Tuesday, 6 March 2012

Daily Cycling Facts 06.03.12

Paris-Nice began on this day in 1988, 1994, 2005 and 2011. The 1988 edition brought a record seventh victory for the Irish rider Sean Kelly. Unlike Jacques Anquetil's five wins - which he'd equaled in 1986 - Sean's seven ran consecutively and as such are likely to be never equaled, let alone broken. The start line was moved to start Villefranche-sur-Saône after two years in Paris.

In 1994 Tony Rominger became the third Swiss rider to win the event, then Bobby Julich was the first from the USA in 2005. Tony Martin, the German rider by then well on his way to taking the unofficial World's Fastest Cyclist from Fabian Cancellara, won in 2011.

Gerrie Knetemann
Gerrie Knetemann, born in Amsterdam on this day in 1951, shares the Dutch record for Tour de France stages won (10) with Jan Raas and Joop Zoetemelk. His career took off in 1974 with victory at the Amstel Gold Race; then he won Stage 12 at the Tour in 1975 and journalists discovered he was their dream come true - not only was he showing signs of being a great rider, he was also highly intelligent with a fully-operational and razor-sharp sense of humour. Before long, he was the star of special features during Dutch coverage of the Tour and other races, giving a unique and frequently very funny take on the event.

The next year, he won the first of his four triumphs at the Ronde van Nederland (also 1980, 1981, 1986) and a string of other races including the Vuelta a Andalucia and in 1977, the Four Days of Dunkirk and Stages 19 and 21 at the Tour. 1978 saw him take victory at the Six Days of Ghent, Six Days of Maastricht, the Tour Méditerranéen and Paris-Nice, also winning Stages 18 and 22 on the Champs-Élysées at the Tour where he wore the race leader's yellow jersey for two days, and the World Road Race Championship. He wore yellow again at the 1979 Tour, this time for one day and won the prologue and Stage 22; then achieved a similar result in 1980 with a win in Stage 12. He didn't win any stages in 1981 but wore the jersey for four days, suggesting that he had the makings of a General Classification contender as well as being capable of bagging stage wins, then won Stages 4 and 12 (and the Stage 9a team time trial) a year later. The Dutch fans wondered if, sooner or later, he might live up to that GC promise.

Then in 1983, having already won the year's Tour Méditerranéen, he was badly injured in a crash at the Dwars door Vlaanderen and took months to recover. He returned in 1984 and won a few races, but it was obvious at the Tour de France that something was wrong - the sparkle was no longer there, either when he raced or when he was interviewed. He seemed a different, less lively character altogether.

The following years brought some success - another Amstel Gold Race, the Six Days of Madrid, a Postgirot Open and of course his fourth Ronde van Nederland - but a part of him never recovered from the crash, and he retired in 1989. Having won 127 races over his 17 professional years, he was too valuable to be allowed to vanish from the cycling world and found employment as the national team coach. On the 2nd of November in 2004, he was mountain biking with three friends in Bergen, Noord-Holland when his bike threw its chain. He dismounted and, as he bent down to put it back on the chain ring, suffered a heart attack and died. He was 53. The Grote Prijs Gerrie Knetemann in Gelderland, Netherlands, was named in his honour and his daughter Roxanne is a professional cyclist with Skil-Koga.


Zak Carr, born in Norwich, Great Britain on this day in 1975, held National Time Trial titles for 50 miles, 100 miles and 12 hours and was to compete in the 2008 Paralympics as pilot to a blind stoker when he was killed by a car on the A11 near his home in Attleborough. The car's driver was later found guilty of negligence, having tried to drive home following an overnight flight which had caused him to fall asleep at the wheel and was sentenced to five years in prison.

Freddie Grubb
Freddie Grubb, who died on this day in 1949, was called "the most talked-of cyclist in Great Britain" in 1910 after he set a new 100 mile time trial record, covering the distance in under five hours - on road, riding a fixed-wheel bike without normal brakes. One year later he entered a 12-hour competition on a 210 mile course near Liverpool, that distance being judged impossible by the event's organisers. They had to extend it by 10.5 miles because Grubb ran out of road.

