P Is For Peloton: The A-Z Of Cycling
By Suze Clemitson and Mark Fairhurst
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About this ebook
Beautifully illustrated by renowned cycling artist Mark Fairhurst, P is for Peloton is packed with fun facts from the amazing to the bizarre, and stories about the greatest riders in the sport. Ever wanted to know the difference between your flamme rouge and your lanterne rouge?
This is the book for you - or the cycling obsessive in your life.
Suze Clemitson
Suze Clemitson is a cycling journalist and commentator. She is the author of P is for Peloton, with artist Mark Fairhurst, and edited Ride the Revolution, also published by Bloomsbury. @festinagirl
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P Is For Peloton - Suze Clemitson
A IS FOR …
ARRIVÉE
YOU SAY A (as in apple) – REE – VAY (rhymes with say)
WHAT IT MEANS Let’s start at the finish – Arrivée is the French word for the finish line of a race, usually marked by a giant inflatable archway. In 2013, the Orica-Greenedge team bus managed to get wedged underneath the finish line at the Tour de France but the arrivée is usually the stage for a rider to cross the finish line and throw their arms aloft in the traditional V of victory.
ABANDON
When a rider is forced to climb off his bike during a race because of illness or injury, he ‘abandons’ and may end up in the broom wagon (see B).
AERODYNAMICS
A cyclist’s greatest enemy is wind (no, not that kind). In order to cut through the air with maximum efficiency you need to be as aerodynamic as possible in order to reduce the drag effect that wind creates. Even though you feel you’re moving forward, wind drag is always pulling you backwards. Minimising drag is the key for making a cyclist go faster, and cycling teams often spend a significant amount of money sending riders into wind tunnels to measure how aerodynamic they are. There are several key factors to making a cyclist more aerodynamically efficient:
Clothing – Team Sky have popularised the use of skinsuits for time trials, where aerodynamics are of huge importance, with individual cyclists riding alone against the clock, with no rider or peloton in front to take the brunt of the wind. Imagine going swimming fully clothed and the effort you need to expend to get through the water; the same is true of a cyclist passing through air; if less immediately appreciable. This is the reason cyclists wear clothing that’s as streamlined and form-fitting as possible.
Aero bars and helmet – aero bars protrude straight out from the front of the bike and you can rest your entire forearm on them and lie flatter on the bike, which helps to shrink the ‘wall’ your body presents to the wind in front: less wind slams into your body, and more flows over. Aero helmets work by smoothing the shape your head makes and improving airflow around it and make a significant time saving in a time trial – a small price for looking like an alien.
Position – this is the biggest single factor in the rider-plus-bike-versus-wind equation, as a cyclist’s body accounts for 70–80 per cent of drag. The bigger you are, the higher that percentage goes, which is why so many of today’s professional cyclists are so skinny, giving them a far better power to weight ratio and better aerodynamics. The rule is: the flatter you can get on the bike, the better. Get into a good aerodynamic tuck and you’ll scythe through the air like a Cavendish or a Wiggins – or you’ll go faster, anyway.
BLUFF FACT In the decisive time trial at the end of the 1989 Tour de France, Greg LeMond used aero bars and an aero helmet. If Laurent Fignon had worn a cap he would have won the Tour.
ALLEZ!
YOU SAY AL (rhyme with pal) – AY (rhymes with hey!)
WHAT IT MEANS Go! Come on! Allez is the universal expression of cycling encouragement, shouted from French roadsides since 1868 when Englishman James Moore won a 1200-metre race on 31 May 1868 at the Parc de Saint-Cloud, Paris. Equivalents include vai in Italian and venga in Spanish. Somewhat bizarrely, the Dutch and Belgian fans shout ‘hop’ at their riders.
CLIMB
ALPE D’HUEZ
YOU SAY ALP – DOO – EZ (rhymes with fez)
ALTITUDE 1850 metres
HEIGHT GAIN 1150 metres
AVERAGE GRADIENT 8 per cent
MAXIMUM GRADIENT 13 per cent
LENGTH 14.5 kilometres
LOCATION French Alps
The mountain climb in cycling and certainly the most glamorous in the Tour de France, where it was the scene of the first ever mountaintop finish in the race. First climbed in 1952, its 21 hairpins (or lacets) loop their way from the village of Bourg-d’Oisans to the ski resort at the summit. Your prize for winning the stage? Your name on a sign at one of those famous lacets. Fausto Coppi’s name is there – he was the first to win on the Alpe. Lance Armstrong’s name is not, though he won there twice – the Alpe doesn’t acknowledge some of its miscreants. Christophe Riblon is the most recent winner – in 2013 he won the historic ‘double d’Huez’ stage in the Tour de France when the Alpe was climbed twice in the same stage. Alpe d’Huez is probably the most famous
The 21 signs on the 21 hairpin bends each bear the names of the riders who have won on the most glamorous mountain in cycling:
1GIUSEPPE GUERINI (1999). The Italian climber was knocked off his bike by a young German photographer – eager to take a photo. Guerini got up, hopped back on his bike and was so far ahead he still won the stage.
