Cyclopedia (48 page)

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Authors: William Fotheringham

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The key to track racing's survival after its death in the United States was the presence of stars of road racing such as Fausto Coppi alongside established track racers such as the sprinters Antonio Maspes, Arie Van Vliet, and Reg Harris. The Vel d'Hiv drew crowds that might have included the millionaire Henri de Rothschild and the writer Ernest
Hemingway, who wrote of the “smoky light of the afternoon, the high banked wooden track, the whirring sound the tires made on the wood as the riders passed, the effort and tactics as the riders climbed and plunged, each one a part of his machine.”
Road racing was a gritty, grimy occupation, but evening track meetings were the glamour side of cycling. Road champions would ride into town on the overnight train, then stage a dramatic entrance to the velodrome in sunglasses—to hide the bags under their eyes—wearing tailored suits, with Brylcreemed hair. Afterward, they might dine on oysters, steak, and champagne.
In one winter, Coppi rode 21 such meets, either invitation pursuit matches or international omniums. What mattered was performance and pleasing the crowd: TOM SIMPSON, for example, would ride, wall-of-death style, up the vertical advertising boards at the top of the track, or take one hand off the bars in a finish sprint and “pretend” to take a tow by grabbing a rival's saddle.
In Europe track racing gradually declined with the advent of television: the road stars lost their mystique, so there was no reason for the crowds to come and watch them on the track. Sponsors realized they would get more exposure from having their men race on the road. Most of the great velodromes, like the Vel d'Hiv, are gone or they are dying, like the Vigorelli. The sixes cling on, mainly as late-evening entertainment for German drinkers, but are threatened by the removal of the Madison from the Olympic program.
If there is a flicker of hope, it has come from Britain's creation of a new style of track racing: the Revolution meetings, which have taken advantage of GREAT BRITAIN's success at successive OLYMPIC GAMES, and have also been run in Australia. America may well be next. The format is accessible and lively, entry prices are low, and it boasts celebrities as well as Olympic
champions to draw in the crowds; a championship format of the Revolution meetings was adopted in 2009, with big names leading teams that included youth riders to create a narrative over the winter.
TRACK RACING—DISCIPLINES
The Olympic track disciplines are as follows:
•
Sprint:
two riders compete in a series of knockout races over three laps. Seeding is determined by a time trial over 200 m; fastest meeting slowest and so on. The early knockout rounds are sudden-death; the later rounds are best of three. Riders who exit early have a chance to re-enter the contest via the
repéchages
, a second chance, which offer losers a chance to fight their way back in.
•
Individual pursuit:
two riders start from opposite sides of the track and are timed over their distance. The objective is to “pursue” the opponent and overtake them; if that does not happen, the fastest wins. First round is a time trial to determine seeding for the medal ride-offs; first v. second, third v. fourth. Women race over 3 km, men over 4 km.
•
Team pursuit:
for men, run on the same basis as the individual, over 4 km. Riders do half-lap or one-lap turns at the front.
•
Team sprint:
for men, two teams of three riders timed over three laps. Qualifying through a time trial round to determine seeding for the ride-offs.
•
Points race:
a bunched race over 160 laps (40 km) for men, 100 laps (25 km) for women, decided on points awarded every ten laps—5, 3, 2, 1—with a 20-point bonus for any rider who can lap the field. If riders tie on points their final
positions when they take the checkered flag determines their place.
•
Madison:
a relay bunch race for men held over 200 laps (50 km) for teams of two riders, one of whom is racing while the other circles at the top of the track waiting to be put in the race. This is done by a hand-sling, in which the faster rider grabs the other's outstretched hand and “throws” him into the race. There are two objectives: to lap the field, and to earn points in sprints every 20 laps. If teams finish on the same lap, points total determines their placings.
