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Selling the Yellow Jersey

Page 16

by Eric Reed


  participated in two Tours in the 1930s. Fontenay came to Bobet’s hometown

  to compete in the Grand Prix de Saint- Méen, one of the hundreds of local

  races in Brittany. After the fi nish, the fourteen- year- old Bobet talked with Fontenay, who promised to buy the teenager a new seat for his bike. Later

  in the summer, Bobet ran into his idol while training on Brittany’s country

  lanes, and Fontenay lived up to his promise.10 Antonin Magne, who won the

  Tour twice in the 1930s, grew up in a dairy farming community outside Paris.

  His father worked on a farm down the road from one owned by the parents

  of the Pélissier brothers, made famous by Henri Pélissier’s Tour win in 1923

  and the Tour’s “galley slaves of the road” scandal of 1924.11 Since nearly 2,200

  men competed in the Tour between 1909 and 1929, many communities could

  boast that a former Tour rider lived in their midst.

  Clubs and corporate sponsors also created the structured organization of

  apprenticeship and promotion during the interwar years that allowed large

  numbers of aspiring young cyclists to sharpen their skills and to test their

  mettle. The Union Vélocipédique de France, the major umbrella organiza-

  tion for competitive French cycling clubs, grew enormously. Between 1909

  and 1939, the Union Vélocipédique expanded from 80,000 to approximately

  200,000 members.12 The culture of cycling clubs changed signifi cantly dur-

  ing the interwar years, as the clubs evolved from being social enclaves for the bourgeoisie into training centers for aspiring cyclists of all classes. For example, the Véloce- Club de la Belle Epoque was founded in 1888 in Cholet as an

  “association of progress” meant to promote patriotism and popularize new

  technologies like the bicycle, automobile, and airplane. It changed its char-

  ter in 1921 to focus the club on competitive cycling and created two types of

  membership to separate the social and athletic functions of the club.13 Many

  clubs dropped overtly exclusionist, classist language from their charters and

  became “popular” in character. This trend among cycling clubs mirrored the

  broader transformation of associative sports in the interwar years, as more

  and more French men of various social classes and profi les began to partici-

  pate in sports clubs.14

  During the interwar years, industrial concerns and professional racing

  teams became more directly involved in the cycling clubs and sponsoring

  amateur racing. The biographies of professional cyclists who grew up at this

  time make it clear that cycling clubs had become training centers for aspir-

  ing cyclists. The trainers and administrators of the clubs were often former

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  c h a p t e r f o u r

  professional cyclists and acted as intermediaries between young racers and

  professional teams. A formal, national network of amateur and semiprofes-

  sional races throughout the country supplied the proving grounds for young

  cyclists. The most important of these was the Premier Pas Dunlop, the ju-

  nior championship of France, which was sponsored by the tire manufacturer

  Dunlop. The competition consisted of scores of races, fi rst on the town level, with the winners moving on to regional and national championships. A victory in the Premier Pas or similar competitions often led to lucrative profes-

  sional contracts. The clubs and racing circuits fed the ranks of the professionals with an ever- growing number of competitors.

  Marcel Bidot, son of a café owner, grew up in Troyes and realized the

  dream of many aspiring cyclists. In 1920, the eighteen- year- old Bidot, with

  the help of his father, found a clerical position at Crédit Lyonnais Bank. He

  soon quit the job, however, and became a bailiff ’s assistant to have more free time to train and race. In 1922, he joined the Véloce- Club de Levallois. While with the club, Bidot won the Paris – Rouen race after a long solo escape from

  the peloton. Club offi cers introduced Bidot to Ludovic Feuillet, manager of

  the Alcyon racing team. Bidot signed a contract with the team and was paid

  a monthly salary of 500 francs. Bidot’s fi rst year as a professional was a great success: “In 1923, cycling won me 23,000 francs. I would have had to work at

  Crédit Lyonnais, where I was paid 200 francs per month, for ten years to accu-

  mulate such a sum.”15 Following the 1928 Tour, in which he won 5,500 francs,

  Bidot had saved enough money from his cycling winnings to buy a house in

  the countryside near Troyes. Although he never won the Tour, Bidot’s strong

  showings brought him lucrative racing and sponsorship contracts.

