Peak Performance – L’Eroica Britannia – Festival & Ride Report

“Every time I see an adult on a bicycle, I no longer fear for the human race” – H.G. Wells

For quite some time I have thought that bicycles have semi-magical qualities. Riding one can make you happy when you are otherwise sad and they can make you believe that you are someone else – usually someone far better at riding a bike. They can make you fitter and more sociable and, as Mr H.G. Wells says in his wonderful quote above, they can change the destiny of the world. It’s a given then that they are wonderful things. But, until this weekend at the sublime L’Eroica Britannia event, I had not realised that they are also capable of enabling time travel. Perhaps that’s why old H.G. (who knew a thing or two about Time Machines) loved them so much.

Continue reading

Stoller’s Départ – Douglas Cowie & Matthew Shaw

I am lucky to be old enough, and to have arrived in London just in time, to have enjoyed the considerable pleasures of the old Reading Room at the British Museum. The circular space at the centre of the Great Court, which attained almost sacred status to the Capital’s writers of yesteryear, was just about the most evocative place one could imagine to read or write. The Victorian desks, low glowing lights, the curved bookshelves lining the perimeter walls and the elegant clerestory windows were all suitably impressive but so was the archaic ticketed entry system which made you feel as much a part of the ancient furniture as the often impenetrable tomes in the room. Pushing open the low gate and entering the hushed arena of that literary sanctum was about as good as it got for me back then and I mourned the closing of the old Reading Room in 1997 like the loss of an old friend. It remains my favourite London space, despite not being open for 17 years.

Continue reading

Happy Birthday – Greg Lemond

Happy Birthday Greg – 26.06.1962

  • TdF Winner –  1986, ’89, ’90
  • World Champion 1983, ’89

lemond_2378703b-1

One of the most popular Tour winners of all time, Greg Lemond’s epic battles with his team mate Bernard Hinault and then with the life-threatening injuries he suffered in a freak shooting incident to come back for his second and third Tour wins are truly the stuff of legend. Boyishly enthusiastic, good-looking and yet determined to bring a new professionalism and outlook to the sport, his 8 second win over Laurent Fignon in 1989 remains one of the most memorable of all time. Somewhat sidelined and overshadowed during the Armstrong era, Lemond has recently re-emerged to take his rightful place as an icon of the sport.

Portrait of ‘The Cycling Podcast’ – with Richard Moore, Lionel Birnie & Daniel Friebe

It’s just after 3pm on a Tuesday afternoon in Hackney and Richard Moore, Lionel Birnie and Daniel Friebe are looking for a bit of peace and quiet. The trouble is that around the busy East London streets of Broadway Market and London Fields school kids are heaving out onto the hot pavements and the nearby building sites that are sprouting up yet more flats in this trendy part of the capital are still in full swing. Add in the chatter of the many achingly cool characters lounging outside myriad cafés and coffee shops and, despite the lovely summer afternoon weather, things are looking, and most definitely sounding, pretty bleak.

Continue reading

Neo-Pro Life – Tao Geoghegan Hart – Interview

Nineteen year old British rider Tao Geoghegan-Hart experienced both the highs and lows of the top level of peloton life in the recent Tour of California. The Hackney-born neo-pro, riding his first season with Axel Merckx’s Bissell Development Team, found himself 4th on General Classification on Stage 1 after getting into the day’s successful break and gaining time bonuses at the intermediate sprints. A trip to the podium also followed to pick up the Best Young Rider jersey.
Throughout the week the Bissell riders were road-testing SRAM’s new wireless shifting group set offering an additional opportunity for Tao to talk with an understandably excited press, but the youngster’s week ended in less than ideal fashion with a bad crash that left him 14 minutes down on the day and with a large amount of road-rash that made his journey back to the UK very uncomfortable. I asked him questions on the day he took his family to watch a bit of sun-soaked cycle action at the London Nocturne event around Smithfield.
TJP: The Bissell team really took the race on in California recently. What were the teams plans before the race?
TGH: Simply to get stuck in and show ourselves to the bigger teams as much as possible. I was the youngest rider, but some of the other guys are in their last or second to last year as U23’s, so it is important they show themselves at any opportunity. Obviously it is a 2.HC race stacked with WorldTour opposition, so you take your chances where you can.
You got the young rider jersey and 4th on GC after stage 1. How did that feel?
It was an opportunistic move, but like I say, as a smaller development team, we have to go for every bit of exposure and result, however big or small, that we can. It was good to get the team off on the right foot, even if we eventually did have some troubles later in the week with crashes and injuries.

20140617-202354-73434422.jpg

The Young Rider jersey on Stage 1 at the 2014 Tour of California.
Is this the first time you’ve raced with the likes of Wiggins, Cav, Sagan etc?
Yes, although I have trained with quite a few of the guys I was racing with at one time or another, so it wasn’t all completely new.
Did the race feel different because of their presence?
No, a bike race is a bike race, once you are in it it doesn’t matter who you are racing, there isn’t time for that. Of course it is special having such a high caliber field lining up but in order to race, I think it is important to remove any thoughts of the opposition, who they are, what they might have achieved, from your mind. It certainly elevates the profile of the race though.
Tao has featured prominently in the junior events which he has been competing in until now. His 3rd place finish in Junior Paris-Roubaix in 2013 was followed up by stage and GC wins in the Tour d’Istrie and the Giro Dell Lungiana. Another podium finish in this year’s U23 Liege-Bastogne-Liege shows his strength is still good at this new level. Touted by cycling writer Daniel Friebe as a ‘future winner of the Tour de France’ Tao will be closely watched by many in the sport as he continues to develop.
You must have spoken with a few different teams before signing with Bissell. What helped you make the decision to race with them?
Racing under Axel was a huge draw, combined with the team’s history of placing riders into the World Tour and on to great careers. ‘Development’ is the most important thing in this team and I value that above all else. Although I must add we have some great sponsors too, which always helps.