2MARCO PANTANI (1997). The pirate won 19 months after an accident at Milan–Turin which would have ended the career of many riders – he suffered multiple compound fractures to his left leg.
3MARCO PANTANI (1995). This is generally agreed to be the record ascent at 37 minutes and 35 seconds, and was Pantani’s first stage win in the Tour.
4ROBERTO CONTI (1994). Eros Poli had won the day before on Mont Ventoux and now another gregario had his day. This was 30-year-old Conti’s first ever professional win.
5ANDY HAMPSTEN (1992). The first – and now only – American winner on the Alpe.
6GIANNI BUGNO (1991). This was Bugno’s second success on the Alpe, and he became the first rider to climb the Alpe in under 40 minutes.
7GIANNI BUGNO (1990). Bugno beat Greg LeMond who would go on to win the Tour.
8GERT-JAN THEUNISSE (1989). The last Dutchman to win here – the Alpe has been known as the Dutch mountain because of the extraordinary success of Dutch climbers. The only man to win on the Alpe in the polka dot jersey.
9STEVEN ROOKS (1988). Another Dutchman.
10FREDERICO ECHAVE (1987). This was the first win on the Alpe by a Spaniard. The Irish are now trying to claim this one as ‘Irish Corner’.
11BERNARD HINAULT (1986). Hinault is credited with the win though he and team-mate LeMond crossed the finish line hand in hand at the finish of one of the most iconic stages in Tour de France history.
12LUIS HERRERA (1984). ‘Lucho’ was riding for the amateur Colombian team.
13PETER WINNEN (1983). A double winner, the Dutchman said he felt the climb had taken five years off his life.
14BEAT BREU (1982). The only Swiss to win on the Alpe, he attacked from the foot of the climb and was never caught.
15PETER WINNEN (1981). Winnen was in his first year as a professional when he scored his first win on the Alpe.
16JOOP ZOETEMELK (1979) and Pierre Rolland (2011). In 1979 the Alpe was climbed twice on successive days, Zoetemelk won the second time around. Rolland was only the second Frenchman to win on the Alpe where he sealed the white jersey. ‘I know the Alpe by heart’ he said afterwards.
17JOACHIM AGOSTINHO (1979) and Carlos Sastre (2008). Agostinho was the only Portuguese rider to win on the Alpe and was 36 at the time. Sastre won the Tour on this stage with a well-orchestrated attack to take the yellow jersey from his team-mate Frank Schleck.
18HENNIE KUIPER (1978) and Frank Schleck (2006). Kuiper, yet another Dutchman; and Schleck, the first rider from Luxembourg to win on the Alpe.
19HENNIE KUIPER (1977). The Dutchman’s win from the year before.
20JOOP ZOETEMELK (1976) and Iban Mayo (2003). In 1976 Dutchman Father Jaap started a tradition with Zoetemelk’s win of ringing the church bells for every Dutch victory, which made him a very busy man. The Spaniard Mayo attacked seven kilometres from the summit and won a la Pantani, completing the climb in 39 minutes and 6 seconds.
21FAUSTO COPPI (1952). The Italian’s style beat Robic’s sheer guts in a classic duel to take the first ever mountaintop finish in the Tour. His time for the first ever ascent was 45 minutes and 52 seconds.
BLUFF IT ‘Frenchman Michel Pollentier actually won on the Alpe in 1978, but he was disqualified for trying to fool the doping control with a condom full of someone else’s pee.’