Review of an F.H. Grubb bike, 1920
Grubb could be seen as one of the forefathers of the Straight Edge movement that has many followers among BMX and mountain bike riders - he never smoked, refused to consume alcohol and was strictly vegetarian at a time when few had even heard of such a concept and the general wisdom was that cyclists should consume vast amounts of meat before a race (Maurice Garin famously got through 45 cutlets of meat during a 24-hour race 17 years earlier).

In 1912, he competed in the Olympics and won two silver medals, then turned professional in 1914. Cycling wrote, "He is 25 years of age, and scales 12st stripped, and when he gets accustomed to the Continental methods there is no reason he should not shine as a star of the very first order in the professional ranks." However, his professional racing career (which - who knows? - might have led to the first British success in the Tour de France) didn't last long - not, as was the case with so many riders of the day, due to war; but because he found European ways not at all to his liking - he said that the Continental riders would "stick an inflator [pump] in your spokes as quick as look at you" - and hankered to return home. He must really have hated it, because the National Cycling Union had banned road racing in Britain and the rules of the time stated that once a rider had competed as a professional, he or she could not downgrade to amateur status nor compete against amateurs. Thus, a return to Britain effectively spelled the end of his competitive career, yet he did it anyway.

Perhaps that made him bitter. After the First World War (during which he abandoned a bike shop he'd set up in 1914 and had to give up his vegetarianism or starve while serving in the Royal Navy), he went into business with a man named Ching Allin and, supported by funds from a member of his cycling club, the two men set themselves up as Allin & Grubb, a bike manufacturer based at 132 Whitehorse Road in Croydon, South London (the building, much altered, is still there and is now occupied by a firm of safe engineers. According to historian Mick Butler, Grubb was an intensely dislikable man who, among other things, demanded to be given sole credit for the quick release system they'd invented since he was the firm's chief designer and despite the fact that the system appears to have actually been invented by Charley Davey, the man who had provided the funds to start the business (incidentally, the quick release was the first example of its kind, predating better-known systems by several years). Customers found Grubb hard to deal with, so before long Allin was handling sales and relations while his partner concentrated on design.

Advert for Grubb bikes (£12!) from
Cycling, 22.05.1925
Nevertheless, the pair fell out: by 1920 Allin & Grubb had changed its name to A. H. Allin and was selling bikes under the Davey brand. Grubb, meanwhile, set up a new business based at 250 London Road in West Croydon (an advert in Cycling, 04.03.1920, lists F.H. Grubb at the address as having "no connection to any other company," suggesting that the split had been far less than amicable and that the two men were keen to distance themselves from one another - the very imposing building is still there, but is now an ice cream shop), moving to Twickenham in 1926, and by 1924 had a shop in Brixton. That company produced what is believed to be the first British recumbent bike and lasted until 1934 when it went into liquidation - not only had it lasted fourteen years, it must also have been financially successful because when Grubb set up a new company under the name FHG, he re-employed 20 of his old staff at a new premises located at 147a Haydon's Road in Wimbledon, South-West London (that building is long gone, replaced by ugly low-rose flats). His family kept the business going after his death, then sold it in 1952 to Holdsworth, one of the most famous British bike manufacturers of the times. Holdsworth continued to produce Freddie Grubb-branded bikes right up until 1978 (Holdsworth, incidentally, are still in operation and can be found at 132 Lower Richmond Road in Putney).

Charles Moss, born in Ascot, Great Britain on this day in 1881, competed with Freddie Grubb at the 1912 Olympics Team Road Race in which they won a silver medal.

Servais Knaven
Servais Knaven
(image credit: Ralf Seger CC BY-SA 3.0)
Henricus Theodorus Josephus "Servais" Knaven, born in Lobith, Netherlands on this day in 1971, was National Track Pursuit Amateur Champion in 1991 and 1992, then began to concentrate primarily on road racing and became National Road Racing Champion at professional Elite level in 1995. He won numerous criterium races and one-day classics, including Paris-Roubaix in 2001 and is one of only two men to have entered and finished the notoriously dangerous race sixteen times (the other was Raymond Impanis). He also won Stage 17 at the Tour de France in 2003. Since retiring at the end of the 2010 season, Knaven has worked as a directeur sportif at Team Sky.


