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Yesterday β€” 7 July 2024The Guardian

Remco Evenepoel in bloom can put a Belgian back on top of Tour de France | William Fotheringham

7 July 2024 at 03:00

Young rider has an ace up his sleeve after winning on Friday with final stage set for time trial for the first time since 1989

Naming famous Belgians is a pub quiz staple, but for cycling fans, there is a more intriguing piece of trivia. Your starter for 10 – name the last time a Belgian stood on the Tour de France’s finish podium in Paris. The wording is critical, but the question remains a massive one for the country that produced Eddy Merckx, whose achievements were thrown into the spotlight this past week for the umpteenth time.

The last Belgian to win the Tour remains the curly haired diminutive climber Lucien Van Impe, who is also the last to stand on the podium in Paris; incredibly for a nation of Belgium’s cycling stature, that was in 1981. One Belgian has figured in the top three since then, and here is the trivia twist: the now forgotten Jurgen Van den Broeck, a gangling time-trial specialist, never got on the podium, but was awarded third long after the 2010 race, when Alberto Contador and Denis Menchov were disqualified for doping offences.

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Β© Photograph: Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty Images

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Β© Photograph: Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty Images

Before yesterdayThe Guardian

Stubborn, brave, brilliant: Cavendish defies age again to rewrite history | William Fotheringham

3 July 2024 at 15:21

To win a Tour stage at 39 is a stunning feat of endurance in a sport where many careers last less than two years

In 2007, when Mark Cavendish made his Tour de France debut, there was plenty of expectation that the youth from the Isle of Man would produce special things on his bike, but longevity was never mentioned. Professional cycling is a world where the average career is said to last two and half years, where most professionals don’t get past their initial two-year contract, and merely to win one race is an achievement. To win a Tour stage is still viewed as the crowning glory for most, and to keep racing into the early 30s is a big ask. So where, then, do you rank winning 35 Tour de France stages, over a span of 17 seasons, and to be still winning at 39, let alone breaking the Tour stage-winning record held by EddyΒ Merckx?

The answer is, you don’t. You think back to where you were 17 years ago – when Tony Blair was a very recent memory, Sven-GΓΆran Eriksson and Lance Armstrong slightly less recent, and Boris Johnson had only been sacked from a couple of prominent roles – and you think forward to where you are today, you compare the two, and you wonder. Which of us can maintain the drive to excel at anything for that long? And then you reflect on what it must take to persist so stubbornly at something as frankly insane as sprinting from a bunch in the Tour de France, something where the risks are blindingly obvious – just ask Fabio Jakobsen to name one – and the rewards magnificent but so oftenΒ elusive.

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Β© Photograph: Daniel Cole/AP

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Β© Photograph: Daniel Cole/AP

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