Erik Breukink, pictured here on the far right in the 1987 Giro, was on the upswing of what seemed to be very bright future. From a young age, he appeared to be a natural Grand Tour rider, so the Dutch teams he perpetually rode for did what Dutch teams do best, which is heap loads of pressure on an ill-prepared mind, micro-manage the snot out of him, and use a horse blanket to snuf out any remaining embers of potential. To be fair, though, this model is not solely the domain of the Dutch; the Italians, French, and Belgians are all quite adept at this particular talent development technique.
Erik faired better than most Dutch prodigies have since the 80’s; he managed to podium in two Grand Tours – 2nd to Hampsten in the ’88 Giro and 3rd to LeMond in the ’90 Tour – in addition to winning a handful of stages along the way. But more than anything, what distinguishes Breukink from a promising modern rider like Gesink was his ability to keep from falling off and breaking things at critical times.
Erik hit his peak around 1990 when, were it not for a bad day on the slopes of Luz Ardiden, he might have been fighting for the Tour de France win instead of flustering about to get hold of the podium.
Admittedly, this sounds like a suspect track record to qualify as an Awesome Dutch Guy. For the most part, we Dutch hold ourselves to a higher standard of Awesome than getting a few podium spots. Well, sometimes Awesome is more than just your results. Awesome comes without ribbons, it comes without tags, it comes without packages, boxes, or bags. Awesome, it seems, is a little bit more, like wearing a shit-eatin’ grin that can be spotted from the Moon while everyone else in the bunch is being squeegeed through the vents of the hurt locker at the legs of the balding Pedro Muños who is doing a fantastic job demonstrating the Two-Eyed V-Squint.
That, my fellow Velominati, is what Awesome is all about. Case closed.
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Who's the Panasonic rider pictured on the far right?
Not sure but do I detect the Robert Millar honk just behind him?
@unversio
My dyslexia got the better of me; Breukink is the rider on the right, not the left, with the smirk.
ADG... Love the new acronym, as well as your description of the Netherlands Talent Development Programme. @Frank, are you aiming to be an ADG when you grow up? Like that day will ever happen (thank god)
@frank I love this post. No idea who this guy was, but you have brought him to life for me.
Sweet, an ADG and an AnatOP, all in one post! Brilliant!
That's some fine company EB's in. Can't remember the Fagor guy's name (I think it's Jean Claude Bagot), but you've got Roberrt Millar in the climber's green jersey, Marino Lejaretta in the Caja Rural jersey, and ? in the Del Tongo and ? in the white jersey for best young rider. I'll do some research this weekend.
Total reverence for the low-profile MAVIC GP-4s. I raced on a set last season and will continue on them.
@frank
I was making a nod to the article posts that followed THE RISE AND FALL OF THE CLIPLESS PEDAL (mystery Panasonic guy), but I'm glad that you caught the correction.
Glad to see this series back. It's been too long since the last one of these although "Awesome Dutch" is a bit redundant isn't it? Let's not forget it was Breukink who actually won the famous stage over the Gavia in 1988.