Tomasz Marczyński, winner of the Polish National Championships in 2007, was born in Kraków on this day in 1984.

Other births: Nelson Oliveira (Portugal, 1989); Mikel Pradera (Euskadi, 1975); Carlos Cardet (Cuba, 1951); Romain De Loof (Belgium, 1941); Yevgeny Kovalyov (Russia, 1989); Jean Hansen (Denmark, 1932, died 1987); Bruno Bulić (Yugoslavia, 1958); Hans Goldschmid (Austria, 1914); Ainhoa Artolazábal (Spain, 1972); José Magnani (Brazil, 1913); John Musa (Zimbabwe, 1950); Jack Mourioux (France, 1948); Leslie King (Trinidad and Tobago, 1950); Henning Jørgensen (Denmark, 1949); Meng Lang (China, 1984); Gaston Delaplane (France, 1882, died 1977); Kim Cheol-Seok (South Korea, 1960); Imre Géra (Hungary, 1947); Servais Knaven (Netherlands, 1971); Koku Ahiaku (Togo, 1963).

Monday, 5 March 2012

French legend de Muer dies at 90

The legendary French cyclist and manager Maurice de Muer has died at the age of 90, according to reports.

De Muer won Paris-Camembert in 1944 and came second at the second edition of Paris-Nice ever held in 1946. His career, during which he remained with Dunlop-Peugeot, extended between 1943 and 1951 and he rode with some of the greatest names in cycling including the Swiss Ferdy Kübler - the oldest surviving Tour de France winner at 92.

After retiring from competition, de Muer moved into team management and worked as a directeur sportif for Bic, Pelforth and Peugeot; training Tour winners Luis Ocana and Bernard Thevenet in his new role.

He had been living in a retirement home since September 2011 when his house was destroyed by fire.

Maurice de Muer, born Potigny, France on the 4th of October 1921; died on the 5th of March 2012.

Wiggins leads Paris-Nice GC

Having surprised the world with a stunning performance and second place at yesterday's rain-soaked opening time trial, British rider Bradley Wiggins has taken the yellow jersey of Paris-Nice after putting in a similarly impressive ride today.

(image credit: Haggisnl CC BY 2.0)
Wiggo broke away from the peloton with a select group of twelve riders halfway through the stage, a brave move for any General Classification contender that shows enormous confidence and a supreme ability to tailor tactics to a specific parcours. A number of other riders bridged the gap, swelling numbers to around 30 before a crash took out several men, but the peloton found itself outclassed and unable to reabsorb the group. By the time they reached the 10km to go marker, Wiggins' gang had an advantage of over 2' and the result began to look inevitable.

The 31-year-old, who was born in Belgium to British parents (his father Gary was also a professional cyclist) but moved to London with his mother following her divorce, was 11th over the line behind Bernard Hinault's top tip Tom Boonen while Sky team mate Geraint Thomas was 10th. However, he recorded the same time as the first 20 riders - giving him a 6" advantage over Levi Leipheimer in the General Classification.

Becoming Britain's first Tour de France winner has been Bradley's main aim for some years now. Last year he showed up at the start line of cycling's greatest event looking as though he was made of nothing but bone and sinew, ready to take on the likes of Contador and Schleck on the tough climbs in the Pyrenees and Alps, but his prospects were shattered when he suffered a broken collar bone during a mass pile-up in Stage 7. The Tour is still some months away, but if he can maintain the form he's currently on and with this year's race featuring plenty of time trial kilometres and fewer mountains it seems that 2012 offers his best chance to realise the dream that he and all British cycling fans share.

Daily News Roundup

Nick Nuyens has abandoned Paris-Nice. The 31-year-old Belgian rider turned up at the start of the second stage this morning, but decided not to go on as he is presumably suffering in the wake of a hard crash yesterday.

