Dutch cyclists ecstatic about 2015 Tour start
Sometimes history repeats itself and sometimes historic events are the
prelude to something beautiful. Already the Netherlands is the country where
most Tour starts (La grande départ) have taken place and this country will
strengthen that lead. In 2015 it will be the sixth time that the Tour de France
will start from this small country by the North Sea. And it will take place in
Utrecht. It’s a historic success for the city and its inhabitants. JOEP DERKSEN
goes back in time and looks at the history of this competition in the
Netherlands.
The city of
Utrecht is the sixth city where the Tour will start. In 1954, it was Amsterdam
that could pride itself of being the first city outside France to give host to
la grande départ. After that, the Tour starts in the Netherlands were held,
respectively, in Scheveningen
(1973), Leiden (1978), Den Bosch (1996) and Rotterdam (2010). With these
statistics, the Netherlands beats all other countries in the world as far as
the hosting of the Grand Depart is concerned, beating Belgium (4 tour starts),
Germany (3), Luxemburg (2) and the United Kingdom 2).
At the time, the 41st start
in 1954 was a huge success. Not in the least because Dutch cyclist Wout
Wagtmans won the first stage from Amsterdam to Brasschaat, beating 110 riders
from eleven teams. Later on in that race, two other Dutchmen won a tour stage;
Wim van Est (stage 4) and Henk Faanhof (stage 9). Ultimate winner was Louison
Bobet, who rode the 23 stages, 4,656 kilometer in a total time of 140 hours, 6
minutes and five seconds, with an average speed of 33.229 km/h.
The Tour of 1973 also started with a
Dutch winner in the prologue; Joop Zoetemelk, who won the 1980 edition of the
Tour de France and became world champion five years after that, at the age of
38. A total of 12 Dutch cyclists participated in the Tour of 1973, but none of
them won a Tour stage, except Joop Zoetemelk, who was the strongest in the
fourth stage from Reims to Nancy. Overall winner that year was Luis Ocana.
The third time that the Tour started in
the Netherlands, it was a big disaster. Therefore, that episode in Tour history
is also referred to as ‘La Grande Debacle’. In 1978 the first Tour stage was a
prologue in Leiden. It was raining cats and dogs, but Jan Raas was the
strongest of them all. However, in that rain, some of the (French) favorites
had fallen and lost considerable time. The Tour director, Felix Levitan,
decided that the end results of the prologue would not count. It is whispered
that another reason for this decision was a disagreement between the Tour organisation
and the local volunteers regarding the division of the sponsor money. Raas
himself was furious about the decision and he turned all his frustration into
energy, winning the first stage – and the famous yellow jersey – the next day.
That year, Bernard Hinault won one of his five Tour victories.
The
Netherlands had to wait almost twenty years for another Tour start. But in 1996
the Tour came back to this country, starting in Den Bosch. Ultimate winner that
year, with an average speed of over 39 kilometers per hour, was Bjarne Riis,
who later on admitted that he had used epo. Dutch stage winners were Jeroen
Blijlevens (5th stage), Michael Boogerd (6) and Bart Voskamp (18).
The latest
Tour that started in the Netherlands was the 97th edition and the
cyclists gathered in Rotterdam for the first stage. Unfortunately, there were
no Dutch successes to be recorded that year. Alberto Contador beat Andy Schleck
by 39 seconds to win the overall Tour title. But two years later, it turned out
that Contador had used doping (clenbuterol) and the title was taken away from
him. In history books, it is Andy Schleck who is now proclaimed the winner.
So in 2015
the Tour de France is returning to its foreign roots and Aleid Wolfsen, mayor
of Utrecht, is delighted by this news, he said in NUsport of 8 November. ‘The
start of the Tour de France in Utrecht is good for the Netherlands, this city
and the sport. It will be a fantastic party and it is a unique feat, especially
in these economic times.’ Also Tour director Christian
Prudhomme is pleased with Utrecht as starting location, NUsport writes. ‘It is
a city that lives with the bike; a university city which matches the Tour
perfectly.’
Up
to a million visitors are expected to visit Utrecht at the time of the Tour
start. All hotels in and near the city will be fully booked for a week. That
year, all eyes will be focused on the Dutch riders again. Cyclists such as Lars
Boom, a huge talent who can achieve much more victories than he has
accomplished so far. Boom looks forward to the 2015 Tour. As a young boy he
watched the Tour pass by in his native town Vlijmen and he hopes that he can
achieve ultimate glory in 2015.
(Published
in The Holland Times, December edition).
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