In the fourth chapter of Cyclist`s Tour de France
Transcription
In the fourth chapter of Cyclist`s Tour de France
Tour diaries b Pro racing Tour diaries… the directeur sportif ‘O n Wednesday, I entertained a guest of Richard Virenque…’ Trek Factory Racing’s directeur sportif (DS), Alain Gallopin, interrupts his own story to bellow out the window, ‘Richie! Richie, you want a drink?’ Team Sky’s Richie Porte strains a smile through the haze of riding up the 22km ascent of the Col de la Croix de Fer, but raises a declining palm of the hand. ‘Where was I?’ Gallopin says, to himself rather than me. ‘Yes, Ricco’s friend was with us and said I’m like a mafia baron because I’m everywhere. I guess he’s right – this is my 25th Tour and I know everybody.’ It’s around 2pm on Friday in late July, Stage 19 between Saint-Jeande-Maurienne and La ToussuireLes Sybelles, and Cyclist is in the passenger seat of the Trek Factory Racing team car. It’s a sweltering day in south-east France, the sort of oppressive heat and humidity that adds intensity to every movement. Helicopters hover beneath gathering dark clouds. Ambulance sirens pierce the noise of the fans and the perpetual car horns. Against this apocalyptic backdrop, 58-year-old Gallopin is the coolest man around. ‘Everything under control,’ Gallopin murmurs to himself. ‘Everything under control…’ P 86 cyclist Trek’s directeur sportif, Alain Gallopin, issues instructions from behind the wheel of the team car during Stage 19 of this year’s Tour In the fourth chapter of Cyclist’s Tour de France journey with Trek Factory Racing, we take a ride with the man in charge of team tactics Words James Witts Photography Juan Trujillo Andrades Tour diaries b Pro racing P As it transpires, Gallopin is right. Everything is under control. By the end of the stage, Team Sky’s Geraint Thomas will drop down the standings, elevating Trek’s Bauke Mollema to eighth in the general classification. Mollema will take seventh place on the day, behind stage-winner Vincenzo Nibali, and will cut a threeminute deficit to 43 seconds on IAM Cycling’s Mathias Frank. ‘Our goal has always been for Bauke to finish seventh overall,’ Gallopin says. ‘He has a good chance because he listens. This morning, Bauke wanted to attack. We [Gallopin and fellow DS Kim Anderson] said, “Where will you go with that? Just stay in contention and let the others crack.” It worked. Tomorrow the strategy will be the same.’ It’s a strategy that will prove to be spot on, with Mollema ultimately finishing the Tour in seventh place. It’s evidence that no rider can succeed at the big races by the strength of their legs alone. They need to follow a plan, and this is where the directeurs sportif earn their money. These are the experts in strategy and occasionally subterfuge. They establish the team goals, brief the riders, crack the whip where necessary, and sometimes offer a shoulder to cry on. Directeurs sportif are the orchestrators of the team. At training camps they work with the riders to decide their race schedule and subsequent course reconnaissance. At the races they make tactical calls before and during the stage, and provide a regular source of food and drink for the riders. They also tend to drive like lunatics. ‘That car in front – if you’re a good driver, you don’t make such noise. Alain Prost taught me that’ 88 cyclist While Gallopin casually regales me with tales from his life as a DS, which includes two Giro d’Italia titles and one Vuelta a Espana, I cling on for dear life as he takes the sharp corners of an Alpine lane at 50mph-plus. Every frenzied instruction from the car’s microphone is interpreted by Gallopin as the green light to put his foot down and weave his way in and out of the flotilla of team cars in search of a Trek rider to deliver fuel to. Today those riders include Markel Irizar and Gregory Rast, two big riders whose domestique duties are more suited to the flatter stages. Gallopin is supporting the rear group while Anderson follows Mollema and Bob Jungels further up the field. I suspect Anderson’s driving style adheres to the Gallopin School of Overtaking, namely: aim for the car in front and hammer the horn repeatedly, which miraculously creates a gap barely a foot wider than the width of Gallopin’s Skoda to storm through. It’s a script that’s played out many times over during the 138km stage. ‘Have you had any crashes?’ I ask. ‘Not really, no,’ replies Gallopin. ‘Everyone gets used to this driving, though the young ones aren’t as good. That Giant-Alpecin car in front – he’s screeching at every turn. If you’re a good driver, you don’t make such noise. Alain Prost taught me that.’ As Gallopin says, he knows everyone. At every roadside stop to pass bottles to the riders, Gallopin chats – to the Astana DS, the TinkoffSaxo DS and his son, spectators – he even receives a kiss from a lady in the crowd. ‘This is my favourite race,’ he says, a glint behind the glasses. ‘There’s solidarity between the teams and I love it. It’s like my second sporting family.’ son, Tony, races for Lotto-Soudal. He’s completed four Tours, including 2015’s edition, and memorably wore le maillot jaune on Bastille Day in 2014 – a feat that’s been described as so French you could ‘keep cheese in it’. Alain also raced, but for only three months in 1982. ‘I was racing the Circuit de la Sarthe [an early-season stage race in France],’ he says. ‘I was involved in a stupid crash – all crashes are stupid – and nearly died.’ The directeur sportif has an allencompassing role, deciding tactics, giving riders their instructions, briefing the media and handing out drinks on each stage Below: A textbook sticky bottle He suffered a fractured skull, plus a capitulation of his inner ear that affected his balance so severely he couldn’t stand. ‘I healed but I still have ringing in my ear. That’s why I wear this earpiece – it softens the pain.’ At just 25 Gallopin called time on his professional racing career almost before it had begun. The loss of a childhood dream could weigh on a man’s character, make him bitter, especially surrounded by his siblings’ P The Gallopin family His first family is part of the fabric of French cycling. Alain’s brothers, Guy and Joel, rode nine Tours between them in the 1970s and 1980s. Joel’s cyclist 89 Tour diaries b Pro racing P trophies and memories of past glories. Not Gallopin. ‘Life is life and I’m still alive,’ he says, before swiftly moving the conversation on to matters less personal. ‘In the past, on a climb like this [Col de la Croix de Fer], Bernard Hinault would say to the lead riders, “Let’s go easy and reserve energy for the big fights at the end.” He’d then warn them, “If you don’t want to, I’ll go full gas and 40 guys won’t make the cut-off and will head home. So which is it?” He was the boss.’ It was another French Tour winner, Laurent Fignon, who Gallopin was closest to in his early days. After his crash, Gallopin retrained as a physiotherapist but kept in touch with Fignon, who had been a friend since both men turned pro in 1982. After winning successive Tours in 1983 and 1984, a knee injury forced Fignon out in 1985. Seeking a confidence boost and guidance, Fignon hired Gallopin as his soigneur and ‘confidant’. ‘We grew close and I soigneured for Laurent right up until his retirement in 1993 when he was racing for Gatorade,’ says Gallopin. Fignon, who died from cancer aged 50 in 2010, was full of praise for his friend. In his autobiography, We Were Young And Carefree, he suggests it was Gallopin’s absence that led him to test positive for amphetamine misuse in 1989 for the second and last time in his career. 90 cyclist ‘Ten days before the Grand Prix de la Libération, we had arranged to do a session of intervals behind the motorbike,’ Fignon revealed. ‘The phone rang. Alain’s wife was in labour and he had to go to hospital for the happy event. There was no more to be said, except that I was left alone with my bike, my morale in my boots. I had no desire to hurt myself on my own and I can still see myself now, completely undecided whether I QUICK Q&A Gallopin’s swift tips for coping with the Tour What’s your best piece of advice for anyone visiting the Tour de France? The first tip is to just be careful with the sizeable crowds on parts of the parcours. This is especially important as a lot of children attend the event and you don’t want you or the child to cause an accident. You should also respect the riders. Give them room to ride as they have a very tough job. ‘I could be retired and at home with my wife, but I love it and won’t stop until I can’t do my job 100%’ What’s the weirdest thing that has happened to you at the Tour? It’s probably not weird but it was certainly strange, and that’s when Laurent Fignon lost the 1989 Tour by just 8secs. Again, this probably isn’t ‘weird’ but I remember giving a bottle to Lance Armstrong at the 2010 Tour when with Radioshack. I was astonished at how much he could suffer on the bike. What’s your best piece of advice for anyone riding a big event? On the Friday and Saturday before Sunday’s race increase your carb intake, but don’t eat too much on the morning of the event. When riding, eat every 40 minutes, choosing fast-acting sugars like energy drinks and gels. Also, don’t get carried away with the excitement and go too hard, too early. You’ll go into the red, which could make it a long day. It’s clear that Gallopin will do anything for his riders. His paternal instinct sees him enquiring after the riders’ health as he hands them rice cakes and bidons through the car window. Like any DS, he’s not averse to gently accelerating while the rider grasps the bottle to help slingshot them back into the pack. He considers this reasonable in what he describes as ‘the most brutal event in sport’. ‘The riders and their safety are everything to me,’ he says. ‘They also keep me young. I’m 58 and have no plans to finish yet. Yes, I have a bad back, which stops me cycling and running as much as I’d like, but I stretch to stay in shape. I could be retired and at home with my wife, but I love it and won’t stop until I can’t do my job 100%.’ With that, Gallopin looks to his right, plucks some papers from the glove compartment and throws them out of the passenger window to a passing team car from CannondaleGarmin. ‘What were they?’ I ask. ‘They were insurance papers. We were involved in a bit of a knock yesterday,’ Gallopin replies, a smile spreading over his tanned visage. ] James Witts has finally released his grip of the team car’s door handle would even put a leg over the saddle. It was that bad.’ He resorted to a ‘pot’ – the pro’s term for the drug. Fignon tested positive and ‘felt shame’, but was soon back racing. As well as actually driving, Gallopin has a host of things to keep track of from behind the wheel, including where his riders are on the stage and what’s happening in the race Managing talent In 1994, Gallopin sampled his first taste of team management at French team Catavana-AS Corbeil EssonnesCedico, which disbanded after just one season. But Gallopin was hooked, and went on to work for several toplevel teams including CSC, Astana, Radioshack and now Trek. cyclist 91