
Spectacular Hour Failures: The World Hour record is the true test of a champion. Riders have needed to be lifted off their machine at the finish, and the great Eddy Merckx said it shortened his career, but they will never stop trying. Ed Hood takes a look at the top men who failed in the hour race of truth.

In January we lost our friend and colleague Ed Hood, two years after his devastating stroke. We will never forget Ed and his knowledge, connections in the cycling world, his writing style and love for the sport. Ed wrote thousands of stunning articles for PEZ, so we will pay homage the βKing of the Blackberryβ with re-runs of his great work.
And a big thank you to everyone who contributed to Edβs βGo Fund Meβ. It made a big difference to his last two years.
You can read the PEZ-Crewβs memories of Ed Hood HERE.

The King of the Hourβ¦ and lots of other things β Eddy Merckx
βThe Hour.β
Itβs a sport where sometimes itβs hard for a layman to understand what the hell is going on β omnium, the green jersey, match sprinting, madison, keirin β whatβs that moped for? But βThe Hourβ is simple, one man, one bike, he rides around a velodrome for one hour to see how far he can go before the gun fires. He leaves that track elated or a broken man. Alex Dowsettβs recent gallant but abortive bid made me think about otherβs who have jousted with the sweep hands and lost.

Jacques Anquetil on the Vigorelli
Jacques Anquetil:
βMaitre Jacques,β one of the most talented and stylish βchronomenβ who ever threw a leg over a bike, twice broke the record, albeit the second time his distance was never officially recognised. In 1956 on the boards of Milanβs legendary Vigorelli Velodrome he rode 46.159 kilometres to beat the βCampionissimoβ Fausto Coppiβs 45.798 kilometres. In 1967 he bested Roger Riviereβs figure of 47.347 kilometres with 47.493, again on the Vigorelli. The βbutβ is that this distance was never ratified due to no dope test having been conducted. Whatβs less well known is that Anquetil twice failed in record bids in 1955, sitting shattered beside the track after his failures the Italian fans in the stands chanted; βCoppi! Coppi!β to add to the Frenchmanβs misery.

Evgeni Berzin
Evgeni Berzin:
The blond Russian blazed brightly across the cycling heavens in the 90βs, going from World Amateur Individual and Team Pursuit Champion to Giro winner within a couple of seasons. However, like most shooting stars he quickly began to fizzle out, after a lack lustre 1997 season with the BatikβDel Monte team he was held by his squadra to a clause in his contract stating that he had to attack the world hour record. Riding a 54 x 13 gear on the boards of the Bordeaux Velodrome it took a mere 17 minutes at way off record pace to establish that Evgeniβs name wasnβt going to be added to the role of honour.
Jack Bobridge Hour attempt
Jack Bobridge:
The Australian was a prodigy, world junior team pursuit champion, he added the Commonwealth and senior world individual and team pursuit titles to his palmarès as well as setting the world record for the four kilometres pursuit. On the road he won the national and world u23 time trial titles before twice taking the elite national road race.
However, his βliking of a drinkβ caused him problems with his elite trade and national teams and in 2015 riding for the Australian continental team, Budget Forklifts he made an attempt on the record to refresh his career. Despite riding himself beyond the pale, being unable to get off his machine at the end of the hour, he missed Mathias Brandleβs record of 52.852 kilometres by some 500 metres; his only consolation was that he established a new Australian record.

It all went wrong for Peugeot
Ferdinand Bracke:
Vuelta winner, World Professional Pursuit Champion, stylish βchronomanβ with the GP des Nations and Trofeo Baracchi on his palmarΓ¨s, not to mention six day star, Bracke broke the record in 1967 on the boards of Romeβs Olympic Velodrome, eclipsing Anquetilβs unratified distance with 48.093 kilometres. But the following year, Dane Ole Ritter travelled to Mexico and in the rarefied air rode 48.653 kilometres on the Olympic Velodrome.
Bracke decided he wanted his record back and travelled to Mexico as reigning World Professional Pursuit Champion, having beaten British pursuit star, Hughie Porter in the final. However, despite two attempts in good conditions the Belgian couldnβt get to grips with the thin air leaving his sponsor, Peugeot with no record or positive publicity, just a huge bill.

Vittoria Bussi
Vittoria Bussi:
The Italian was womenβs world record holder until British rider, Joss Lowden recently relieved her of the honour. But whatβs less well known is that Bussi twice tried and failed to break the record prior to her successful bid. Of her first failed bid, one year before her success, she told us;
βThe main thing was that the position I had was too extreme, it was really aero but I couldnβt maintain power and my breathing just collapsed. We went into the wind tunnel after that and as a result raised my handlebars, it wasnβt as aero a position, it was a compromise but it meant I could maintain the power.β
She also, βdid an Obree,β trying and failing in her record bid the day before she broke the record, telling us;
βThere was a lot of pressure on me on that first day, maybe too much? I had too much focus and couldnβt enjoy the experience, at 45 minutes I was on the pace but the βflowβ just wasnβt there. The next day I found the βflowβ and the atmospherics were better too.β
If at first you donβt succeed. . .