  André Leducq, eventual winner of the 1930 and 1932 Tours, worked his

  way up through the hierarchy of prestigious clubs and was also discovered by

  Ludovic Feuillet. Leducq began his amateur career with Montmartre- Sportif,

  a Paris club on the rue Poissonnière. The club’s founder, Charles Ravaud, was

  a journalist at L’Auto and helped Leducq gain membership in the Véloce-

  Club de Levallois after the twenty- two- year- old rider won the French amateur championship. Feuillet employed the widespread practice of “sham amateurism” ( amateurisme marron) and secretly offered money and equipment to the club’s top amateurs to ensure that they signed contracts with his Alcyon team.

  Leducq recalled that in mid- 1925 Feuillet invited him and the two other top

  riders of the club to his offi ce on the avenue de la Grande- Armée and signed

  each to contracts of 1,300 francs per month.16 The riders remained amateurs

  for the rest of the year and offi cially turned professional on January 1, 1926.

  The biographies of Brittany’s cycling stars attest that the system of promo-

  tion worked in roughly the same manner in the provinces, although it must

  t h e f r e n c h s c h o o l o f c y c l i n g

  87

  be said that this region produced an unusually large number of competi-

  tive professional cyclists. The Circuit de l’Ouest, raced in Brittany and spon-

  sored by the Rennes newspaper L’Ouest- Éclair, offered young Breton cyclists a highly visible proving ground and was a pipeline to selection for the Tour

  de France and to more lucrative professional contracts. Pierre Cloarec, Jean-

  Marie Goasmat, Jean Fontenay, Lucien Le Guével, and Eloi Tassin translated

  high fi nishes in the Circuit de l’Ouest into invitations to compete in the Tour de France.17 The Premier Pas Dunlop competitions also helped Breton cyclists

  gain recognition. In 1938, future Tour winner Louison Bobet’s father bought

  him his fi rst bicycle. Thirteen- year- old Louison lied about his age, claimed he was eighteen to enter the local Premier Pas Dunlop challenge in Saint-Méen, placed seventeenth in the race, and gained a taste for competition that

  inspired him to become a professional cyclist.18 Bobet joined the Cyclo- Club

  Rennais in 1941 and was provided with a racing machine and a small contract

  with a regional professional team sponsored by Stella, a Nantes bicycle man-

  ufacturer. The Premier Pas Dunlop also launched the professional career of

  Jean Robic, the 1947 Tour champion. Robic won the regional competition in

  1939, which allowed him to move to Paris to compete in lucrative velodrome

  races in the capital.19

  The Tour de France stood at the pinnacle of the French School’s system

  of competitions. Young men became professional cyclists and dreamed of

  parti
cipating in the Tour de France for glory, profi t, and social promotion.

  The Tour was cycling’s richest event. The lure of the Tour’s prize money en-

  ticed many riders, and a good showing at the Tour led to lucrative contracts

  to compete in other races. For example, André Leducq won a 30,000- franc

  prize for winning the yellow jersey in 1932, but after his victory he signed

  dozens of racing contracts, including a contract for 17,500 francs to compete

  in a velodrome race in Algiers and 25,000 francs to enter the Six Jours de Paris endurance track race.20

  The number of individuals who earned their living as professional cy-

  clists was minuscule, despite France’s expansive system of clubs and races.

  At most, several score were employed full- time per year. Those who were

  not the top riders on their teams struggled fi nancially: cyclists who signed

  contracts with Peugeot, one of the top teams, in the early 1920s rarely made

  more than 200 or 300 francs per month.21 Even successful professional rid-

  ers such as Antonin Magne endured periods of under- or unemployment.

