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Authors: William Fotheringham

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BOOK: Cyclopedia
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WIGGINS, Bradley
Born:
Ghent, Belgium, April 28, 1980
 
Major wins:
Olympic pursuit champion 2004, 2008; Olympic team pursuit champion 2008; world pursuit champion 2003, 2007, 2008; world team pursuit champion 2007, 2008; world Madison champion (with Mark Cavendish) 2008; world junior pursuit champion 1998
 
Nicknames:
the Twig, Wiggo
 
Further reading:
In Pursuit of Glory
, Bradley Wiggins, Orion, 2010
 
A mainstay of the GREAT BRITAIN Olympic TRACK RACING team who won two gold medals in Beijing and then equaled the British record set by ROBERT MILLAR when he finished fourth in the 2009 TOUR DE FRANCE. Wiggins is a gangling Londoner—although born in Ghent—with a penchant for the Mod culture of the 1960s, the music of punk rockers the Jam, and a collection of electric guitars. He is also one of the finest impersonators in professional cycling: his imitation of fellow 2009 Tour star MARK CAVENDISH is particularly hilarious.
Wiggins's estranged Australian father Garry was a top professional on the SIX-DAY RACING scene in the 1980s; by 1998, Bradley had surpassed his father by taking the junior world pursuit title, and in 2000 at the age of 20 he won an Olympic bronze medal in the team pursuit. The world pursuit title followed in 2003, and in 2004 he took three medals in the Athens Olympics: gold in the individual pursuit, silver in the team event, and bronze in the Madison. No Briton had achieved anything to match this since the 1960s, but Wiggins received little recognition at home; his sense of deflation was such that he turned to drink for several months, getting through his entire collection of Belgian beer and spending much time in the pub.
He made his Tour de France debut in 2006 and rode strongly in the 2007 race, coming close to winning a time-trial stage, but had his sights fixed on defending his Olympic title in Beijing. He took three gold medals (individual and team pursuits, Madison) in the 2008 world championships and followed up with two golds in the pursuits in China despite suffering from a severe virus shortly before departure.
The following year, having got the Games out of his system, he astonished most of European cycling by riding an almost perfect Tour, struggling only on the penultimate day's mountaintop finish at Mont Ventoux and finishing just 32 seconds behind third-placed LANCE ARMSTRONG, who tipped him as a possible future winner. It was an improvement that hinged on two things: weight loss and his need to find new goals after his Olympic triumphs.
By the end of the season he was the object of one of cycling's biggest transfer battles between Team Sky and his 2009 backer Garmin, eventually moving to the fledgling British squad.
In 2008 he published his MEMOIRS,
In Pursuit of Glory
. The title was thought up by Brad and his wife, Cath, and the book delves deep into his relations with his father and his problems post-Athens.
WOMEN
At the start of the cycling era, the new pastime played a key role in getting women out of the kitchen, away from chaperones, and out of constraining multiple petticoats and corsets into “rational” dress. Surprizing as it may seem now, the CYCLISTS' TOURING CLUB was involved in at least one case in the 1890s where a female member was refused entry to the women's bar in a hotel because she was wearing “rational” dress—in essence baggy long trousers—rather than a skirt.
“For women, the bicycle became a vehicle of liberation from domesticity and isolation,” wrote the historian Jim McGurn in
On Your Bicycle
(John Murray, 1980). There were disputes over the pros and cons of rational dress and long skirts, and public resistance in remote parts to the former; it remained an issue until the 1920s.
Women began racing soon after the first men's race in 1869 but the cycling authorities have consistently failed to keep up with their progress. There were early records set by the American Jan Lindsey and Germany's Marguerite Gast, while the best early women's track racer was Hélène Dutrieu of France (see opposite), who set an hour record of 39.190 km; the infamous “Choppy” Warburton (see also SOIGNEUR) had female protégés such as “Lisette”—Amélie le Gall—who won an early world championship in 1896.
Six Great Women's Champions
=
 
Hélène Dutrieu
(b. Belguim, 1877, d. 1961) First women's HOUR RECORD holder, setting a distance of 39.190 km in 1895. Dutrieu was one of a group of professionals who used the Simpson lever chain immortalized by HENRI DE TOULOUSE-LAUTREC. She won world track titles in 1897 and 1898, and in November 1898 she won a 12-day race in London. She was awarded the Cross of Saint André by King Leopold of Belgium and went on from racing to stunt cycling (for example, looping the loop), motor sport, and then aviation. In 1910 she became the fourth woman in the world to be licensed as an airplane pilot, causing a minor scandal when it was revealed that she did not wear a corset in the cockpit. She was the first woman pilot to stay airborne for more than an hour. She later took French nationality and was awarded the Légion d'Honneur.
 
Eileen Sheridan
(b. 1942) was British cycling's second woman star after Marguerite Wilson, a double winner of the British Best All Rounder (1949 and 1950). Sheridan set records at most of the set time-trial distances before turning professional for the Hercules bike company to break place-to-place records. Her best was Land's End to John O'Groats (1954) in 2 days 11 hours 7 minutes. She featured in a documentary made by Dunlop entitled
Spinning Wheels: Cycle Sport 50s Style,
which also included REG HARRIS, and did publicity for Player's cigarettes.
 
