seen as bad form and makes a rider disliked by his peers - which is why Pozzato's nickname is "The Shadow." The results brought him a new World Tour-level contract with Lampre-Merida for 2013; two top ten stage finishes at the Giro d'Italia proved that in his fourteenth professional year he remained a formidable rider.

Christopher Sutton
Born in New South Wales on this day in 1984, Chris Sutton is the son of the NSW Institute of Sport's chief cycling coach Gary Sutton and the nephew of British Cycling chief track coach Shane Sutton, both of them retired professional cyclists - it's no surprise, then, that he became a professional cyclist too.

Christopher Sutton
Sutton had already won a stage at the Bay Classic (2003) and been National Points Champion (2004) when he signed up to Cofidis as a trainee in 2005. He won the Under-23 National Road Race and Elite Madison Championships at home that year, also winning the Coppa G. Romita and U-23 GP Liberazione in Italy; which earned him his first full professional contract from Cofidis for 2006, then he won the GP Cholet-Pays de Loire and his contract was extended through 2007. That year, he won four times and attracted a more lucrative contract from Slipstream-Chipotle, with whom he would stay until the end of 2009.

In 2008, he rode the Giro d'Italia and got his first taste of major success when Slipstream won the Stage 1 team time trial, giving a good account of himself later on in the race with two top 20 stage finishes. Later in the year he won a stage race - the Ronde van Zeeland Seaports - for the first time, then in 2009 he won Stage 1 at the Tour of Britain and was second in the overall General Classification. He apparently liked what he saw of Britain, because late in the season he announced that he would be riding for the new British team Sky the following year. With them, he won another Bay Classic and returned to the Giro, though he won no stages and finished 133rd. 2011 was his real breakthrough year - first, he won the tough 193km Classic Kuurne-Brussels-Kuurne, then Stage 2 at the Vuelta a Espana, his first Grand Tour stage. He remained with Sky through 2012 and 2013.


Paulina Brzeźna, born in Środa Śląska on this day in 1981, came third at the Polish Road Race Championship in 2001 and turned professional with Bonda-Lukowski for the following two seasons - which passed without victory or notable results. In 2004 she switched to MKS Start Peugeot Andrzej Kita Lublin and came second at the Nationals, then in 2005 she won. In 2006 she was second at in the Road Race and third in the time trial at the Nationals, which brought her to the attention of the better-known Dutch-based AA Drink-Leontien.nl, one of the most respected teams in women's cycling; she joined them for 2007 and 2008, winning the National Road Race title for a second time and taking a silver for the Time Trial as well as winning a stage at the Tour de Limousin. She was second again in the Time Trial and third in the Road Race at the Nationals in 2009, by which time she'd signed to RedSun; then went another year without notable results before coming second in the National Road Race Championship in 2011 and 2012. In 2013, her return to the top continued with second place in the National Road Race Championship, third in the National Time Trial Championship, a stage win at the Gracia Orlova and another at the Krasna Lipa.

Other cyclists born on this day: Greg Henderson (New Zealand, 1976); Aaron Kemps (Australia, 1983); Piet van der Lans (Netherlands, 1940); Willi Meurer (Germany, 1915, died 1981); Ovidiu Oprea (Romania, 1976); Giuseppe Palumbo (Italy, 1975); Björn Johansson (Sweden, 1963); Alfred Tourville (Canada, 1908).

Monday 9 September 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 09.09.2013

Alison Sydor
Alison Sydor
Born in Alberta on this day in 1966, Alison Sydor discovered cycling while studying at the University of Victoria and went on to become one of the most successful Canadian cyclists of all time, enjoying numerous victories in road racing, mountain biking and cyclo cross.

Sydor's first big win was the 1990 National Road Race Championship; she kept that title in 1991 and took a bronze medal at the World Road Race Championship, then won a silver at the World Cross Country Mountain Bike Championship in 1992. She was National Road Race Champion for a third time in 1993, then for a fourth time in 1994 - when she also won the World and National  Cross Country Championships. She would keep both the MTB titles in 1995 and 1996, the year that she took second place in the MTB race at the Olympics, then in 1997 she was second in the Cross Country World Cup - which she then won in 1998 (when she was also second in the National Road Race Championship) and again 1999.