  The son of a farmer from the Aurillac region, Magne entered races secretly

  during the mid- 1920s to hide his cycling from his disapproving father. He

  raced well and, after a strong showing in the Circuit de Champagne race in

  1928, won a contract for the 1929 season from bicycle manufacturer Alleluia.

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  c h a p t e r f o u r

  In the off- season, he performed odd jobs around his father’s farm to make

  ends meet. Desgrange named Magne to the Tour’s French national team in

  1930. Although he fi nished third in that Tour, Magne could not fi nd adequate

  sponsorship for the 1931 season because no professional team would hire him

  as its featured rider. Magne instead raced for Marcel Massoon, who owned

  a single bicycle shop near the train station in Gargan, a Paris suburb, and

  promised to provide Magne with racing machines and material, if not a sal-

  ary, for the season.22 Despite his handicap vis- à- vis the better- compensated professionals, Magne was named to the 1931 Tour’s French national team and

  won the fi rst of his two yellow jerseys.

  2. Tour Heroes as Celebrities and Commodities between the Wars

  Fame itself had become a commodity with immense commercial value. Ce-

  lebrity made star cyclists wealthy. In the hands of the newspapers, who li-

  onized Tour champions and transformed them into popular heroes, and of

  the industrial sponsors, who used cycling champions to sell their products,

  sports celebrity itself was an object of consumption for the French public.

  Stories of the exploits of French Tour champions spurred sales of L’Auto and other newspapers, and the endorsements of these stars helped to sell entire

  lines of products, from bicycles that bore their names to other products com-

  pletely unrelated to cycling.

  The commercial value of cyclists’ fame opened new paths to enrichment

  for Tour stars like the Pélissiers, Antonin Magne, Georges Speicher, and An-

  dré Leducq. Two developments undoubtedly increased the star appeal and

  marketing power of the riders. First, French cyclists once again dominated

  the Tour in the 1930s after a long period of relative weakness vis- à- vis riders of other nationalities. Between 1911 and 1930, only one Frenchman, Henri Pélissier, won the Tour (1923). Following Desgrange’s creation of the national team

  formula in 1930, French riders won in 1930, 1931, 1932, 1933, 1934, and 1937, and the national team won four times between 1930 and 1937. Second, more and

  more businesses recognized what the newspapers had come to understand. In

  terms of marketing, the names, faces, and words of celebrities — athletic and

  otherwise — possessed considerable power; French men and women coveted

  and purchased the images of their favorite stars in the same way that they

  bought tangible products. Businesses sought to link the images of famous

  cyclists to their products to increase sales, even if the goods and services they offered had little relation at all to cycling or to sport.

  Bicycle manufacturers recognized this trend in public tastes and trans-

  lated the fame of interwar Tour stars directly into marketing power. The tone

  t h e f r e n c h s c h o o l o f c y c l i n g

  89

  and approach of bicycle marketing changed markedly since the fi rst days of

  the Tour. Early in the event’s history, manufacturers like Peugeot and Al-

  cyon hired talented professional cyclists in the hope that they would win

  to “prove” the superiority of their products to consumers. Advertising fre-

  quently centered on the machines themselves, rather than the athletes. This

  earlier style of publicity continued in the interwar years. For example, in a

  full- page advertisement during the 1922 Tour, the Labor brand boasted that

  its bicycles had won that year’s Paris – Roubaix race but did not mention the

  name of the racer who rode the machine to victory.23 L’Auto and other dailies often proclaimed victory by “a Peugeot” or “an Alcyon,” and journalists

  frequently substituted the name of a bicycle for that of the rider that rode it.