Pat McQuaid
(image credit: Oblongo CC BY-SA 2.0)
McQuaid harbours Contador doubts?
UCI boss Pat McQuaid has revealed that he's not convinced Spanish rider intentionally doped at the 2010 Tour de France - and even hints that he's not happy with the Spanish rider's punishment, telling the Spanish AS sports newspaper that "The Court of Arbitration for Sport in its ruling does not say that Contador is guilty or has doped, and states that a contaminated nutritional supplement is to blame." When asked if it would have been worse for Contador to be escape prosecution and continue riding, even with suspicions hanging over him, he says: "I do not know, honestly."

McQuaid also says that he believes the war against doping is being won. "Doping has not been what it was  for some years now. Fortunately, the situation has changed for the better, and there are less positive results." Asked if doping is cycling's worst enemy, he says "One of the worst, no doubt because it is a deeply rooted culture - as it is in other sports." However, he feels that the problem is now sufficiently under control for the UCI to start looking at combating other issues: "...another very serious problem that affects other disciplines to ours is that of illegal gambling. That sporting fraud is on the agenda."

Vos: "I have so much more power available"
You might think Marianne Vos would be content with where she is now, winning just abut everything she enters. You might even think she couldn't get any better. Marianne, who will be 25 this May, loves her sport so much that she believes she can get even better: she explained in Rabo Wielermagazine that one of the best things about riding with the new Rabobank Women's Team is the improved training program which gives her opportunity to improve specific areas. At present, she's working on her time trial performance in preparation for the Olympics. "It is, of course, a test on a stationary bike in an enclosed space and you can't compare it to a real race," says the Dutch rider. "However, it gives me confidence that I have so much more power available."

Other news
Cofidis rider Florent Barle broke his collar bone at the Three Days of West Flanders - a new misfortune for the 26-year-old Frenchmanwho won the 2010 Tour of the Pyrenees but went without victory in 2011.

Canadian Heather Moyse - who has already had successful careers as a rugby player and in bobsleigh - proved her recent decision to begin a third career as a cyclist was a wise one yesterday when she was the fourth fastest rider in the 500m TT at the PanAmerican Championships in Argentina, recording a time of 36.207".

Bernard Hinault is tipping Tom Boonen for success in today's second stage at Paris-Nice. "Boonen has made an impression," says the five-time Tour de France winner. "He was very fast, even on the climbs. He is aiming, of course, for the Spring Classics, but with the form he has he can make use of any opportunity. If an opportunity arises he won't miss it, because he is a winner." Boonen is paying respects to LeopardTrek's Wouter Weylandt with a "108 per sempre" badge on his bike. 108 was Weylandt's race number when he died at the Giro d'Italia last year.

Three-time track cycling World Champion Gary Neiwand appeared before Melbourne Magistrates today, where the 45-year-old Australian faces two counts of deliberately exposing his genitals to women whilst masturbating in his car. Magistrates received a medical report stating that Neiwand is responding well to treatment for psychological problems caused by heavy drinking and now has his drinking under control, but said that they believe the rider needs the threat of imprisonment hanging over him to encourage him to continue treatment. According to the Herald Sun newspaper, "In an extraordinary outburst outside court, Neiwand’s lawyer threatened to knock a TV camerman’s “head off” as the former cycling great was bundled into an awaiting car."

He's OK, folks -
Alex Dowsett
(image credit: Adambro CC BY-SA 3.0)
British Time Trial Champion Alex Dowsett broke his elbow in a crash during the final stage at the Three Days of West Flanders on Sunday. Team management had initially believed the rider had not broken any bones after another rider crashed in front of him, but subsequent medical checks confirmed otherwise. The 23-year-old Team Sky rider preferred to be treated back home, as he revealed when he passed on the news via his Twitter account...
@alexdowsett
Broke my elbow yesterday. Drove myself back from Belgium & checked into A&E. Operation today at Royal London Hospital. pic.twitter.com/5OHChAbO

Daily Cycling Facts 05.03.12

Paris-Nice began on this day in 1978, 1980, 1989, 1995, 2000, and 2006. Gerrie Knetemann won in 1978, then Gilbert Duclos-Lassalle in 1980 when the start line was moved to Issy-les-Moulineaux after five years in Fontenay-sous-Bois. 1989 saw the start move to Paris after a year in Villefranche-sur-Saône and Miguel Indurain, who would become world famous when he won five Tours de France, became the first Spanish victor. Laurent Jalabert won the first of his three consecutive victories in 1995.