The remainder of Sydor's career passed without the big wins she'd enjoyed in the past, but she remained a regular sight on the podium with second place at the World Championship and third at the World Cup in 2000, second in the World Championship in 2001 and 2003, third in the World Championship in 2004 and second place in the Nationals in 2005 and 2006 and second in the National Cyclo Cross Championship in 2007. In her 19-year professional career, she finished in the top five at the World Championships 13 times consecutively, won 17 rounds of the World Cup, won silver medals at the Olympics and the Commonwealth Games and was inducted into both the Mountain Bike Hall of Fame and the British Columbia Sports Hall of Fame.

Rik van Steenbergen
Belgium has produced an inordinate number of great cyclists. Among them, of course, is Eddy Merckx, the most successful rider of all time with some 525 professional victories; Rik van Steenbergen, who was born in Arendonk on this day in 1929, is widely considered to be one of the best of the rest. He came from a poor family and, like so many before and since, learned to ride fast on an old, heavy delivery bike that came with his first job as a delivery boy; then began racing at the age of sixteen.

Rik van Steenbergen
09.09.1924-15.05.2003
Within a few years, van Steenbergen had become known as one of the strongest Junior riders in the country. After winning the sprint at the National Track Championships in 1942, he turned professional with A. Trialoux-Wolber for the 1943 season - and won 17 races, including the Elite National Road Race Championship, then in 1944 he became the youngest man in history to win the notoriously tough Ronde van Vlaanderen. It became apparent early in the race that he was going to win - as soon as the riders set off, it was obvious to all that not only was he on perfect form, he was having the sort of day that all cyclists dream about in which his body worked in perfect unison with his machine. He remembered years later that it had been the best ride of his life: "I could do whatever I liked, ride better than anyone," he said. "In the end I was with Briek Schotte and Enkel Thiétard. They were happy just to follow me. We made an agreement. I said that they could stay with me until we got to Kwatrecht. I wouldn't drop them provided they'd do their best to work with me. They were happy with that. They didn't have a choice. Under the bridge at Kwatrecht I just got rid of them."

1945 brought a second National Road Race Championship victory, 1946 brought seventeen victories including a second Ronde van Vlaanderen and he took a bronze medal at the World Road Race Championship. 1947 was a quieter year with "only" eight victories, then in 1948 he won Paris-Roubaix, the race that many riders consider the hardest of them all, setting an average speed whilst doing so that also netted him the Ruban Jaune, a prize established by Henri Desgrange to recognise the rider who set the fastest averag in a race more than 200km long during any one year (he chose yellow for the same reason the leader's jersey in the Tour de France is yellow: his L'Auto newspaper was printed on yellow paper). His average was 46.612km - a new record, which stood until 1955, three years after he won the race for a second time in 1952.

Van Steenbergen became World Road Race Champion for the first time in 1949, the perfect end to a year that saw him win fifteen races including the Waalse Pijl and Stages 12 and 21 at the Tour de France. He was very much a one-day and Classics specialist, but this would not be the only time he did well in a stage race - in 1950, he won three stages and the overall General Classification at the Tour de l'Ouest as well as Stages 1 and 15 and second place overall at the Giro d'Italia; two years after that he won four stages and the General Classification at the Vuelta a la Argentina, Stages 6, 9 and 10 at the Giro and Stage 1 at the Tour. He also won Stage 9 at the Giro in 1953, then Stages 5, 16, 17 and 22 at the same race in 1954 - earlier in the year he had won Milan-San Remo, and later in the year he would win another National Road Race Championship. In 1956 he won Stages 1, 7, 8, 11, 14, 17 and the overall Points competition at the Vuelta a Espana, then became World Road Race Champion for a second time, successfully defending the title in 1957 after going back to the Giro to win Stages 1, 11, 17b, 20 and 21.

Van Steenbergen's pavé on the Chemin des Géants,
commemorating his two Paris-Roubaix victories
In 1958 he won 27 races including a second Waalse Pijl, another National Road Race Championship and the European Madison Championship, the latter apparently encouraging him to begin competing in more track races - he defended the Madison title and added the European Omnium title in 1959 (and won 17 road races), then kept the Madison title until 1961 (winning a total of 37 road races during the two intervening years. He eventually retired, after 23 seasons racing at the top level of the sport, in 1966; he slowed down a little over the last four years but still won another 18 races. Estimates vary widely, but some claim that he won around 1,000 races over the course of his career. Some put it much higher - author Les Woodland says he won 1,314 races on the track alone.