CLIMB
ANGLIRU
YOU SAY ANG (rhymes with hang) – LEE – ROO
ALTITUDE 1573 metres
HEIGHT GAIN 1245 metres
AVERAGE GRADIENT 10 per cent
MAXIMUM GRADIENT 24 per cent
LENGTH 12.2 kilometres
LOCATION Picos de Europa, Spain
The Alpe d’Huez might be more famous, but the Angliru is one of the hardest climbs ever used in cycling where it forms part of the Vuelta a España. The Angliru was originally for goats – not cars or cyclists – and the hardest part is still called ‘the Goat Track’. In fact it’s so difficult and so steep that some riders just get off and walk. Often compared to Monte Zoncolan in Italy, the Angliru was unknown before 1996 when a member of a Spanish cycling team decided to check out rumours of a super-steep climb hidden away in the Picos de Europa, the razor sharp mountain range that isolates the Asturias region from the rest of Spain. It was introduced into the Vuelta a España in 1999, and one of the riders who won there, the Spanish climber Roberto Heras, described it simply as ‘hell, there’s nothing like it’. Abandoning the Vuelta a España in 2002, British rider David Millar shouted ‘We’re not animals and this is inhuman!’ as he refused to cross the finish line. Deceptive in its early kilometres, the Angliru saves its savagery for the last six kilometres, which ramp up to an alarming 13 per cent with the coup de grâce, the Cueña les Cabres, that infamous goat track, reaching an almost impossible 24 per cent just three kilometres from the summit.
BLUFF IT "It would have been impossible to climb the Angliru even 20 years ago, old-fashioned gear ratios were just too high.’
ARDENNES
The Ardennes, along with the Flanders region in north-west Belgium, have been called the ‘beating heart of Belgian cycling’. This wooded and hilly region in southern Belgium is famous for the races known as the Spring Classics, the Flèche Wallonne and Liège–Bastogne–Liège. The climbs may not have the grandeur of the Alps or the Pyrenees, but they are steep. The Cauberg has a maximum gradient of 12 per cent, la Redoute 17 per cent and the Mur de Huy a whopping 26 per cent. The Mur de Huy really is like climbing a wall. Try doing that on your bike.
ATTACK
When a rider launches himself off the front of the peloton, he goes on the attack. Baroudeurs (see B) live for the opportunity to launch a long range bid for glory. For the GC contenders, the mountains are the place where Grand Tours are won and lost, though Hugo Koblet – the ‘pedaleur de charme’ – won the 1951 Tour de France by attacking on a flat stage.
BLUFF IT ‘As Bernard Hinault, one of the most aggressive riders ever, used to say: As long as I breathe, I attack
RIDER
ANQUETIL Jacques
BORN 8 January, 1934, Mont-Saint-Aignan (Normandy), France
DIED 18 November, 1987, Rouen (Normandy), France
NATIONALITY French
ACTIVE 1953–1969
RIDER TYPE All-rounder, Anquetil was a quite outstanding time triallist
NICKNAMES Maître Jacques (Master Jacques), Monsieur Chrono (Mr Time Trial)
BIG WINS 5 × Tour de France (1957, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964), 2 × Giro d’Italia (1960, 1964), Vuelta a España (1963), 9 × Grand Prix des Nations (1953, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1961, 1965, 1966), Liège–Bastogne–Liège (1966), hour record (1956)
MAJOR RIVAL Raymond Poulidor
Jacques Anquetil was the French rider, born in Normandy, who became the first man ever to win the Tour de France five times, taking only eight years to do so, the first in 1957 with four wins in a row from 1961 to 1964. He was the first rider to achieve the Tour de France–Vuelta a España double, and the first to win all three of the Grand Tours. He was an excellent all-round rider but his big strength was time trialling – the Bradley Wiggins of his day. His intense rivalry with Raymond Poulidor ‘the Eternal Second’ divided France. Anquetil was considered to be cold and calculating, though in the peloton he was as admired for his courteousness and sense of fair play as Poulidor was disliked for his bad temper and selfish tactics.
In 1964, their enmity culminated in one of the most famous stages of the Tour de France when Anquetil and Poulidor climbed the Puy de Dôme literally elbow to elbow, with the time triallist bluffing the climber every pedal stroke of the way, clinging to him like a limpet. Poulidor, realising too late that he had been conned, attacked in the final kilometre and ended the stage only 14 seconds behind his rival, but it was too little too late. Anquetil’s response? ‘That’s thirteen seconds more than I need’.
Anquetil was a notorious party animal, staying up late during races drinking champagne, but he would do anything to beat Poulidor. After withdrawing from a race in 1967 owing to the pulmonary trouble that dogged his career, he was on a drinking binge with friends when one of them toasted to Poulidor’s anticipated success the next day. ‘Set the alarm for 7’ he told his wife. He was on the start line the next morning and beat Poulidor yet again.
But it was Anquetil’s life off the bike that was truly bizarre – he was involved in a love triangle with the wife of his doctor and her step-daughter for many