The 2000 edition was notable for three reasons. Firstly, the start line moved back to Paris for the first time since 1990; secondly the Points leader's jersey was changed to pink and purple (which made the wearer look as though he was covered in bruises) and thirdly, the race passed into the ownership of two-time Tour de France and once Giro d'Italia winner Laurent Fignon. The winner was the German rider Andreas Klöden. In 2006, it was won for the second time by an American, Floyd Landis, Bobby Julich having been the first American to win one year previously.


Filip Meirhaeghe at the 2007 Omloop het Volk
(image credit: Peter Huys CC BY-SA 2.0)
Filip Meirhaeghe
Filip Meirhaeghe, born in Ghent on this day in 1971, is a professional mountain bike rider who also competes in cyclo cross, road racing and track. He has been most successful in MTB and became National Cross Country Champion in 1996, 1998, 2000 and 2001; National Downhill Champion in 1994 and European Cross Country Champion in 2000. He won the Paris-Roubaix Mountain Bike race in 1997 and 2002; the Lugano round of the 2003 World Cross Country Championships and the Mountain Bike World Cup in 2002.

Having won a silver medal at the 2000 Olympics, Meirhaeghe entered again in 2004 but was caught out when an anti-doping test revealed traces of EPO at the World Cup a short while before the Games began. Several other riders also tested positive day but Meirhaeghe refused to join them in protesting his innocence and calling the validity of the test and professionalism of the testers into doubt; instead preferring to come clean and confess that he had indeed used the drug, then announced his retirement. He later wrote a book titled Positief about his experiences, but it has only been published in Dutch and is difficult to find in other countries.

Meirhaeghe was suspended after the positive Olympic test, but returned to racing in 2006 with professional contracts in mountain biking (Versluys-Landbouwkrediet-Sportstech) and on road (Landbouwkrediet-Colnago), each for three years, and won his last National Cross Country gold medal that year. He took silver the following year and bronze the next, then retired in 2009 once his contracts expired.


Christian Knees, born in Bonn on this day in 1981, became National Road Race Champion in 2010 and was offered a contract with the Australian Team Pegasus. However, when it was announced that the team had not been successful in gaining a Pro Continental licence, he turned them down in the hope of being picked up by more fortunate team. That decision worked extremely well in his favour - he was offered a contract with the Pro Tour Team Sky and rode in the Tour de France.

Georges Chappe, born on this day in Marseilles in 1944, won Stage 4 at the 1968 Tour de France and the Critérium International in 1970 - then became Lanterne Rouge at the Tour in 1971.

Sergei Ivanov, born in the USSR on this day in 1975, has been National Road Race Champion six times (1998, 1999, 2000, 2005, 2008 and 2009, won Stage 9 at the 2001 Tour de France, Stage 14 in the 2009 Tour de France, Stage 5 at the 2003 Tour of Luxembourg, Stage 4 at the 2004 Tour of Britain, overall at the 2008 Tour de Wallonie, the Amstel Gold Race in 2009 and the Points classification at the 2010 Tour of Luxembourg.

This day in 2010 brought the first ever Egyptian Cycling Day, with thousands of cyclists meeting in Tahrir Square, Cairo. The event was a success, meaning that a repeat was planned for 2011 - however, the Square became the focal point of the 2011 Revolution when the people of Egypt rose up and defeated the oppressive government, toppling President Hosni Mubarak. At the time of writing, Egypt is close to civil war as the population attempt to end military rule and so Cycling Day is unlikely to take place in 2012, and possibly not for many more years.