There's an old saying: "how the mighty fall." It couldn't be more true than when applied to van Steenbergen. During his professional career, van Steenbergen had a reputation for being astute with his money; René de Latour revealed that he played the stock markets. Van Steenbergen later said that his biggest mistake had been not finding a job to fill the gap left by cycling when he retired, instead spending twelve years doing little while gambling satisified the need for excitement that the stock markets once had. He became addicted, squandering his wealth and ending up in such a poor financial state that he was reduced to starring in a pornographic film to earn money. Later he became subject of a police investigation when he was suspected of "incitement to debauchery," conspiracy and drug trafficking and even went to prison for a short while. When his wife left him he began drinking heavily and spent much of 1966 to 1970 drunk. Fortunately, he fell in love again, this time with a British woman from Wigan named Doreen Hewitt and, with her help, defeated his addictions and rebuilt his life, then found a new job and happiness. He lived for another 33 years, dying at the age of 78 on the 15th of May in 2003.

Freddy Bichot
Freddy Bichot, born in Saint-Fort, France on this day in 1979, was the surprise winner at the National Amateur Championships in 2002 - where very few riders and fans had ever heard of him - just like that he became famous and was offered a trainee contract with La Française des Jeux. Unfortunately, he'd find more fame a short while later when it was revealed that he'd tested positive for testosterone, having apparently decided that he'd spent enough time as an obscure amateur and that a chemical shortcut to professional racing was the way to further his career. He was banned for one year.

When the ban expired, Bichot returned to amateur racing but was rapidly picked up by Barloworld, the returned to what was now named fdjeux.com for 2004. He rode the Giro d'Italia that year but abandoned before Stage 10 then, having won Etoile de Bessèges early in the season, went back in 2005 and abandoned before Stage 14. In 2006, he made no impact at the Vuelta a Espana; then in 2007 he took a step down into the ProContinental ranks with a switch to Agritubel, who received a wildcard entry to the Tour de France that year - and, suddenly, things started falling into place: he finished Stage 12 in 11th place and Stage 20 in 12th (he won the Combativity award for the stage), both respectable results, then came second on Stage 3 at the Tour of Britain later in the year. In 2008, however, the promise faded: he won the Boucles de la Mayenne, but his best Tour result was 25th on Stage 21 and he was far down the list on the majority of other stages, finishing in 135th place overall.

Bichot remained with Agritubel in 2009, achieving four victories that year, then moved to BBox-Bouygues Telecom for 2010 and 2011 with two victories in the latter year. He has been racing for Continental team Veranda Rideau in 2012 and won the Trophée des Champions  and the Sprints classification at the Tour de Limousin.

Aitor Osa, born in Zestoa, Euskadi in this day in 1973, came ninth overall in the 2001 Vuelta a Espana, won the Vuelta's King of the Mountains and the Tour of the Basque Country in 2002 and came second at La Flèche Wallonne in 2003. He would later be implicated in the Operacion Puerto doping scandal when he was suspected of being "8," the owner of bags containing preserved blood found in Eufemiano Fuente's laboratory. Aitor's younger brother Unai was believed to be "7," owner of more bags.

Markus Fothen, born in Kaarst, West Germany on this day in 1981, won the Under-23 World Time Trial Championship in 2003. In 2005, only his second year as a professional, he was 12th overall at the Giro d'Italia; the year after that 15th over at the Tour de France and in 2008 he won Stage 5 and was eighth overall at the Tour de Suisse. Fothen rode for Gerolsteiner for five years until 2009, then switched to Milram for two years. In 2011 he moved down to Continental-clas racing with NSP-Ghost and stayed with them through 2012 and 2013.

Other cyclists born on this day: Jean-Louis Harel (France, 1965); Salim Mohammed (Trinidad and Tobago, 1946); Laurent Vial (Switzerland, 1959); Omer Beaugendre (France, 1883, died 1954); Manfred Ulbricht (East Germany, 1947); Nuno Ribeiro (Portugal, 1977); Gvido Miezis (Latvia 1980); Arvīds Immermanis (Latvia, 1912, died 1947); Georgi Fortunov (Bulgaria, 1957); Zbysław Zając (Poland, 1933, died 1985); Taworn Tarwan (Thailand, 1947); Wiktor Olecki (Poland, 1909, died 1981); Charles Bana (Cameroon, 1956); André Lepère (France, 1878, died 1964); Edmund Hansen (Denmark, 1900, died 1995); Georges Détreille (France, 1893, died 1957).