•
Keirin:
Japanese discipline for men and women in which six riders follow a pacing motorbike which accelerates to 50 kph for men, 40 kph for women before pulling off the track with two and a half laps to go, after which it is a sprint for the line. Run through a series of qualifying rounds in which the lineups are determined by a draw (see KEIRIN for details of the intricate ceremonial the sport involves in Japan, and the massive betting scene).
The same disciplines are included in the world championship program, plus the following:
•
Women's team pursuit:
over three kilometers for three riders.
•
Women's team sprint:
over two laps, for two riders.
•
Time trials:
over one kilometer for men, 500 m for women. These events were dropped from the Olympic program after 2004.
•
Scratch:
a bunch race over 15 kilometers for men, 10 kilometers for women. First over the line wins.
•
Omnium (men and women):
a test of all-round skills held over a single day: 250 m time trial, scratch, pursuit, points race, kilometer time trial, devil (see below).
Other track events include:
Devil Take the Hindmost
, a crowd-pleasing event in which
the last rider over the line each time is eliminated until three are left to contest the final sprint;
Win and Out
, the opposite, held over five laps in which the winner is the first rider over the line on lap one; he or she has to pull out, then the second is the first over the line on lap two and so on;
Danish pursuit
, which is a points race followed by a Devil with rankings decided over the two events;
Course des Primes
, a race with prizes awarded every lap;
Motor-paced
, in which the riders race in the slipstream of motorbikes, usually low-powered machines known as DERNYS, although on outdoor tracks full-size bikes may be used.
TRICYCLE
The pioneering days of bicycle design between 1870 and 1900 gave rise to a huge variety of multi-wheeled machines—primarily tricycles and quadricycles—with different seating configurations and wheel arrangements. By 1884, over 120 different models were being made in 20 factories in just one English manufacturing center, Coventry.
JAMES STARLEY's Coventry Lever Tricycle of 1876, with a large central wheel, and smaller ones at either end, was the first lightweight tricycle to enter mass production. Starley also designed the Salvo quad, which was sold to Queen Victoria and renamed the Royal Salvo.
There were rear-drive tricycles with dual steering wheels at the front, quads in which the drivers sat side by side, and the Hen and Chickens, a HIGH-WHEEL bike in the middle of four small wheels, the idea being to make the machine as stable as possible for cargo carrying.
The classic upright tricycle as we know it today, with one steering wheel at the front and two driving wheels at the back, began to appear in the mid-1880s, at the same time as the SAFETY BICYCLE. Early examples
were the Humber Cripper—named after a professional racer, Robert Cripps—and the curiously named Psycho from Starley.
The stability of the tricycle makes it suitable for carrying heavy loads over short distances: the design is used for rickshaws in Asia and in some cities in the UK, Europe, and the US. Delta tricycles have a recumbent design, while Tadpole trikes are RECUMBENTS with two steered wheels at the front and one driving wheel at the rear.
The largest British tricycle maker today is Pashley, founded in 1926 and based in Stratford-Upon-Avon. In the UK, the Tricycle Association was founded in 1929 to cater for trike enthusiasts, and the Road Records Association recognizes tricycle place-to-place records. There are a small number of tricycle criteriums, and a tricycle world championship, on a time-trial format.
U
UCI
see UNION CYCLISTE INTERNATIONALE
UNION CYCLISTE INTERNATIONALE
Also known in English as International Cycling Union.
Cycling's worldwide governing body, founded in 1900, split into two arms in 1965, one governing pro racing (FICP) and one for amateur federations (FIAC), with the UCI as an umbrella body. In 1992 all three were merged; in 1996 the distinction between amateur and professional racers was ended.
The UCI inhabits a purpose-built center in the Swiss town of Aigle, near Lausanne, that includes offices, a library, a 200-meter velodrome, and the world cycling center, where cyclists from outside the European heartland can come to train.
Competitions Run by the UCI:
=
 