Maria Canins
(b. 1949) Italian who combined cross-country skiing and road racing at the highest level, becoming JEANNIE LONGO's greatest rival in the late 1980s. Canins was a great climber but a weak time triallist, so her best wins were in races where she could use her climbing skills. She twice won the women's Grande Boucle, won four medals in world road titles (two bronze, two silver), and took stage races such as the Giro d'Italia and Tour of Norway. She went on to take two mountain-bike world titles as a veteran and 15 Italian cross-country skiing championships in various categories.
 
Connie Carpenter-Phinney
(b. 1957) American who came to cycling from speed skating, in which she won a national title in 1976. That year she won the US road and pursuit titles, repeating the double in 1977 and 1979. In 1984 she became the first women's Olympic road race champion in Los Angeles, narrowly outsprinting her teammate Rebecca Twigg. Carpenter was also a national collegiate standard rower. She is married to Davis Phinney, a stage winner in the Tour de France in 1987, and their son Taylor is tipped to be the next big name in US cycling.
 
Yvonne McGregor
(b. England, 1961) was one of the first wave of British track cyclists to succeed after the beginning of lottery funding in 1997. Like CHRIS BOARDMAN, McGregor was a time triallist, hour record breaker, and pursuiter who was trained by Peter Keen from the early 1990s. The Yorkshirewoman took a surprise win in the points race in the 1994 Commonwealth Games, then was part of the British track riders' breakthrough in Sydney, taking bronze in the individual pursuit. She added the world title that year and was made an MBE in 2002.
 
Leontien Van Moorsel
(b. Netherlands, 1970) Triple Olympic champion in Sydney in 2000, where she won the road race, the time trial, and the 3 km pursuit. She defended her road title in Athens in 2004 in spite of a crash on the penultimate lap, after which she retired as one of Holland's most successful Olympians. Van Moorsel traded on a glamorous image, wearing bright lipstick and long painted fingernails, but took time out of the sport between 1994 and 1998 to recover from anorexia and depression. On her return she won the world time trial title and took silver in the road race on home soil.
In GREAT BRITAIN, the Rosslyn Ladies' Cycling Club was founded in 1922. Marguerite Wilson was British cycling's first woman star, a record-breaker who rode as a professional in the 1930s, breaking every women's record on the books including the END TO END and 1,000 miles. It was not until the 1950s that women's racing took off again; the Women's Cycle Racing Association was founded in 1956 and began running a national road race championship. Eileen Sheridan won the first women's BBAR and 100 title in 1950. (The
first women's national TIME TRIAL championship was the 25 held in 1944).
While the UCI began holding a women's road race world title in 1958 (the first held in Reims, France, won by Elsy Jacobs of Luxembourg) under pressure from Eileen Gray, one of the first women to race in British national colors in 1946, they did so against a certain amount of opposition, and women's racing truly began to gather pace only in the 1970s and 1980s. That was thanks partly to an upsurge in interest in the US after the foundation of the Coors Classic, and by the end of the 1980s most of the best women's races were in North America.
The women's TOUR DE FRANCE started in 1984 and was run concurrently with the men's race but that came to an end in 1989 and a similar event known as La Grande Boucle Féminine is run by a different company, but lasts less than a week. The toughest races on the women's calendar are the Tour de l'Aude and GIRO D'ITALIA, while the women's World Cup includes scaled down CLASSICS such as Flèche Wallonne and the Tour of FLANDERS. The money available in women's road racing is minimal compared to what is on offer for men; the disparity is far greater than, say, in tennis.
MOUNTAIN-BIKING has played a key role, because women competed on equal terms from the sport's beginnings in the 1970s and the sport did not have road racing's tradition of discrimination. That meant that when mountain-biking took off in the early 1990s women such as Britain's Caroline Alexander and the Americans Juli Furtado and Missy Giove were able to make a far better living than if they had been racing on the road.
On the other hand, questions about women's cycling were still being raised in the early 1990s, when there was debate about the length and toughness of women's road racing—the UCI felt distances should be restrained, while some races such as the Ore–Ida Classic in the US deliberately went outside the rules.
Women's racing in the OLYMPIC GAMES began only in 1984 and in the Commonwealth Games as late as 1990. At the time of the Beijing Olympics the British sprinter Victoria Pendleton rightly complained that women were discriminated against in track racing, with only three events to the men's seven. This will be put right in 2012, but is many years overdue.
 
(SEE ALSO
BERYL BURTON
,
NICOLE COOKE
,
JEANNIE LONGO
,
ALFONSINA STRADA
)
WORLD
CHAMPIONSHIPS
Cycling as a world sport was not unified in the 19th century but the dominant organization was Britain's National Cycle Union, strictly an amateur body. Their national title races were considered unofficial world championships. The first was a mile race at Wolverhampton in 1874, won by JAMES MOORE, while in 1879 a long-distance race was organized, lasting 26 hours and won by Charles Terront of France. When the NCU helped to found the International Cycling Association, that body ran the first official world championships, held in Chicago in 1893 to coincide with a world exposition. There was limited participation from outside the US, which took two of the three gold medals.
The Italians began campaigning for a world road-race championship after the First World War, and an amateur title was inaugurated in 1921. The French Grand Prix Wolber was considered an unofficial professional world title until the UCI ran its first professional road race title in 1927, with pros and amateurs riding together on the Nurburgring in Germany. The winner was ALFREDO BINDA of Italy. The UCI has been slow to promote women's racing and there was no world title for women until 1958, when
the winner was Elsy Jacobs of Luxembourg.
BOOK: Cyclopedia
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