Morten Okbo joins us on the second rest day of il Giro (even though it really feels like only the first rest day) to tell the tale of the Giro making its start in his homeland of Denmark. Morten is a long-time reader of Velominati, but distinguishes himself amongst our Guest Contributors as also being a contributor for Rouleur, one of our principle muses. Morten is a musician – either by trade or by heart – but finds a way to write and to follow the Grand Tours in person. Stand by for more contributions as the season chugs on.
Morten has also managed to drag his photographer, Jakob Kristian Sørensen, down to our level. This post has been updated to include a second photo album courtesy of Jakob.
Yours in Cycling, Frank
—
This was in 2010, I think. And it began as a joke. Then a friend on the inside sent an email. Now it was no joke. Absolutely no joke, it read. Frankly, my photographer and I were a little bewildered. Rumours had circulated for a long time but nobody really believed it; Il Giro would start in the city of Herning, Denmark. Listen, I said to anyone who would listen; We’ve already secured the UCI Road World Championships in Copenhagen 2011. There wouldn’t be a GT in Denmark for thirty years now, if ever.
Besides, why would the Italians look to the north in May? Sure, it could be sunny here. Hell, even warm some days. But also with possible thunderstorms. Or howling winds bringing cold weather from (a) The North Sea. (b) The Fjells of Norway or (c) Siberia.
Call Cunego for a comment, I emailed back and got out of the bathtub.
Time passed. Now we hear Monaco is making their bid for the start. Having just spent 10 days in Cannes I thought; Yep, that’s more like it! The slopes of Southern France are perfect because, well, because they ARE! I was getting tired of the whole thing; what were we doing talking about Denmark and the Giro!?
Then it shifted. Word got out that Washington DC was in the race for the start. I laughed. Those silly americans. Do we want jetlagged riders doing a TTT in Verona? Now there’s a rubric. But I was not so sure anymore. It all seemed random now and the race organizers, unlike Le Tour, were never known to be traditionalists.
Of course, Bjarne Riis was looming in the background. The man is born and raised in Herning – cycling city numero uno in Denmark. Also; Riis was wearing his smirk. Everytime the subject came up, Jakob – my photographer – and I exchanged glances.
Fast forward.
Two weeks ago Giro d’Italia arrived in Denmark. There it was. And there was Riis. The smirk. The city of Herning was hosting the start and everything had turned pink. The slogan dropped down from RCS was this; Think Pink! So the people of Herning had painted their buildings pink. Trees. Bicycles, cars. In every shopping window the owners had found something, anything, to spraypaint. 70,000 pink tulips had been planted in every round-about in the city. The local football team changed jersey! Their newspaper look like La Gazzetta Dello Sport? A home for retired people had painted a rollator pink and hung it from a tree!
I’ll tell you what, I said to Jakob as we rolled into town: Our city of Aarhus could never have done this. We are too uptight. Think Museum of Art, The Old Theater, the ridiculously expensive cafees. The University. No. Our city is too big for this. And therefore too provincial.
Jakob said, Did you know that the Giro actually offered our mayor stage 3?
You got to be kidding!
Nope, he continued. But the idiot said no. Apparently it was too expensive. About a million bucks. Then Herning apologized to the Italians who had called back puzzled. Herning then suggested Horsens instead and the first person who picked up the call at City Hall said ‘Yes, thank you very much!’
Oh, god.
_________
And then it was over. For three days the race was here. The public, the media, even the Royal Family embraced this as if Il Giro was our homecoming queen. And then it struck me: Of course! Pink is pork in my corner of the world. Danish bacon. Pick up pork next time you go shopping. The company is called Danish Crown. Crown Prince Pink Pork. 20 million pigs and five million danes were welcoming pink home to the Motherland.
Of course, Il Giro fit right in!
[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/mortenokbo@gmail.com/Giro D Italia/”/]
Jakob Kristian Sørensen’s Album:
[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/mortenokbo@gmail.com/Giro in Herning/”/]
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View Comments
@VeloVita
I drove the wall last week when I was there I felt like I do in Europe when I happen upon a legendary road. There is a race with history, and the geniuses who decided American racing was big enough for a dedicate Championship race. It's not, and we killed the appeal of our biggest race.
When was the last time anyone considered the US Champ jersey worth winning anyway? Hinapie is the only worthy wearer of it in a decade at least. Pharmy's win in 1993 was awesome. That was quite a season; Us Pro Champ, World Champ, the Tripple Crown.
Tour du Pont was an awesome race too. Man.
@frank
well, frank. the crown prince is frederik, he was there at the giro and i got a great shot of him and the podium girls. his wife, mary, is originally from van diemens land, aka tasmania, he met her at the olympics,
i think. but have you seen her legs? i'm with marcus here.
oh. and brian will help you. or he knows someone. i'll ask him
@Steampunk there was one downside for the Danes that Morten didn't mention, and it was a slightly tragic one at that.
The mayor of Horsens was taking part in a promotional ride the day before their stage with the organisers & died of a heart attack.
It's a shame Aarhus balked at the stage, some of the scenery out in the woods around the city is absolutely spectacular & would make for great riding.
@frank
@morten okbo
I just came across this. It has happened to all of us. But I am pretty sure none of us are the bloke married to the (female) President of Finland. Nor was the subject of our attention a Princess at a state dinner.
@Marcus
the jewelry. say jewelry if anybody asks!
but yes, the mayor of horsens died on a small climb outside the city, the giro actually did a minute of silence for him and then one for wouter weylandt. aarhus would truly have been perfect for the giro, a bit ardenne-like. you know the place, marcus?
@morten okbo I don't think Marcus has ever actually stepped foot outside of Victoria. Mum's older brother lives just outside Aarhus, my wife & I spent a few days with them late in 2010 and all I can remember when being driven through the forests was that it would make for awesome riding.
@Mikael Liddy
oh, it was you, mikael. i got that wrong.
Worth a few minutes of your time: http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/video/2012/may/22/giro-italia-stage-17-video
@morten okbo
Great article and great photos, I think you have increased the already high level of this passionate community.
And the same for Jakob Kristian Sørensen photos.