Guest Article: Stephen Roche; A Study in The V

It is with an especially acute understanding of pushing oneself to ones limits, having just completed my second assault on Haleakala, with which I select this Guest Article, a first contribution from community member Scaler911. 

Especially acute in this case meaning that reading this account reminds me that I have no idea how to suffer on a climb. None at all. If I could ride like Roche, I would have done the climb an hour faster and the maximum elevation would have been crushed down by at least 300 feet from the Pedal Stomping Effect, which is commonly known to reduce a hill’s elevation. Enjoy the read.

Yours in cycling,

Frank

I hold a special place in my heart for the Irish. Both sides of my family are from the Emerald Isle, and I’ve done some traveling there. Early in my racing career, I started following the Euro-pros and was drawn to the strong men of Belgium and Ireland. The list is of course topped by King Eddy. In close second, I give you Stephen Roche.

Early in his pre-contract days, Roche had to “…win, or go back to Ireland…” to work a machine shop at a dairy. That season he won the amateur version of Paris-Roubiax.

In his debut professional season, 1981, Roche threw down The V on none other than Le Blaireau himself at the Tour de Corse. And it’s not like Hinault was at the end of his career; he had already had won three Tours, the Vuelta, the Giro, and was currently wearing ‘The Hoops’ around his torso. Less than a month later, Roche won Paris-Nice even though he was ill.

In the ’87 Giro, Roche was to be riding in support of teammate Roberto Visentini, the defending champion and local guy. Roche attacked his teammate, drawing scorn from the tifosi, but ending up with the Maglia Rosa on his back in St. Vincent. Poor sportsmanship? Perhaps, but LeMan would have more yellow jerseys above his fireplace had he done the same. And, besides, Visentini’s palmares pale in comparison (who’s Visentini?) and Roche doubted his teammates promise to return the favor for the TdF. Sound familiar?

Later that same year at le Tour, Hinault had retired, and LeMan was recovering from his bird hunting escapades, Roche was the favorite. 1987 saw the most mountainous Tour since the war. On stage 20, crossing Galibier, Madeleine, and finishing on La Plagne, Roche attacked early. Delgado then attacked, and Roche found himself 1:30 down in the middle of the last climb. He then crushed the remainder, in his big ring, pulling back all but 4 seconds. After crossing the finish line, he collapsed and lost consciousness. He came to after receiving oxygen and was asked if he was OK. His reply was “yes, but I am not ready for a woman straight away” (and that, my friends, is how it’s done).

At the end of a fantastic season thus far, Roche arrived in Austria for Worlds with little training under his belt. In the role of domestique to his countryman Sean Kelly, Roche was covering breaks all day. At the end, he was still covering Argentin, and being away, attacked at 500m. He got the cycling world’s ‘Triple Crown’, a feat only achieved by one other hardman, Merckx. A few days later, Kelly and he went 1-2 at the Nissan Classic.

Had Roche not been plagued by recurring knee injuries, I think he would have given the King a run for his money as the toughest bastard to ever throw his leg over a top tube.

“I never want to abandon my bike. I see my grandfather, now in his seventies and riding around everywhere. To me that is beautiful. And the bike must always remain a part of my life.” – Stephen Roche.

scaler911

Cat II (USA Cycling), Cat III (OBRA), also weekend warrior/ armchair cycling critic.

View Comments

  • @James
    Perfect demonstration of the Three-Point System, I might add.

    @brett, @Oli
    He seemed to almost master those finishes where the cameras didn't work, due to weather. The cameras shut down, then - BOOM - there's Roche! Awesome!

    Check out the slack in his chain there in the photo above. He just shortened his chainstay by V!

  • @Pedale.Forchetta
    I don't know enough about the ins and outs of the dynamic there, and there are always two sides of any story only one of which the English-speaking world is likely to see.

    All those things aside, I generally don't like it when teammates attack each other; and I dislike both parties for it. LeMond/Hinault and Armstrong/Contador had the same effect on me. It's just not cool. Hinault was an ass for attacking him, and LeMond was a whiney bitch about it. Armstrong and Conty are just both douchebags, so in the end, that one was a wash.

    All that aside, in the case of Roche (and LeMond), they went on to redeem themselves through classy riding, and I guess in my short-memory fueled enthusiasm for cycling, that's good enough for me.

  • @ChrisO
    GOR is 270 klms long and Melb to Adel is about 1000 if you go the coast road, which you would choose over the highway. Not sure how much of the true coast road is ridable especially around Mt Gambier onwards as have never been there, but would be a big trip.

  • @ChrisO
    1. Great Ocean Road is a beautiful stretch of road - but effing dangerous as it is very windy (as in turns), with not much shoulder and lots of cars, especially in summer.

    2. Riding Melbourne to Adelaide is, from all reports, crap.

    3. Australia has some great riding, but not in areas like you are considering. You would be far better off planning some sort of ride schedule that takes in the Victorian Alpine areas (only "Alpine" as far as we can get them), then drive back to Melbourne and fly to Adelaide.

    4. Adelaide is a shithole. If it wasn't for the TDU, you would never go. Reckon there might be better races to travel half a world to see...

  • Tour Of Southland is one. Go a bit further, while the rest of the Southern Hemishpere is enjoying summer you can go get blown off the side of the road in Invercargill, snowed on and freeze your nanas off. We had Floyd Landis come race it a couple years ago. That's right, right before he retired. Now we know why.

  • That time trial, where Roche effectively won the Tour, was the first stage of the Tour that I ever saw and, to this day remains in my mind as the most outstanding individual effort I have seen. If Landis hadn't have lied about cheating and had have been placed on oxygen after falling off his bike he may have come close.

  • Pure awesomeness....I had forgotten about this quote!  I love it when these old articles pop up to be redigested and remind us what mere mortals we are!

     He came to after receiving oxygen and was asked if he was OK. His reply was "yes, but I am not ready for a woman straight away

  • It has been said that the falling off/oxygen/ medical assistance was a plan to get Roche off the mountain earlier (By helicopter) & back in the hotel earlier to start recovery for the following day. Delgado was delayed on the mountain for ages giving media interviews + a long trek (Several hours) by car back to the hotel afterwards. This is not to play down the Mega-V of Roche, but he was very smart as well as tough. In Ireland there were 2 camps, you were either a Roche man or a Kelly man (You could be both but ...) Roche was from Dublin & came across as slick, professional articulate, film star smile & a sponsors dream (See Calvita Cheese TV ad). Kelly was a from the country. All function & little film star appeal :) Country people tended to associate with Kelly & city folk tended to associate with Roche. Being from rural Ireland Kelly was God around here & Roche was for the Dubs.

  • @slatanic I am afraid, regardless of the age old "country vs city" debate.  It is the quote that makes him awesome, not the fact that he fell off his bike and needed oxygen.

    It may be said that the quote actually saved him from a pre-Velominati cheeky monkey popping up and quoting rule #5 at him....and we all know where that discussion leads!

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scaler911

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