In 1993, before the UCI put a stranglehold on the means by which riders sought to go faster, innovation flowed through the peloton. Training methods evolved rapidly (apparently in tandem with the potency of the drugs available at the time) and bicycle design was in a period of exciting change spurred on by Greg LeMond’s win in the 1989 Tour de France after using aerobars to overturn a 50-second deficit on Laurent Fignon.
Paris-Roubaix, more than any other event on the calendar, would see some of the most dramatic experimentation, as riders lost themselves in their pursuit to smooth out the race’s brutal terrain. In a five year span, we went from LeMond fitting Rock Shox to his bike to Johan Museeuw showing up aboard a full-suspension Bianchi. The Rock Shox were at first met with raised eyebrows and thinly-veiled snickers until Gilbert Duclos-Lassalle used them to roll over the finish line as the victor at age 37 in 1992. Not surprisingly, 1993 saw many more machines sheepishly toeing the start line with products borrowed from Mountain Bikes, including the GB Team’s custom-built Bianchi’s decorated with Softride suspension stems.
Balance is a critical component in cycling. Balance between rider and machine, of course, but also between comfort and rigidity. As anyone who has ridden with font-suspension will tell you, what is good over the cobbles may not be as good in a closely-contested finish. Gilbert Duclos-Lassalle, the defending champion, and Franco Ballerini, the upstart Italian, broke away together and, with their front-ends quivering like plates of over-cooked pasta, made their way to the velodrome.
The Italian’s confidence in his sprint was matched only by Duclos-Lassalle’s experience on the track. The two wobbled their way to the line, sprinting as hard as their soggy forks would allow and threw their bikes with a synchronization that would be the envy of any Olympic swim-dancing team.
Ballerini was certain he’d won. Duclos-Lassalle wasn’t so sure he’d lost. The referees went to the photo and served Franco a juicy slice of humble pie, in what was one of the closest finishes in Paris-Roubaix ever. Ballerini swore he’d never ride Roubaix again, but nevertheless won it in 1995 and 1998. Solo. On a bike without suspension.
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The complete package, Allsop Powercurve, RevXs, Softride Beam.
@Chipomarc
Every time someone posts a photo of a softened - a cycling fairy falls from the sky
@Marcus
And his name is?...
@Scaler911 was sailing pretty close to the wind in previous posts
@frank
Please tell me the pro season starts soon . . this is a cycling site, right? Sheesh!
@Marcus
Looks like they need to add a few links to the chain - that rear derailleur is looking a bit stressed! Mind you, if you're riding one of these with that handlebar tape, your judgement is likely impaired to begin with.
@DerHoggz
The Competitive Cyclist site fit calculator will get you 95% there. You may still have to adjust seat post height, offset, and stem by tweaking, however. Just grab a friend you trust and do the measurements.
Sorry if I missed it, but has anyone found/posted a video of this race?
Also, while looking for it I came across this. Damn, Roger still looks great. I like the bike he's riding too - is that splash tape? More proof that in the off-season/retirement, the PROS will ride whatever bike is kicking around their garage.
In that finish at P-R that they show who is wearing the Rainbows and getting overtaken at the line?http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2lLflfpuk6o&feature=related
Ha, was just checking out Paris-Roubaix videos & then checked the 1985 finishing spots...awesomest cyclist name I've never heard of: Ferdi Van Den Haute, 10th in 1985.
I wonder if Ferdi was short for Ferdinand or if that was it?
@Ron
Better than Adrie van Houwelingen? Fons de Wolf?
@mouse
Ya. I do tend to do that, not on purpose though...........