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Merckx: Half Man, Half Bike

Page 29

by William Fotheringham


  127 races, 50 wins

  1973 (Molteni) Het Volk (3/3); Ghent–Wevelgem (3/4); Amstel Gold Race (7/4); Paris–Roubaix (15/4); Liège–Bastogne–Liège (22/4); Paris–Brussels (26/9); GP Nations (6/10); overall Vuelta a España + six stages (26/4–13/5); overall Giro d’Italia + six stages (18/5–9/6); overall Tour of Sardinia + one stage (24/2– 1/3); stage of Paris–Nice (11/3); overall GP Fourmies + one stage (22–23/9); Lagueglia Trophy (18/2)

  136 races, 51 wins

  1974 (Molteni) World professional road race championship, Montreal, Canada (25/8); overall Giro d’Italia + two stages (16/5–8/6); overall Tour de France + eight stages (27/6–21/7); overall Tour of Switzerland + three stages (12–21/6); three stages of Paris–Nice (9–14/3); Lagueglia Trophy (20/2)

  140 races, 38 wins

  1975 (Molteni) Milan–San Remo (19/3); Amstel Gold Race (29/3); Tour of Flanders (6/4); Liège–Bastogne–Liège (20/4); stage of the Tour of Switzerland (19/6); two stages of the Tour de France (2–5/7); overall Tour of Sardinia + one stage (22–26/2); overall Catalan Week + one stage (31/3–4/4); two stages of Paris–Nice (9–14/3); two stages of Tour of Romandie (7–11/5)

  151 races, 38 wins

  1976 (Molteni) Milan–San Remo (19/3); overall Catalan Week + two stages (22–26/3); stage of Tirreno–Adriatico (13/3); stage of Tour of Romandie (4/5)

  111 races, 15 victories

  1977 (FIAT) stage of Tour of Switzerland (21/6); overall Tour Mediterranean (19–23/2); stage of Paris–Nice (14/3)

  119 races, 17 victories

  1978 (C&A) 5 races, 0 victories

  Last professional race Circuit du Pays de Waes (Kemzeke, Belgium), 19 March

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  For sharing memories of Merckx on various occasions I should like to thank: Jørgen Leth, Jean-Luc Vandenbroucke, Gian-Paolo Ormezzano, Bob Addy, Ian Banbury, Sean Kelly, Michael Wright, Jiří Daler, Joël Godaert, Giorgio Albani, Bernard Thévenet, Ole Ritter, Vittorio Adorni, Ernesto Colnago, Sid Barras, Emile Daems. Particular thanks should go to Jos Bruyère, Guillaume Michiels and Bob Lelangue, all of whom were generous with their time when discussing their years at Merckx’s side.

  During research for a future book on Flandrian cycling, the name Merckx inevitably came up when I interviewed Rik Van Looy, Patrick Sercu, Walter Godefroot, Herman Van Springel and Frans Verbeeck. I would like to thank all of these greats for their help.

  For providing telephone numbers and general advice, I should like to thank Stéphane Thirion, Marc Ghyselinck, Marco Pastonesi and Philippe Bouvet. Their names seemed to open doors wherever I looked.

  Other valuable assistance came from Chris Boardman and Peter Keen, both of whom provided insights into their Hour Records and that of Merckx. I am indebted to my brother Alasdair for helping with interviews with Raphael Geminiani and Txomin Perurena, and to Barbara Rumpus at l’Equipe for sourcing one particular piece of writing. Jacinto Vidarte and Javier de Dalmases were generous with their memories of José Manuel Fuente while Joël Godaert provided insights into the final months of Merckx’s career and supplied extracts from his book Eddy Merckx La Roue de la Fortune, reproduced in La Dernière Heure. Many thanks to Tim Harris and Jos Ryan for good coffee, encouragement and the loan of their spare bed in East Flanders while I was interviewing. My son Patrick will remember this book for his first paid writing assignment – Merckx’s palmares – for which many thanks.

  My agent John Pawsey and my sports editor at the Guardian, Ian Prior, have both provided valuable backing over many years now. At Yellow Jersey Press my editor Matt Phillips was a tower of strength from start to finish, while thanks are also due to James Jones in design for the cover, Bethan Jones in publicity, Phil Brown in production, the copy editor, Richard Collins and the proof reader, Myra Jones.