Thomas Dekker gave it a good go
Thomas Dekker:
If youβve read his book, βThe Descentβ then youβll know that the man was a serious βparty animal,β drink, drugs, fast cars, faster women, the full gamut of stuff which is ultimately incompatible with our βking of sportsβ.
However, he was a wonderfully talented athlete, silver medallist in the u23 World road race and time trial championships in 2004 and as a second year pro he won the prestigious Tirreno-Adriatico. His crazy extracurricular activities though meant that he never realised his full potential and he slipped down the rankings. In 2015, with no contract on the table he travelled to the current, βTemple of Speed,β Aguascalientes in Mexico in attempt to take the record and grab a contract on the back of it. His ride was creditable at 52.221 kilometres, just some one lap shy of Rohan Dennisβ record of 52.491 kilometres β but The Hour is, βbinary,β success or failure; and Dekkerβs career was over.

Michael Hutchison
Michael Hutchison:
On the international stage, Hutchisonβs name isnβt well known but the Irishman was a prolific winner of British national time trial championships. His entertaining book, βThe Hourβ charts his ultimately fruitless bids for Hour immortality in the early 2000βs. Itβs well worth a read for information on the hoops that have to be jumped through just to sit on the record start line, not to mention much βHour triviaβ.

βBig Migβ
Miguel Indurain:
The summer of 1995, heβd won his fifth Tour de France and taken the world time trial championship; and at 06:00 am β the early hour so he was riding during the stillest part of the day β he mounted his Pinarello Espada and rolled off on 62 x 14 in search of Toni Romingerβs 55.291 record. In spite of the time of day on a Sunday, some 5,000 people had packed into the Bogota Velodrome to witness a Living Legend make history. But it was not to be, despite being up on Rominger early in the ride he slipped further and further back before climbing off after 31 minutes.
Banesto team manager, Jose Miguel Echavarri put the failure down to the early morning cold, damp conditions and a rising breeze. The big man himself said; βI canβt be happy but itβs not the end of the world, I want to consider it as a defeat like any other, as a race lost and nothing more.β But things would never be the same again between the two men and the following year βBig Migβ would call a halt to a great career. Manolo Saiz, the main man at the ONCE team is said to have offered Indurain 4.5 million Euros to ride for him in 1997 but heβd had enough. . .

Graeme Obree on βOld Faithfulβ
Graeme Obree:
Back in the 80βs when I was a βtime testerβ on Scottish roads, I was racing a 25 mile time trial down at Ayr. My life long amigo and DS for the day, Dave Chapman said to me at the finish; βthereβs a guy out there on a circus bike!β He was of course, referring to Graeme who had recently adopted his crazy but SO aero and powerful inverted handlebar position. Little did we know what the future held.
But the day before the maverick Scotsman broke βCampionissimoβ Francesco Moserβs of 51.151 kilometres with 51.596 kilometres on the now demolished Hamar Velodrome in Norway he failed in his attempt. However, fuelled by a nightβs sleep and a highly scientific diet of marmalade sandwiches β βpiecesβ as we call them in Scotland β and corn flakes, Graeme lined up next day and the rest is history, as they say. . .

Ole Ritter βThe Impossible Hourβ
Ole Ritter:
The so stylish Dane, who, on his best day could beat Merckx in a time trial was the first to exploit the thin air of Mexico City, albeit he maintains that it was rather the presence of the worldβs press corps in anticipation of the 1968 Mexico Olympics which was his prime motivation for choosing that venue for his bid.
However, Merckx relegated the Dane to the ranks of, βformer recordman de lβheureβ with his epic 49.431 ride in Mexico in 1972. Ritter decided to go again to reclaim his record; the cult documentary film by Ritterβs countryman, Jorgen Leth, βThe Impossible Hour,β tells the story of Ritterβs unsuccessful attempts to reclaim the βBlue Ribandβ of cycle sport better than I can, watch it β and if you already have then do so again, itβs wonderful.

Roy Schuiten and Peter Post
Roy Schuiten:
The Dutchman was pure class, as an amateur he won the Tour of Britain, βMilk Raceβ and the super-fast Olympia Tour in his homeland. As a fresh professional he won the World Professional Pursuit Championship, the Grand Prix des Nations and the Baracchi Trophy with Francesco Moser β a fabulous debut. The following season his meteoric progress continued with another world pro pursuit title, the GP Frankfurt, the GP des Nations, the GP Lugano. . .
βThe Hourβ seemed like a formality and a trip to Mexico was duly organised, but his son told us the story like this;
βThereβs no doubt that his material was top of the bill for the era β the bike, the clothing, it was all perfect. But things between my father and his team manager, Peter Post werenβt the best any more, in 1974 heβd been βhis boyβ but now he had more stars on the team and my father felt that Post wasnβt so supportive any more, he felt abandoned even? And there were commercial interest in play; Post had sold the TV rights to a Dutch broadcaster and to get the satellite link he had to start at THIS time. Merckx didnβt have that handicap, his start time wasnβt set for him β the wind is a factor on an outdoor track like in Mexico and you should ride to suit the weather conditions not just for maximum publicity or satellite link. People talked as if it was going to be easy but it was a Merckx record; my dad was only 23/24 years-old, a rookie and if you look at the guys who took the record in that era, mostly it was towards the end of their career.β
Jorgen Leth perhaps summed it up best, yes indeed, βThe Impossible Hourβ.
The post The Impossible Hour and Those Who Failed appeared first on PezCycling News.

