
World-renowned cycling photographer Cor Vos passed away suddenly on Tuesday morning at the age of 77. The Rotterdam native was an icon in the cycling peloton. Most of the race photos on PEZ are from the Cor Vos agency.

Cor Vos with Tom Dumoulin
Cor Vos began his career as an amateur cyclist himself, later combining his passions for cycling and photography. Over the years, Vos became a well-known figure in the cycling world. In 1975, he founded his own press agency and for 35 years he was active in events such as the Tour de France from his motorcycle. On Tuesday morning, Vos suddenly fell ill and died in the hospital. He planned to retire in 2026 and travel with his wife Carla.
PEZ Cycling News founder and publisher, Richard Pestes: βHe was the first legit cycling photographer to agree to work with us. So we stuck with him ever since. I think itβs been over 22 years. I met him at de Ronde in 2007(?) and then got to know him and his wife Carla over the years. Cor was from that generation that knew a different version of cycle sport than we do now. He started as.a photographer shooting film in black and white.
He was for me typically Dutch β that is very direct. Itβs a trait we North Americans sometimes confuse as rudeness, which is a misunderstanding. But Cor was always loyal and treated us better than almost any other client Iβve worked with. Through the past few years of declining brand support for cycling media, Cor always worked with us and never denied us access to his vast catalogue of amazing images. He was a top class operator, and is a major loss to cycling media.β

The History Behind Cor Vos
The Rotterdam nativeβs name is synonymous with beautiful cycling photos. He has been a household name in cycling since the 1970s, even now that heβs no longer on the bike himself. Together with his wife Carla, he runs his photo press agency. He sends photographers all over the world and, from behind his computer, updates his database daily. And when thereβs no competition, he scans himself idly to access his impressive archive digitally.

Cor Vos with World champion Gerrie Knetemann
Cor Vos himself has a cycling background. βI was a racer, nothing special. I rode criteriums and short tours. But you need those to fill a peloton; you canβt just have winners. In 1968, the year Jan Janssen won the Tour de France, I crashed. Severe brain damage. That ended my career immediately. After that, I didnβt do anything for at least five years. Then I started taking photos. Iβd never held a camera before, when I went to watch another club race. Iβd bought a Russian cameraβI still have itβand I started experimenting. I never took a course; I taught myself everything. Self-taught, they call it. I also taught myself how to develop on location.β
Vos experienced his first Tour de France as a photographer in 1975. Not yet on a motorcycle. βBut if you want to be right in the thick of the race, thatβs a prerequisite. So I went to race director Felix LΓ©vitan with a journalist who spoke French. We said: βThere are more and more Dutch successes, itβs time we let a Dutch photographer ride the bike.β The following year, I was bike number seven. Thatβs how many photographers were in the race back then.β
Cor realised he started at a good time. There wasnβt much competition yet. And with the arrival of the TI Raleigh team, Dutch successes increased. βFor the first two years, I rode with a French motorcyclist. Heβs now 93, and I still send him a Christmas card. But I didnβt speak French, so I started looking for a Dutch motorcyclist. That turned out to be Joop Zijlaard, Michaelβs father and Leontienβs father-in-law. After six years, he quit, and it was only then that I realised heβd always driven for me without a license! A good motorcyclist is so important. It accounts for at least forty percent of the photoβs quality. If I yell βstop,β he doesnβt have to drive another hundred meters.β

Moto driver Joop Zijlaard
At one point, Cor got so busy that he hired a photographer. βAnd then another, and another. I arranged the car, bought the cameras, and paid all the travel expenses. Joop Zijlaard warned me: βCor, youβll teach monkeys to climb, and at some point theyβll throw a coconut at your head.β Thatβs happened before, but most of them have been taking photos for me for years.β
The advent of digital photography not only meant a shift in Corβs working methods, but also a redefined role for him. βAfter a hundred kilometres of racing, Iβd take the cards out of the cameras and go to the press room. At some point, I thought: Iβll save a lot of money if I stay home and organise everything from Hoogvliet.β He rode his motorcycle less and less often, the last time being when the Tour de France started in Rotterdam in 2010.

Hard at work
Cor had a good eye for a great cycling photo. βIβve been completely blind in my right eye since birth. Oh well, in the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king.β Cor at 75, had no intention of quitting. βI still enjoy it too much, and I have the responsibility for several employees. But becoming the richest man in the cemetery doesnβt make much sense either. So my wife says: just keep going.β
Everyone at PEZ Cycling News sends their condolences to the Vos family and friends.

Tour de France 2010 β Cor Vos with Tour director Christian Prudhomme
# Thanks to WielerFlits for the history and quotes. #
The post Rest in Peace Photographer Cor Vos appeared first on PezCycling News.