  As ever, I owe the biggest and most enduring debt to Caroline, Patrick and Miranda, who have been unstinting in their love and support in the face of yet more absences in foreign parts and many days when my heart and mind were in Flanders or the Dolomites.

  Bibliography

  Rider statistics and Merckx’s victory margins are taken from Vélo-Gotha, by René Jacobs and Harry Van den Bremt, published in 1984, which was also my reference for Merckx’s palmares. For detailed references to the Tour de France, I have gone back to l’Equipe’s Tour de France à 100 Ans, published in 2002. The website www.cyclingarchives.com was a useful resource for the results of other races. The website www.INA.fr was a good source of archive race footage.

  Also of reference were the following books, in no particular order:

  Eddy Merckx l’Epopée, Théo Mathy, Editions Luc Pire, 2007; Maglia rosa, triumph and tragedy at the Giro d’Italia, Herbie Sykes, Rouleur Ltd, 2011; Eddy Merckx, La Veridique Histoire, Jean-Paul Ollivier, Glenat, 1996, from which is taken my translation of Roger Pingeon’s account of an evening with Merckx in 1969 in chapter six; Eddy Merckx, Cet Inconnu, Roger Bastide, Marabout 1972; Eddy Merckx, Homme et Cannibale, Rik Vanwalleghem and Joël Godaert, Pinguin/Dernière Heure, 1993; Faema Espresso 1945–2010, Collezione Enrico Maltoni, 2009; Cycling Classics 1970–72, Noel G. Henderson, Pelham Books, 1973; Pedalare! Pedalare! A history of Italian cycling, John Foot, Bloomsbury, 2011; The Great Bike Race, Geoffrey Nicholson, Magnum, 1978; Het Wonder Van Vlaanderen, de Epos van de Ronde, Rik Van Walleghem, Pinguin/Het Nieuwsblad, 1998; Tours de France, Antoine Blondin, La Table Ronde, 2001; Toute l’Histoire du Cyclisme Belge sur route, Théo Mathy, Editions Arts et Voyages, 1978; Een Klein Dorp, een Zware Tol, Stefan van Laere, Frans and Josef Craeninckx, Manteau, 2004; Eddy Merckx en ik, Herinneringen aan de Kannnibal, Stefan van Laere, Bola Editions, 2010; Les Géants du Cyclisme Belge, Théo Mathy, Editions Arts et Voyages, 1975; Qui Êtes-Vous Eddy Merckx?, Marc Jeuniau, Editions Arts et Voyages, 1969; Le Phénomène, Eddy Merckx et ses Rivaux, François Terbéen, del Duca, Paris, 1970; I Miei Campioni, Nino Defilippis and Beppe Conti, Graphot Editrice, 2000; Tour de France 1974, David Saunders, Kennedy Bros Publishing, 1974; Pour un Maillot Jaune, Luis Ocaña and François Terbéen, Calmann-Lévy, 1972; Luis Ocaña, Le Soleil des Pelotons, Bernard Loizeau, private publication, 1978; Merckx–Ocaña duel au sommet, François Terbéen, Calmann-Levy, 1974; Merckx ou la rage de vaincre, Léon Zitrone, Editions Planete, 1969; Eddy Merckx, l’Irrésistible Ascension d’un Jeune Champion, Pierre Thonon (translation of original biography in Flemish by Louis Clicteur and Lucien Berghmans), De Schorpioen, 1968; Tout Eddy, le plus grand champion cycliste de tous les temps raconte sa vie d’exception, Stéphane Thirion, Jourdan, Paris, 2006; Face à face avec Eddy Merckx, Marc Jeuniau, Editions Arts et Voyages, 1971; Merckx Intime, Philippe Brunel, Calmann-Lévy, 2002; Plus d’un Tour dans Mon Sac: Mes Carnets de Route 1972, Eddy Merckx with Marc Jeuniau, Arts et Voyages, 1972.

  Newspaper and magazine articles referred to include:

  Author interviews with Eddy Merckx, Cycle Sport, 1997; Observer, 2005; Sandra Laborde’s profile, Vélo, November 2000; interviews with Eddy Merckx and Bernard Thévenet in l’Equipe magazine, 21 June 2003; ‘Eddy, Walter, Patrick, Herman et les autres’, Vélo, October 2005; Patrick Lafayette on Merckx’s first race in l’Equipe magazine, 1 October 2011.