World championships
UCI ProTour
UCI Continental Tours
Women's world road cup
CYCLO-CROSS world cup
MOUNTAIN-BIKING world cup
BMX world cup
INDOOR CYCLING championships, for artistic cycling and cycle ball
The UCI is no stranger to controversy: questions were asked about a major contribution to its antidoping program from seven-time TOUR DE FRANCE winner LANCE ARMSTRONG. The ProTour circuit was controversial (see HEIN VERBRUGGEN), so too various
restructurings of the professional ROAD RACING calendar, and recent decisions to drop some of the most traditional events from the OLYMPIC GAMES track racing program.
The UCI owns the rights to the WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS, which are sold to various towns or regions each year. It also runs antidoping, in tandem with national antidoping bodies, and provides race referees (
commissaires
) who levy fines in Swiss francs. The current president is Pat MacQuaid of Ireland, who was reelected unopposed in 2009.
UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA
Whereas Europe has always been seen as the heartland of cycle racing and China is the nation that goes to work on its collective bike, cycling in the United States has known fluctuating fortunes. Having once been as popular as baseball is today, it hit the doldrums as the automobile took over but has enjoyed a strong renaissance over the last quarter of a century: the Tour de France has entered public consciousness and LANCE ARMSTRONG has become a national celebrity.
In the HEROIC ERA following the invention of the safety bicycle, cycle racing was as popular in the United States as in Europe, if not more so. There were 600 professionals competing in track races at the end of the 19th century, and as A. A. ZIMMERMAN, America's first cycling star, explained, “the racing in those days extended over a greater part of the country. Nearly every state and county fair had bicycle racing as an attraction. We rode principally on dirt tracks and we made a regular circuit, going from one town to another and riding practically every day.” Crowds of up to 20,000 attended track races to watch
stars such as Major TAYLOR, and SIX-DAY RACING was a lucrative, glamorous little industry in its own right.
As the sixes died out during the Depression, there was no homegrown tradition of road cycling to replace them. Unlike in Europe, where cycling became the mode of transport of the working class and road racing expressed that cultural tie, in the United States the automobile was king. That only began to change in the 1970s, as the middle class discovered cycling's health and environmental benefits. The early part of the decade saw a 40-fold increase in demand for lightweight bikes. Even so, in FILMS such as
American Flyers
(1985) and
Breaking Away
(1979) cycle racing is depicted as a strange activity performed by marginalized young men.
The revival in the United States was spearheaded in women's track racing through the 1970s, with Sheila Young, Sue Novara, and Connie Paraskevin winning sprint world titles, while men's amateur teams gradually improved on the road, and the first professional pioneer, JONATHAN BOYER, traveled to France to ride for the ACBB club in Paris (see FOREIGN LEGION for how ACBB played host to numerous English-speakers), then rode the 1981 Tour de France for BERNARD HINAULT's Renault team.
A key factor was the rise of a major stage race: the Red Zinger Classic, later the Coors Classic, held in Colorado during the 1970s and 1980s. Organized by charismatic marketing
professional Michael Aisner, the race was responsible for turning Boulder, Colorado, into the center of American cycling. The town hosted the world road championship in 1986, and now more US pros live in and around Boulder than anywhere else.
The Coors Classic broke new ground by launching a women's stage race alongside the men's event. It was watched by President Gerald Ford and is credited with sparking comedian Robin Williams's obsession with bike racing. Aisner eventually took his event to California and Hawaii, brought in top European teams, and even got the best Soviet racers to turn up for the 1981 event, less than a year after the US had boycotted the Moscow Olympics (see EASTERN EUROPE for more on the Russians).
The Russians, led by Olympic champion Sergei Soukhoroutchenkov, met fearless opposition in a new American star: junior world champion GREG LEMOND, then only 20 years old. LeMond fought off the Soviets, drawing a crowd of 40,000 to the race finale in Boulder. He followed Boyer to Renault, and the pair finished 2nd and 10th in the world road championship in 1982. The 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles gave cycling more momentum, with America taking nine medals. The RACE ACROSS AMERICA helped raise the profile of cycling as well. So too did the first US stage win in the Tour, LeMond's time trial victory at Lac de Vassivière in 1985. Later that year, LeMond raced the Coors Classic with Hinault. When the pair posed in Stetsons with their legendary manager, Cyrille Guimard, for
l'Equipe
, America's return to the cycling mainstream seemed complete.
American Cycle Racing at a Glance
=
 
