Tour de France magazine - 2020 edition | Page 10

EDITOR’S LETTER A celebration of life! Riding a bike is These excerpts from fundamentally Velominati’s The Hardmen: an incredible Legends of the Cycling Gods experience. – a book full of humorous The wind in and inspiring descriptions your face, of the riders, many of them the sensation of generating blue-collar workers and speed under your own power, farm hands, who created the the balance of forces that indomitable culture of our almost magically hold the sport over the past 120-plus bike suspended upright. For years – reminds us of the most of us as children this pure essence of cycling. mythical experience was Le Tour, the grandest of all coupled with a profound events, is a celebration of sense of liberation as what makes us feel truly alive. our mobility expanded Whether we have ridden exponentially. Our radius of a bike in Europe or dream travel, previously limited by to one day, we can’t resist how far we could walk, grew the fairytale. The honesty by an order of magnitude. of climbing to 2 000m on a With this growth came our first sense of autonomy. We no longer needed to persuade our parents to take us where we wanted to go, we could decide to make the journey ourselves. The bicycle meant freedom, and not just for the children. The development of the bicycle during the late 1800s and early 1900s meant freedom for women at large, emerging as it did just as the women’s rights movement was gathering momentum. Suddenly women could take control of their own transport and achieve a measure of autonomy. With that came a challenge to the accepted codes of social etiquette and even clothing.” “Life is a complicated mess of interdependencies in which we are more likely to be passengers than drivers: politicians, corporations, friends, family, morals, laws and physics routinely get in the way of us achieving our dreams. To ride our bikes and suffer by our own choice is to take control, if only for a short while, and escape into a more simple world.” “THE BICYCLE MEANT FREEDOM” switchback pass with a 10% gradient, leaving the heat in the vineyards and sunflowerlined valleys below to go beyond the clouds to snowcapped peaks is irresistible. Similarly, a 1 600-yearold cobbled road, built by paupers and convicts and traversed by kings in ornate horse-drawn carriages, is something we South Africans find richly compelling. As the 176 most talented and finely tuned gladiators fight for their lives over three wonderfully entertaining weeks, we are inspired by the image of ourselves spinning effortlessly past medieval castles and farms that seem as old as time. This is the magic of Le Tour. In 11 years of producing this official Tour guide, we have never experienced anything like this postlockdown hunger for battle – nor has the sport’s greatest showcase been as fiercely combated. The deepest field in a long time includes a host of candidates who could podium in any category. This will not be the Ineos procession that has somewhat dulled our sense of excitement in recent years. There are a plethora of riders who can win stages and more GC contenders than we can ever remember. Young bulls and experienced elder statesmen abound. We hope you have a secret beer or wine stash and earned some TV remote-control points because, as you will read over the next 160 largeformat pages, you won’t want to miss a single moment of any stage. Enjoy the show. If this stressful lockdown has dampened your spirits, may this be the catalyst to your motivation to ride and start planning your next journey, be it a gravel tour through the Karoo, an international sportive or a road race in your backyard. Be like Eddy and embrace the pain – it’s what makes you happy. Be safe, wear a mask and support your local bike shop. Paul Ingpen FOLLOW US Road Bike Magazine roadbikemagazine @RoadBikeMag EDITORIAL DIRECTOR & PUBLISHER Paul Ingpen [email protected] 021 438 5972 / 082 990 8408 MANAGING EDITOR Anne Duncan CREATIVE DIRECTOR Elinore de Lisle COMMERCIAL MANAGER Abré Roux [email protected] 021 438 5972 / 078 099 5473 OPERATIONS EXECUTIVE Deirdre Devine DIGITAL MANAGER Matthew du Toit To advertise in these publications please call Abré on 078 099 5473 or email [email protected] The Tour de France Official Guide is published by Electric Ink Media under licence from Tour de France organisers ASO in Paris, France. Copyright: Electric Ink Media. No portion of this publication may be reproduced without prior written consent from Electric Ink Media or the authors. The publishers are not responsible for any unsolicited material. The opinions expressed are not necessarily those of Electric Ink Media, the editors or the Tour de France Official Guide office. Editorial & advertising enquiries: [email protected] 7 Pitlochry Road, Bakoven, Camps Bay 8005 Printed by Novus Print Solutions Distribution: Mia 083 445 5097 PHOTOGRAPH: OAKPICS.COM 10 | TOUR DE FRANCE 2020