  Index

  The page references in this index correspond to the printed edition from which this ebook was created. To find a specific word or phrase from the index, please use the search feature of your ebook reader.

  EM indicates Eddy Merckx.

  Addy, Bob 210

  Adorni, Vittorio 57, 58, 70–1, 72, 73–4, 75, 76, 89, 152

  Aerts, Jean 28, 68

  Aerts, Marcel 288

  Agostinho, Joaquim 144, 147, 167, 168, 191, 275

  Aimar, Lucien 121, 134, 147, 171

  Aix en Provence, Grand Prix d’ 1977 273

  Aja, Gonzalo 248, 249

  Albani, Giorgio:

  background 162

  EM’s Hour Record, recalls 195, 197, 199, 200, 201, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207

  Molteni and 162, 182, 231

  all-round champions 75
, 185, 187, 188, 221

  Altig, Rudi 57, 72, 118, 119–21, 220

  Amstel Gold:

  1975 254

  1976 269

  1977 273

  Anderlecht football team 286–7

  Anderson, Phil 91

  Anquetil, Jacques 70

  alcohol and 11, 133, 134

  background/childhood 97, 110

  Bic team and 63, 160

  earnings 50

  EM, comparisons with 210, 219, 220, 222–3

  EM, friend of 133, 134

  EM, hero of 30, 85, 123

  Fangio, compared to 122

  final years in cycling 272, 284, 289

  Giro/Tour de France double 142

  Hour Record 195, 198, 204, 208

  lack of interest in details of his bike 126

  lifestyle 11, 152, 160

  Paris–Luxembourg, 1969 128–9

  Paris–Nice, 1967 58

  racing style 95, 289

  retires 160

  rivals 157

  sees cycling in commercial terms 226

  specialist 75, 219, 222–3

  Tour de France 11, 51, 123, 176, 249, 250

  Tour de France, 1963 122

  Tour de France, 1964 121–2, 166

  Van Buggenhout and 47

  Van Looy and 93, 94

  winning margins 123

  Anquetil, Janine 134

  Antwerp Six-Day, 1966 51

  Ardennes Weekend, 1972 183, 208

  Armani, Luciano 45, 51, 171

  Armstrong, Lance 6–7, 11, 149, 153, 180, 192

  comeback 272

  De Vries and 236

  EM, comparisons with 219, 222, 223, 290

  EM, friendship with 288–9, 290

  hostility towards 261

  Hour Record, does not attempt 208

  personality 286

  racing style 237, 290

  testicular cancer 288–9

  Tour de France 219, 223, 261

  Tour de France, 2004 290

  ASO 287

  Augendre, Jacques 193

  Bahamontes, Federico 26, 63, 160, 184, 222

  Banbury, Ian 271, 272, 282

  Baracchi Trophy:

  1966 57

  1967 69

  1969 137

  1971 180

  1972 198

  Baronchelli, Gianbattista 245, 246

  Barrett, Mike 273

  Bartali, Gino 36, 66, 103, 157, 162, 289

  Basso, Marino 87, 162

  Bastide, Roger 71, 89, 144–5, 222–3, 232

  Battaglin, Giovanni 215

  Belgian amateur championship 41

  1962 85

  1964 43–4, 67

  Belgian Federation 110

  Belgian junior championship, 1962 38–9

  Belgian national championship 48, 49, 287

  1967 67–8

  1976 269

  Belgian national team 39–40, 43–4, 45, 50, 67–8, 76, 178, 253, 276, 287 see also world championships

  Belgium, Tour of 158, 224

  1970 7, 54, 140–1

  1971 54, 163

  Bianchi 66, 89

  Bic 50, 63, 143, 160, 166–7, 168, 171, 173, 184, 191, 193, 237, 239, 247, 274

  bike factory, EM’s 285, 286, 287

  Binda, Alfredo 215, 254

  Bitossi, Franco 60, 87, 156, 198

  Blois velodrome, EM’s crash at 133–40, 148, 152, 153, 181, 197, 224, 247, 279, 280, 285, 291