  For example, in a Petit Parisien reporter’s summary of the 1927 Tour standings, the leading racer seemed to be of secondary importance to the bicycle he

  rode: “The grand brand [Alcyon] . . . still holds, with Frantz, fi rst place in the overall standings, as well as fi rst in the team standings, and continues to reap the laurels of this race that is so diffi cult for the bicycles.”24

  A new style of promotion emerged in the interwar years that relied solely

  on the personal star appeal of the famous French Tour riders. In the 1930s, the Mercier brand led the way among the bicycle manufacturers. Company director Emile Mercier marketed entire lines of bicycles in the late 1930s named after the stars of the Tour — Francis Pélissier, Georges Speicher, Roger Lapébie, An-dré Leducq, and Antonin Magne. He paid enormous sums to the riders for the

  right to use their names and images: in 1937, Francis Pélissier received 300,000

  francs and André Leducq was paid 150,000 francs. Riders received a percent-

  age of the sale of each bicycle frame as a royalty.25 The fi rst- place prize of the 1937 Tour de France was 200,000 francs. Interestingly, many of these stars were retired or past their competitive primes by the time that Mercier bought the

  right to use their names for the bicycles. Francis Pélissier, for example, had

  not competed in the Tour since 1927, and Emile Mercier did not contact Anto-

  nin Magne about creating a line of machines until 1939, the year of the rider’s retirement.26 Clearly, Mercier did not expect to promote the brand by hiring

  these over- the- hill heroes to win races. The mere association of their famous names with the machines publicized and promoted the bicycles.

  After 1930, Desgrange created the publicity caravan and opened the door

  to widespread corporate sponsorship of the Tour. New and different types of

  businesses involved themselves in sponsoring the “national bicycle race” and

  other sporting events during the 1930s. They used the star power of Tour he-

  roes to sell products that were often completely unrelated to cycling. L’Auto, in which Desgrange had promoted the Tour riders as moral role models and

  the event itself as a campaign against physical degeneration, began to change

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  c h a p t e r f o u r

  its approach. In the 1930s, rider
s touted cigarettes and alcohol in the pages

  of L’Auto. In a 1930 advertisement, for example, Charles Pélissier, “the most popular of the French riders,” claimed that Lucky Strike cigarettes have “always been the brand that I prefer” because “It’s Toasted.”* Later, Antonin

  Magne also promoted Lucky Strikes: “Of course, I don’t smoke when I’m rac-

  ing, that would be extravagant . . . but once I cross the fi nish line, what a great feeling to be like everyone else, to be able to smoke Lucky Strikes.”27 Alcohol and wine producers also hired Tour racers to promote their spirits. In Le Petit Parisien, Magne promoted Frileuse Wine as a “sports fortifi er” in an advertisement during the 1935 Tour: “I drink Frileuse Wine every day. Nothing’s

  better for loosening up the legs.”28 René Le Grèves, the French professional

  champion in 1936, touted the aperitif La Quintonine as an “excellent sports

  tonic” in the company’s campaign during the 1936 Tour.29 Thirty riders, in-

  cluding almost the entire French national team, endorsed Le Bonal wine dur-

  ing the 1933 Tour: “In the opinion of the Giants of the Road, Le Bonal is a

  great and soothing wine.”30 In other advertisements in the 1930s, Tour riders

  promoted such products as spring water, paint, and cheese.

  3. The Star System and French Cycling after the Second World War

  The marketing power of cyclists’ celebrity increased and the commercial uses

  for athletic fame diversifi ed after the Second World War. More and more

  businesses sponsored professional cycling teams in the hope of engaging the

  vast audiences that watched bicycle races. A team was incomplete, however,

  without a star cyclist to lead it. The reason for this overriding imperative

  was simple: the media photographed, interviewed, and lionized winners and

  stars, not also- rans. As fi ve- time Tour champion Jacques Anquetil asserted,

  “Second- place fi nishers are forgotten.”31 A star played the role of front man and marketing agent for his sponsors, as well as the athletic role of champion

  and team leader. It was primarily through the team’s lead rider that sponsors

  gained access to the media, especially television, the postwar’s most domi-

  nant medium. A cyclist’s victories made him famous and often translated

 

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