Other births: Hamish Haynes (Great Britain, 1975); Seamus McGrath (Canada, 1976); Rob Woods (Australia, 1968); Derek Harrison (Great Britain, 1944); Roberto Maggioni (Italy, 1968); Leo Nielsen (Denmark, 1909, died 1968); Stanley Butler (Great Britain, 1910, died 1993); Janus Braspennincx (Netherlands, 1903, died 1977).

Sunday, 4 March 2012

Weekend News Roundup

British riders have a good weekend
23-year-old British star Lizzie Armitstead, one of several riders to have joined AA Drink-Leontien.nl following the demise of the Garmin-Cervelo Women's Team, scored a major victory with first place at the Omloop het van Hageland today after breaking away from the peloton in the latter part of the race accompanied by Hitec Products-Mistral Home's Elisa Longo-Borghini and Rabobank's Pauline Ferrand-Prevot. In the final sprint, she demonstrated the sheer power that has seen her as respected in the women's peloton as Cavendish is in the men's, beating Ferrabd-Prevot by 2" and Longo-Borghini by 4". Lucy Martin, also riding with AA Drink, took ninth place, Emma Silversides of Sengers was the next best Brit in 47th.

Russell Downing of Endura Racing won the Grand Prix de la Ville de Lillers Souvenir Bruno Comini, Douglas Dewey was third at Lierde and Danny McLay of Lotto-Ridley Espoirs was 10th at Brussels-Zepperen. Meanwhile, at the Vuelta a Murcia Jonathan Tiernan-Locke finished in second place in the General Classification, an excellent result for the 27-year-old among a top ten that included names as illustrious as Samuel Sanchez, Robert Gesink and Johnny Hoogerland. Team mate Eric Rowsell - younger brother of Matrix-Prendas' legendary Joanna, who wowed the world at the the recent UCI Track Cup - was 29th.

Bradley Wiggins surprised many
at Paris-Nice
(image credit: Petit Brun CC BY-SA 2.0)
At the opening ITT stage of Paris-Nice, Bradley Wiggins of Team Sky stunned fans and opponents alike with an unexpected second place finish on a dangerously wet course, just 1" down on Vacansoleil-DCM's Gustav Erik Larsson. Omega Pharma-Quickstep's Tony Martin was most people's favourite but appeared distinctly off-colour and could only manage 28th, a disappointing result for a rider who can put the wind up Fabian Cancellara - winner of yesterday's Strade Bianche, which he dedicated to a recently-deceased uncle - in a time trial.  Looking positively muscular when compared to the cadavre that rolled up to the start line on the Passage du Gois last year, it's been noted that if Wiggo can keep this sort of form over the summer then 2012 - when the Tour is less mountainous and places more emphasis of time trials than it has done in many years - might just prove to be his year.

It wasn't all great from a British point of view, however: Emma Trott, riding with Dolmans-Boels this season, crashed and broke her collar bone. The 22-year-old announced her misfortune via Twitter...
@EmmaTrott1989
Shit happens, 2nd race and I end in hospital with broken collarbone! Fantastic!
Best wishes for a very speedy recovery, Emma.

Other News

Welcome back, Emma Johansson!
(image credit: Eriohm CC BY 3.0)
Having already enjoyed a successful career in rugby (she played with the national women's team) and bobsleigh (she won an Olympic gold medal), Canada's Heather Moyse decided it was time to go looking for another sport - and chose track cycling. This weekend, she represented her nation at the PanAmerican Championships in Argentina, where she competed in the 500m TT and Sprint. (Vancouver Sun)

Emma Johansson made her return to racing at the Omloop het van Hageland, having recovered from twin broken collar bones sustained in a training ride accident back in January. She finished in 27th place - no surprise to the Swedish rider, who seems happy just to be back, but expect a rapid return to race-winning form.

Nick Nuyens looked like he was the latest to break bones at Paris-Nice, crashing hard in the opening time trial. An x-ray revealed that he hadn't broken anything, and despite pain - "I feel weak!" he complains - the 31-year-old Belgian hopes to start tomorrow's stage.