  Blondin, Antoine 114–15, 116, 119, 146–7, 149, 150–1, 153, 167–8, 176

  Boardman, Chris 195, 196, 202–3, 204–5, 206–7

  Bobet, Jean 75

  Bobet, Louison 121, 262, 289

  career ended by injury 247

  Hour Record, does not attempt 208

  influence of Coppi on 70

  Lombardy/world championship/Milan– San Remo, 1951 180

  retirement 169

  strictness in diet and lifestyle 152

  team system and 236

  Tour de France record 129, 176

  Tour de France, 1971, on 169

  Tour de France, 1972 191

  Boever, Jacques de 121

  Boifava, Davide 137

  bon vivant lifestyle 152–3

  Boniface, Guy 159

  Boons, Josef 67

  Bordeaux–Paris Classic 98

  1970 134

  Bottecchia, Ottavio 155

  Bouloux, Robert 171

  Bouvet, Albert 95

  Bracke, Ferdinand 59, 69, 82, 91, 124, 197, 199

  Breton, Nello 261

  Broos, Félix 19

  Brunel, Philippe 11

  Brussels velodrome 46, 246

  Brussels–Alsemberg, 1963 77

  Bruyère, Jos:

  background 228–9

  Bic offer 238–9

  crashes 254

  cultural identity 81–2

  football, love of 228

  Het Volk classic, 1974 244

  la course en tête, on 223

  Liège–Bastogne–Liège, 1971 163

  Milan–San Remo, 1971 162

  team-mate, as EM’s 141, 151, 162, 163, 171, 223–4, 228–32, 234, 236, 238–9, 244, 248, 248, 254, 249, 260, 284

  Tour de France, 1971 171

  Tour de France, 1974 248, 249

  Tour de France, 1975 260

  Tour de France, 1978 284

  Tour of Switzerland, 1974 236

  turns professional 223

  Bruyne, Fred de 66

  Bruxellois, status as a 83, 85–6, 88, 97, 232, 233

  Buggenhout, Jean van:

  background 46

  death of 245–6, 256, 281

  Driessens and 89, 232–3

  EM contract with Peugeot and 50

  EM’s ambition, on 125

  EM’s heavy race calendar and 278

  EM’s Hour Record and 204

  EM’s innocent love of cycling, on 108

  EM’s manager 46–7, 50, 57, 70, 89, 108, 125, 126, 141, 151–2, 204, 226, 232–3, 239–40, 241, 245–6, 278, 281, 283

  EM’s personality, on 108, 109, 151–2

  EM’s preoccupation with details of bike, on 126

  EM’s retirement and 283

  EM’s treatment of team-mates, on 239–40

  Giro d’Italia, 1970, persuades EM to race in 141

  personality 46–7

  power in cycling world 46–7

  Savona and 109

  Swerts and 241

  Van Looy and 226

  C&A 281, 282, 283

  Carpano 62, 66, 67

  Carril, Vicente López 1, 185–6, 248, 249, 250

  Casartelli, Fabio 173

  Catalan Week:

  1973 213–14

  1975 254

  1976 269

  1977 276

  Catalonia, Tour of, 1968 76

  Cavalli, Angelo 204, 218

  Cavendish, Mark 213

  Ceretelli, Professor 199, 200

  CGER bank 288

  Championship of Flanders, 1966 57

  Chany, Pierre 9, 165, 226, 264

  Circuit de l’Aulne, 1970 133, 148

  Claes, George 23

  Classics:

  Ardennes 163

  Bruyère and 228

  EM as great champion for the 62, 70–1, 100

  EM not interested in as a youth 85

  EM tally of 34

  EM retirement and 284

  EM’s rivals in 77

  first tests in 52, 53, 54, 60

  Flandrian 96

  Maertens and 269

  Northern 183

  Ockers and 29

  second-string professionals specialise in 86

  top riders of all time 157

  Van Looy and 47, 62, 75, 93, 222

  see also under individual race name

  Colnago, Ernesto 197, 200, 204, 224, 286

  Contador, Alberto 190

  Coppi, Fausto:

  ambition 125

  appetite for winning 210

  Bianchi and 66

>   Carpano and 62, 66, 67

  decline and death of 93

  detail, fixated with 125–6

  dominance 125

  Driessens and 89

  early life 26, 110

 

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