20140617-202354-73434543.jpg

Bissell have a good track record in placing riders with World Tour teams
How has living abroad and the increased travel been for you? Are you missing London and your family?
I miss my family of course but it is part of the job and I wouldn’t have it any other way. I love being abroad and I don’t think it should be taken for granted to be able to visit new places and see the world. I don’t mind living abroad or travelling, like I say, it is all part of the fun and draw of the sport.
You got to test some special equipment at the Tour of California. Were SRAM looking for feedback from you as well as the testing in a race environment?
Yes we went through an extensive feedback process with SRAM, looking at every angle and detail in which we may be able to improve the groupset for racers and amateur riders alike. It is a fascinating product and it was a real honour to be able to work with and on it.

20140617-202354-73434660.jpg

At the Junior World Road Race last year Tao was let down by an equipment failure on a crucial climb.
What has surprised you most about the pro ranks?
It wasn’t a surprise, but the races are much more controlled than at the Junior level and even U23’s in some ways. There is a clearer hierarchy and a great deal of respect between the riders that there is not at the lower levels.
Tell us about your plans for the next few months.
My race calendar has yet to be announced and is largely dependent on selections, but I hope to have a strong finish to the year in August and September on both sides of the Atlantic. My main aim is to return to the form I had in the Spring and do a good job for the team, on whatever level that may turn out to be.

Check out some of Tao’s video diaries from the Tour of California at Bissell’s website

Tao also writes an excellent blog Le Stagiare

Climbs and Punishment – Book Review – Felix Lowe

For some reason books about epic cycle rides often struggle to maintain sight of the reason behind the particular journey. Caught up with geography, mileage and the inevitable misfortunes that happen along the way, we are quickly left to forget what the point of the epic ride was in the first place. Context is quickly abandoned in place of stories about encounters with mountains, deserts and (usually) wild coyotes or bears. 

photo 1

Continue reading

Happy Birthday – Eddy Merckx

Happy Birthday ‘Cannibal’

  • TdF Winner –  1969, ’70, ‘ 71, ’72, ’74
  • Giro d’Italia Winner – 1968, ’70, ‘ 72, ’73, ’74
  • Vuelta a Espana Winner – 1973
  • World Champion – 1967, ’71, ’74
  • Paris-Roubaix Winner – 1968, ’70, ’73
  • Milan-San Remo Winner – 1966, ’67, ’69, ’71, ’72, ’75, ’76
  • Winner at Tour of Flanders, Liege-Bastogne-Liege, Flèche Wallone, Giro di Lombardia
  • World Hour Record 1972

Eddy Merckx in action during the 1970 Tour de France

A uncompromising winning machine, Eddy Merckx bestrides professional cycling as an unassailable colossus. His palmares is without compare, his dedication to victory without parallel. Quite simply The Greatest of All Time, Merckx has no match; modern, historical or contemporary. On every surface, in every season, over every distance, across every parcours, Eddy was, is and will always remain the man to beat.

Not Folding Under Pressure – The London Nocturne by FACE Partnership

We often hear about the unique element of cycling that says it is the only popular sport where the general public can readily do the same challenges in the very same arenas as their professional heroes. The fact that anyone can take a bike out on the roads used in the world’s biggest races is shown as proof that cycling – more than football, rugby or motorsport to name just a few – is truly the real sport of the people.

Continue reading

Competition Time – The Cycling Anthology Volume 4

It’s another Jersey Pocket Giveaway! This time I have a copy of the latest Cycling Anthology up for grabs. UK postal addresses only this time I’m afraid though…

The Cycling Anthology series is intended to give cycling journalists a greater amount of freedom and expression than they might not otherwise enjoy. Editors Ellis Bacon and Lionel Birnie actively encourage some of the best writers to pen a chapter about something that the contributors themselves want to write. This means that, as well as there being a lot of love and knowledge in every story, it’s often something out of the expected and sometimes downright obscure. Which is all to the good as far as I am concerned.

photo

Volume 4, the first to be published in a new jacket design by Yellow Jersey Press, features 10 chapters from Ellis Bacon, Keith Bingham, Lionel Birnie, Orla Chennaoui,Peter Cossins, Alasdair Fotheringham, William Fotheringham, Daniel Friebe, Richard Moore, Tom Southam, James Startt and Matt Stephens.

Seven of the authors introduced their chapters at the book launch in East London last night, demonstrating the varied nature of the writing. From memories of the 1974 Tour de France visit to the UK, through investigations into whether former pro-rider Iban Mayo really did become a long-distance truck driver, to the musical manifestations of cycling culture, it’s the usual rich mix of easily digestible, high quality writing.

To win a copy just answer the following question: Before the book launch I spent the afternoon with three of the contributors as they recorded ‘The Cycling Podcast’. Which three of the authors were they?

Name and address to thejerseypocket@gmail.com  and a name will be picked out some form of randomising receptacle on Monday 16th.

The Cycling Podcast Volume 4 is published by Yellow Press for £8.99 RRP. Volumes 1-3 are also being re-issued with new jacket designs.

Yorkshire’s Grand Depart – Interview with Head of Media – Andy Denton

With the Tour de France less than a month away, all cycling eyes are turning to Yorkshire as final preparations are made before some of England’s most green and pleasant land is turned yellow for the couple of crazy days that will be Le Grand Depart.

Leading the team charged with communicating the story of Yorkshire’s time in the spotlight is Head of Media, Andy Denton. The Jersey Pocket caught up with this Kentish Lad who found his home in the Yorkshire Dales and then helped win the bid to bring Froome, Nibali, Contador and everyone else to England’s largest county.

8277

Continue reading