Fabian Cancellara wins the Strade-Bianche, Saturday the 3rd of March

Daily Cycling Facts 04.03.12

Paris-Nice began on this date in 1959 and 1990. The earlier year was a remarkable one in that it was the longest edition ever, at 1,955km - the reason for this being that it was run from Paris to Nice and then on to Rome. It was organised as a sort of three-in-one race with three General Classifications, the first from Paris to Nice, the second from Nice to Rome and the third covering the entire parcours. It seems that organisers thought this a splendid idea and had every intention of continuing to run it this way, but the riders were not at all impressed and declared the distance excessive in a six day race. The following year, the race stopped at Nice once more. The winner was Jean Graczyck.

Despite the name, Paris-Nice has started in Paris just four times since 1963 - in 1986, 1987 and 1989 and then again in 1990 before moving to Fontenay-sous-Bois. Paris-Nice's classification leadership jerseys have been altered numerous times during the history of the race, and in 1990 the King of the Mountains jersey - which had been blue since 1985 - changed to yellow and blue, the corporate colours of new sponsor Agrigel. It had been yellow and blue for one year in 1984 when it had been sponsored by Le Crédit Lyonnais.

Helen Wyman
Helen Wyman, born in St. Albans, Hertforshire on this day in 1981, is one of Great Britain's most successful cyclo cross riders. Having won a series of races both at home and abroad early on in her career, she won the National Championship title in 2006, then won it again in 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012. Along the way, she has either won or achieved a podium finish at almost of all the most prestigious races in Europe and the USA, including first place at the 2010 GVA Trophy Koppenberg - her first win in Belgium, cyclo cross' spiritual home, for six years despite a puncture. Now riding for the Kona/FSA Factory team, Wyman is one of the most popular riders with the fans and can frequently be found chatting with them and answering their questions on Twitter.

Tinker Juarez
Born in California on the day in 1961, David "Tinker" Juarez has had one of the longest and most comprehensive careers of any cycling. He became a professional BMX rider in 1977, one of the first people to make a living from the sport and having already won the first ever BMX Grandnational Championship two years previously. He would become one of the most influential figures in the development of the fledgling Freestyle scene, inventing several of the tricks that are now considered classics, as well as the High Air style on both vert and dirt ramps - incredibly, he avoided the injuries that most BMX riders will suffer regularly and didn't break a single bone during a ten year career.

Tinker Juarez in 1988
(image credit: Patty Mooney CC BY-SA 3.0)
Around the middle of the 1980s, he became involved in the so-called Formula 1 cycle racing scene, a new discipline featuring rather peculiar bikes that looked a little like a road/mountain bike hybrid fitted with BMX-size 20" wheels (you can see one if you click here). F1 fizzled out almost as soon as it began, perhaps due to the bikes looking just a bit to ridiculous to be taken seriously, but Juarez was not ready to bow out just yet and took up mountain biking, winning the National Cross Country Championship three times, National Solo 24-Hour Champion fours times and laid claim to another "first" - he competed in the first Olympic mountain bike event. He still races mountain bikes to this day.

From 2005, he also began to compete in long-distance endurance road races and won the 800km single-stage Heart of the South event, later coming 2nd overall at the Furnace Creek 508, a 818km (508 miles) single-stage race that climbs 11,000m in total and passes through Death Valley where temperatures regularly approach 50°C (122°F). As a podium finisher, he automatically became eligible to enter the Race Across America, a 4,800km multi-day, single stage event that encourages entrants to ride for as long possible, without stopping, on roads open to traffic.

Juarez, now 51, is still racing to this day. In 2010, he won the UCI Mountain Bike Masters World Championship in Brazil.


A 12-year-old Steven Burke, who was born on this day in 1988 in Burnley, Great Britain, watched Jason Queally win a gold medal for the 1000m time trial at the 2000 Olympics and was inspired to take up track cycling himself. Eight years later, he stood next to his hero Bradley Wiggins on the podium at the Games in Beijing to receive a bronze medal for the individual pursuit race. To date, he had seven British Track Championship and five European Track Championship wins to his name.

