It’s a classic tactic. The day’s break is caught and before anyone has time to decide what to do about it, you counter-attack. Already tired from chasing the break, maybe – just maybe – the suckers you tricked into pulling for you will let you get away.
That was Beccia’s plan in the 1986 Milan-San Remo. He attacked right as the break was caught on the Poggio and Greg LeMond – America’s greatest-ever cyclist – went with him. The Poggio’s big-ring gradient must have suited LeMond’s powerful style perfectly and riding with the weaker Beccia, he must have felt almost assured of notching what would be the first American win in a monument.
A quick check over the shoulder to make sure no man is bridging up. Sure enough; no man is coming, but that doesn’t mean you’re not being overtaken. That’s Sean Kelly – half man, half bear, and half pig – doing his best to crack his bottom bracket on his one-race-per-frame Vitus.
That’s three big rings and three hard men, but only one has managed to scare the mud off his forehead. Spoiler alert: the finish line photo shows Kelly with spotlessly clean face.
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Just got to love Kelly.
Here's a pic we got at last year's Cat & Fiddle ride in Stoke. He's still laying down the V today...
@Marko Yep. Black shorts. A-Merckx, Brother.
Great photo. Beccia this look on his face of "I'm not game to look back! Fuck I hope that's not who I think it is, 'cause if it is, I'm fucked!"
@il ciclista medio
Yep. And Lemond looks beaten, too. I know it's a still photo, but it looks as though he's already started freewheeling, having accepted defeat...
Must be an Irish thing. My son was born in the Coombe, and he's been dishing out the pain on the local MTB ride.
@Steampunk
+1 there are only a handful of the greats that would creat that "oh shit" moment where you know your done, no matter what you try. Kelly is at the top of the list with Merckxs and Hinault.
@Frank, it's too bad Major Taylor did not race in the modern era... He overcame more racesist B.S., obviously was not "doping" and remained a gentleman.
I too hung out with Greg but found him to be a bit big headed, not in a bad way for a nineteen year old already a star. As I think about it maybe the feeling was he was spoiled. Not that he did not work nor have his heart in it, he did but that it all came a little too easy. Compare him to the Euros and how they came up and their attitudes of working and being hard in life before being hard on the bike just to scrap out a place in a training race so that you might get noticed... Greg had it easy. Just saying that is not bad but the attitude did not impress ...
As for Armstrong never met the man and have such mixed feelings about his Palmeres and methods of training. Leaving aside pharmacology he was too mechanical and driven with out the humanity of Merckx who was also the same in his training. The difference is that Merckx risked failure and Armstrong never did...
@Rob
Interesting perspective. A former student of mine who works at my local café talked about racing with Taylor Phinney a few years ago, and how"”similar situation"”already an imminent star as a teenager, he was impressed with his big personality. The aura around him. I think he was impressed with his abilities, but less enamoured of his character"”having to deal with already being the next big thing.
@Rob
Kelly's also notoriously different than a number of the greats insofar as he is less famous for his long breakaways (Coppi, Merckx, et al.), but rather for this kind of comeback. My other great favourite of this period was Fignon, but his style involved being part of the initial break. You get the impression for most of the contenders in Kelly's two MSR wins, he's the only one who had the mental fortitude to claw back the distance lost, where most would have been inclined to sit up. Interesting that Kelly is one of the very few riders who gets a lot of praise from Fignon in his autobiography.
@Oli
Having aspirations to improve on a 36th place is a long shot from being a contender in the Tour pre-cancer. And La Fleche is a classic, but its no monument. He did win DuPont (awesome race, by the way, wish that was still around) but that and Paris-Nice are both a far cry from a grand tour.
I'll give you that calling him a classics-specialist is unfair in light of those races, but he was no all-rounder like LeMond winning the Tour and getting second in MSR during the same season. Its a completely different class of races.
@Jeff in PetroMetro
Possibly the best finish ever, especially with him in the bands. Incredible. Bretto actually circulated that video around the KT attendees pre-departure to remind us how to ride if something goes awry on KT.
@Jeff in PetroMetro
Its the same as always. Just past the "embed" code from YouTube. Or, if you past the link, the link will convert it when you click on it.
@King Clydesdale
Saying one athlete is better than another is hardly being disrespectful, mate. Pointless, sure. Fun, absolutely. Disrespectful? We have different definitions of what that means.