Sunday 8 September 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 08.09.2013

Jean-Pierre Monseré
Jean-Pierre Monseré, born on this day in 1948 in Roeselare, Belgium and known as Jempi, turned professional with the famous Flandria team in 1969 and won the Giro di Lombardia that year. In 1970, he won the World Road Race Championship - thus becoming the second youngest rider to have done so at 22 years old (for all you fact hounds, the youngest was Karel Kaers who was 20 when he won in 1934). 1971 started well with victory at the Vuelta a Andalucia, but tragedy struck on the 15th of March in 1971:  he was killed instantly during the Grote Jaarmarktprijs when he collided with a car on the parcours between Lille and Gierle.

A monument erected at the spot where he died can be found on the N140 (51° 15' 9.54" N  4° 50' 34.71" E). He left behind his wife and one-year-old son Giovanni. In an even greater tragedy, Giovanni also died in a collision with a car in 1976 while riding a bike given to him as a first communion gift by Freddy Maertens, World Champion in 1976 and 1981.


Alexi Singh Grewal
Alexi Singh Grewal
Born in Aspen, USA on this day in 1960, Alexi Singh Grewal won the Mount Evans Hill Climb with a time of 1h57'36" in 1981 and the Cascade Classic in 1982, then became the first American rider to win the gold medal for the Men's Road Race in the Olympics in 1984. He won Mount Evans again the same year, this time recording a time of 1h47'51", and in 1990 set a new record time in the race at 1h46'29".

In 2008, VeloNews published an essay by Grewal in which he confessed to his own doping. "My prayer and heart is that if, and I still hope that that day comes, that my son desires to taste the “King of Sports” that he can do so knowing that somewhere along the line and in some fashion I came clean and was willing at least once to speak out and do something so that what I saw and experienced is not what he will," he said. Grewal is descended from Punjabi Sikh immigrants and his brothers Rishi and Ranjeet also enjoyed successful cycling careers with numerous victories in mountain bike races. In 2010, it was reported that he was in training and would make a comeback to competition at the Quiznoz Pro Challenge.

Jean Aerts
Born in Laken on this day in 1907, the Belgian sprinter Jean Aerts became World and National Amateur Road Race Champion in 1927, then turned professional in 1929 and went on to win the World Elite Road Race Championships in 1935 - the first man to have been World Champion as an amateur and a professional.

Aerts at the Tour de France, 1929
Like most sprinters Aerts performed poorly in hilly races, but he could do well in a stage race provided there were plenty of flat stages. He won Stages 1, 3, 4, 5 and 7 at the Volta a Catalunya and came second overall in 1929 and won Stage 6 at the Tour de France the following year; then won Paris-Brussels in 1931, Stage 1 at the Tour in 1932, Stages 2, 3, 5 and overall at the Tour of Belgium plus Stages 4, 15, 17, 19, 20 and 21 at the Tour de France in 1933 and Stages 4, 8, 10 and 19 at the Tour in 1935. In 1936 he became National Road Race Champion for a second time, then took the National Track Stayers Championship in 1941 and 1942 before retiring from competition in 1943.

Aerts' first team was Elvish-Fontan-Wolber, with whom he remained for one season. 1930 was spent riding for Fontan-Wolber and Alcyon-Dunlop; he would stay with Alcyon until 1940 when he raced as an individual.

Pete Chisman
Pete Chisman, born on this day in 1940, won the first race - a cyclo cross event at Durham, the city in which he was born - he ever entered, despite competing on a borrowed bike he'd never ridden before. In 1958 he won six races, then in 1960 he won thirteen; a year later he was selected for the Northern England team at the Tour of Britain (then known as the Milk Race after main sponsor the Milk Marketing Board) - he won Stages 1 and 7, was second on Stage 11a and finished in fourth place overall. He won no stages in 1962 but was second twice and third once, which earned him a place on the England team in 1963. That year, he won Stages 1 and 2 and finished in first place overall after leading the race throughout.