Michael Andersson, born in Höganäs in Sweden on this day in 1967, is a multiple National Champion and is the only rider to have won the Postgirot Open (Tour of Sweden) three times. Unfortunately, it looks as though he'll be the remain the only rider to have done so because the race has not been held since 2002.

Italian Flavio Vanzella, born in Vazzola on this day in 1964, wore the yellow jersey for Stages 4 and 5 at the 1994 Tour de France. The following year he won a stage at the Tour de Suisse and overall at the Giro di Veneto.

Georges Ronsse
Born in Antwerp on this day in 1906, Belgian rider Georges Ronsse is remembered by few now. Yet his career, which spanned 13 years between 1926 and 1938, included many very impressive victories - among them were Liège–Bastogne–Liège in 1925; Bordeaux-Paris and Paris-Roubaix in 1927; Paris-Brussels and a World Championship in 1928; another World Championship, Bordeaux-Paris and the National Cyclo Cross Championship in 1929; a third Bordeaux-Paris, a second National Cyclo Cross Championship and the GP Wolber in 1930; 5th place overall and Stage 4 at the 1932 Tour de France and three National Track Stayers Championships in 1933, 1934 and 1935 in addition to podium finishes at most of the big races of the time. He retired in 1938, after winning a silver medal at the National Track Stayers Championship.

Dave Rayner, twice winner of the Under-22 Category at the Milk Race (Tour of Britain) was born in Shipley, West Yorkshire, on this day in 1967. Dave died on the 16th of November 1994, one day after becoming involved in an incident outside a Bradford nightclub when he was just 27 years old. One year later, a memorial fund was created in his name to provide financial assistance to promising British riders, allowing them to compete in European races - the first rider to benefit was David Millar.

Australian cyclist Darren Lapthorne was born in Melbourne on this day in 1983. He achieved good results in his first years as a professional, then became National Champion in 2007. 2008 began well for him with a stage win at the Geelong Bay Classic Series, but tragedy struck later in the year when his sister Britt went missing from a nightclub in Croatia, a country she was visiting during a backpacking tour of Europe. Her body was discovered washed up on a beach less than a month later. The cause of her death has never been discovered, but there is some evidence that suggests her body was weighed down before it went into the sea. The rider returned to racing later, knowing that his sister would not have wanted him to give it up. "She was so proud of what I did and she was there at one of the last races in Germany that I did, she was my biggest fan," he said.

Clarence Kingsbury in 1908
Aketza Peña, born in Zalla in the Basque Country on this day in 1981, was a rider with Euskaltel-Euskadi between 2004 and 2007 when he was disqualified from the Giro d'Italia after it was revealed that he had tested positive for the banned anabolic steroid 19-nortestosterone during the Giro del Trentino earlier in the year. In 2010, he joined the Caja Rural team.

Marin Niculescu, born on this day in 1922, won the Tour of Romania in 1951.

Clarence Kingsbury, a successful British track rider in the early 20th Century, died on this day in 1949 at the age of 66. He competed in the 1908 Olympics and won two gold medals for the 20km and Team Pursuit competitions.

Edouard Klabiński died on this day in 1997, aged 76. In 1947 he won the Critérium du Dauphiné and became the first Polish rider to compete in the Tour de France, where he came 34th overall, then won a series of criterium races. He entered the Tour for a second time in 1948 and came 18th overall, finishing Stages 17 and 20a in second place. In the same year, he won the Grand Prix de Saint-Quentin.

Other births: Elia Rigotto (Italy, 1982); Bohumil Rameš (Bohemia - now Czech Republic, 1895); Arne Johansson (Sweden, 1927); Wu Weipei (China, 1966); Slavoj Černý (Czechoslovakia, 1937); Tibor Magyar (Hungary, 1947); Stanisław Kłosowicz (Poland, 1903, died 1955); Marin Niculescu (Romania, 1923); Ivo Lakučs (Latvia, 1979); Jang Yun-Ho (South Korea, 1961).