Biggest race:
Tour of California
 
Legendary racing hill:
Manayunk Wall
 
Biggest star:
Lance Armstrong
 
First Tour stage win:
Greg LeMond, Lac de Vassivière, 1985
 
Tour overall wins to 2010:
10
 
America has given cycling:
the Giro helmet, the mountain bike, triathlon handlebars, the Livestrong bracelet, Oakley sunglasses
On the road, the next step was a US pro team racing the European circuit, and that appeared in 1985 when 7-Eleven convenience stores backed a squad managed by Mike Neel, who had raced in Italy, and JIM OCHOWICZ, who had raced for the US in the 1972 and 1976 Olympics. They broke taboos by employing a blonde female SOIGNEUR named Shelley Verses, but more substantially, their bucktoothed climber named Andy Hampsten took a stage in the Giro, and the team won more stages at the Tour in 1986. Under Jim Ochowicz, the squad would go on to a successful run backed by the Motorola phone company from 1991 to 1996. After that, US Postal Service and Discovery Channel moved in as European pro team sponsors.
AMERICAN FACTOID
Coors Classic organizer Michael Aisner also masterminded Brigitte Bardot's campaign against the slaughter of fur seals in the Arctic.
4
The Coors Classic ceased in 1988, but a new US Tour ran from 1991 to 1996 sponsored by DuPont, and this was followed in 2006 by the Tour of California, which has drawn professionals of ever-higher quality. The US can also boast its own CLASSIC: the Philadelphia International
Championship dates back to 1985 and is the final leg of the Triple Crown that includes the Lancaster Classic and the Reading Classic, all held in the same week. Until 1985, the best American in Philadelphia was crowned US champion. The race includes its own legendary cobbled climb, the Manayunk “Wall,” two streets where the gradient reaches one in six.
Stars of US Racing
=
 
Frank Kramer:
Along with Major Taylor and A. A. Zimmerman, a hero of the halcyon era of US track racing. Kramer was persuaded to turn pro in 1900 by Taylor, and his career outlasted that of the Major: he won the US sprint title 18 times, with his last title coming in 1921, when he was 41 years old. He raced mainly in the United States, but had two successful seasons in Europe, 1905 and 1906, and also took the world sprint title in the only year he entered, 1912, when it was held in Newark. He retired in 1922.
 
Andy Hampsten:
Bucktoothed, slender climbing specialist from Ohio who turned pro for 7-Eleven in 1985, won a stage in the Giro d'Italia, and was signed by Bernard Hinault's La Vie Claire team for 1986, when he won the first of two back-to-back wins in the Tour of Switzerland. In 1988, back with 7-Eleven, Hampsten won the Giro d'Italia, a victory forged in a snowstorm on the Gavia Pass. His final major win was the l'Alpe d'Huez stage in the 1992 Tour de France, the year he finished fourth overall in the Tour, a repeat of his placing of 1986.
 
Sheila Young:
One of a bunch of US cyclists who doubled up successfully with speed skating, Young achieved a rare double in 1973 when she took the world sprint title on the velodrome and the rink. She went on to win the sprint title twice more, and won gold, silver, and bronze medals in skating at the winter Olympics in Innsbruck in 1976, becoming the first US athlete to win three medals at a winter Games. In that year she married JIM OCHOWICZ, who would go on to manage the 7-Eleven and Motorola pro road teams. She retired, then returned to competition in 1981 to take another track sprint world title. Young's big rival was another speed skater turned sprinter, Sue Novara, who won a total of seven world championship medals. Other speed skaters who were also successful cyclists are Beth Heiden, winner of the world road title in 1980, and her brother Eric, regarded as the greatest speedskater ever but also capable of finishing the Giro d'Italia for 7-Eleven in 1985.

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