Chisman, like many British cyclists of his day, remained an amateur for far longer than most riders on the Continent, despite gaining more good results after his Milk Race victory. In 1965 he won Stage 4 at the Tour de l'Avenir, which finally brought him offers of contracts promising good money and he turned professional for Raleigh-BMB the following year and won numerous prestigious British races. In 1967 he went to the Tour de France, riding for the Great Britain team that included Barry Hoban (who was the most successful British rider in the history of the Tour until Mark Cavendish beat his stage win total and Bradley Wiggins won) and Tom Simpson, who died during the race that same year on Ventoux. Road racing had been taking place in Britain since the Second World War (having been banned by the National Cycling Union since the late 19th Century before that), but the British races were incomparable to those across the Channel; Chisman, like so many others to make the trip over, was completely overwhelmed by the much higher level of competition and, after finishing 123rd in Stage 1a and 122nd in Stage 1b, he abandoned. He was third at the first Simpson Memorial in 1968.

The Tour de l'Avenir is designed to reveal potential Grand Tour stars of the future; it seems highly likely, therefore, that Chisman could have developed and might even have enjoyed an illustrious career in Europe, perhaps even become a household name like Hoban and Simpson did. However, he never really took to professional cycling - for him, joy came from riding his bike rather than winning races and the ever-present need to perform well in professional cycling detracted from that. He retired from competition in 1971 and worked as a civil engineer, but continued riding almost every day until he died following prostate surgery in 2003.


Michael Shermer
Michael Shermer
Born in Altadena, California on this day in 1954, Michael Shermer left university armed with a BA in psychology/biology and an MA in experimental psychology in 1978, then took up competitive cycling. His race results were not especially impressive, but he had a lasting impact on the sport - he worked with Bell in 1979, assisting them in the development of the first modern cycling helmets (it's because of him that modern helmets loosely resemble the old-fashioned leather helmets rather than motorcycle helmets, which he said cyclists would dislike for their aesthetics and lack of air vents) and in 1982 with Spenco, the company that introduced the first saddles and cycling gloves fitted with gel inserts to reduce saddle sores and carpal tunnel syndrome. He was also part of the committee that founded and organised the first Race Across America in 1982 - he took part in the race that year and in 1983, 1984, 1985 and 1989, served as an assistant director for six years and as executive director for seven years.

In 1983, while climbing the Loveland Pass in Colorado and thinking about a nutritionist with a rather dubious PhD he'd been advised by for several months, Shermer reached a conclusion that what he terms "a host of weird things" had offered him no real benefits - among them were some truly bizarre alternative therapies including pyramidology, chiropractic, negative ion treatment and rolfing (a form of massage that claims to "organise the whole body in gravity"). He decided then and there that he would stop attempting to rationalise therapies and encourage others to think about them, rather than accept them without question, which, when he'd retired from competition, inspired him to found the Skeptics' Society in 1992. The Society has continued growing ever since and now publishes a quarterly magazine, available worldwide, and has more than 55,000 members including several well-known scientists from a variety of fields. Shermer has authored and published 17 books on science and scepticism and is a regular on television, frequently appearing in debates.


Italian cyclo cross rider Daniele Pontoni, born in Udine on this day in 1966, won the Amateur World CX Championships in 1992 and turned professional two years later. He then won the Elite National Championships eleven times consecutively, the Elite World Championships in 1997 (along with the National Cross Country Mountain Bike Championships) and twelve Superprestige races.

Ángel Colla, born in Argentina on this day in 1973, became National Road Race Champion in 2004.

Walter Generati
Walter Generati, born in Solara, Italy on this day in 1913, won Stage 11 and came sixth overall at the Giro d'Italia and won Stage 3 at the Tour de France in 1937, won Stage 4b and came sixth again at the Giro in 1938 and won Stage 7 and was seventh overall at the Giro in 1940.

Other cyclists born on this day: Jan Wijnants (Belgium, 1958); Albert Blattmann (Switzerland, 1904, died 1967); Nello Ciaccheri (Italy, 1893, died 1971); Frans van den Bosch (Belgium, 1934); Roberto García (El Salvador, 1937); Éva Izsák (Hungary, 1967); Koen de Kort (Netherlands, 1982); Frederik Willems (Belgium, 1979); Jetse Bol (Netherlands, 1989); Haile Micael Kedir (Ethiopia, 1944); George Estman (South Africa, 1922, died 2006); Steffen Blochwitz (East Germany, 1967); Hans Wolf (USA, 1940); Sergio Martínez (Cuba, 1943, died 1979); Phil Bateman (Great Britain, 1962); Rubén Etchebarne (Uruguay, 1936); Luis Manrique (Colombia, 1955); Loic Gautier (France, 1954); Guglielmo Bossi (Italy, 1901); Dirkie Binneman (South Africa, 1918, died 1959).