Guest Article: The Most Beautiful Race in the World

Photo courtesy of The Friends of Roubaix

Finally we can speak to this Paris-Roubaix mythology. The Keepers Tour group rode twenty-one sectors at something much slower than race speed. After the first sector we regrouped and we were all stunned by how bad it was. Twenty more sectors of that? That was horrendously tough.

The first sectors are the easy ones. The hard ones start with the famous Trouée d’Arenberg, after which a combination of worse cobbles and more fatigue consistently ratchets up the severity of the stones.   In places it seems more like cobbles fell from a truck than that they were placed. A full report on our rides is forthcoming, but as we prepare for our ride over the Ronde van Vlaanderen route, we give you a Guest Article by @il cyclista medio on the famous Roubaix cobbles.

Yours in Cycling, Frank.

Theo De Rooij may be known to some more famously for his comments to John Tesh after withdrawing from the 1985 Paris – Roubaix than his palmares.  This was certainly how I became aware of him. He was also the team manager at Rabobank on the verge of a nervous breakdown, when he made the decision and withdrew Rassjuicin’ from the TDF for having the ability to be in two places at the same time, in the mode of “I dream of Jeannie”.

Watching a grainy VHS copy of the 1985 race, complete with Tesh’s cheesy synth 80’s soundtrack recently, I watched De Rooij (or De Rooy as CBS was want to spell his name) at the front of the race for close to 5 hours before withdrawing, shattered, from the race. It had been wet and muddy with a headwind for the most of the race. Crashes, falls and spills occurring constantly throughout the race and there was De Rooij alone at the front. He may not have been a picture of Sprezzaturra, but he was certainly leading an impressive bunch – Lemond, Kelly, Moser and Madiot to name a few.

He was caught by Madiot’s bunch and Madiot went on to win, solo, with Kelly in third and Lemond a close fourth. It was the short interview that Tesh managed to grab as De Rooij was getting into his team car for the ride back to Roubaix that impressed me as much as leading P-R for part of the day. Perhaps this was his most memorable moment. Here was a Dutch bloke, covered in crap from head to toe, being asked a somewhat inane set of questions by an immaculately dressed American in an overcoat. He took it in his stride and gave an honest account of what he had just been through without batting a crud covered eyelid and finished off with a huge grin when asked if he would return “…sure, it’s the most beautiful race in the world.” His laugh once he had realized the irony of what he had just said, after complaining about the atrocious conditions he had experienced, wasn’t lost on Teshy either. It was a fantastic piece of TV.

It was this that caught my attention as I keep hearing this phrase again and again – “The most beautiful race in the world”. It looks like hell to me: pave, mud, rain, dust, snow, crowds, 7+hrs in the saddle, what’s fricken beautiful about that? Boonen, Fabio, De Vlaeminck, all spring to mind as having uttered these immortal words at one time or another.

So, just what makes it beautiful? Not having done P-R I can only guess the logic behind these words, though I think I get it. While I would never compare myself to be at their level or really understand their why, it may be that the beauty of placing oneself at the mercy of and against the elements, the cobblestones and the environment, not only physically but mentally, to achieve something that truly strengthens and at the same time challenges the individual. To finish something like Paris Roubaix would satisfy an inner need, a feeling of being alive perhaps. As a cyclist I try to do this as much as I possibly can. Sure, I go out for the standard rides, with the usual routes. You know the ones, the Sunday morning group ride out to Waterfall (that’s mine but insert your own here) where we know every little bump, pothole, climb and town line to race for. Great fun but are we really challenging ourselves? Nah, not really, just up the pace, that’s about all if you want a bit of a challenge on these days.

It’s those days where one decides to up the ante: find the mother of a hill to climb, decide to do the (imperial) ton or further than you have before, go out when it’s ball freezingly cold or wet or something else that challenges us or pushes one to their limit as a cyclist. This to me is how one could call something like Paris Roubaix “the most beautiful race in the world” and I for one, agree.

de Rooij: “It’s a bollocks this race! You’re working like an animal, you don’t have time to piss, you wet your pants. You’re riding in mud like this, you’re slipping, it’s a piece of shit…”

Tesh: “Will you ever ride it again?”

de Rooij: “Sure, it’s the most beautiful race in the world!”

il ciclista medio

lack of cycling omniscience compared to Oli Married, 3 kids approx 3, 7 & 20. Clearly a long time between drinks from the first & the last. Riding as much as one can but work & family impact on available time. Translation - weekdays are spent on the trainer & weekends spent on the road

View Comments

  • @snoov
    Reminds me of the scene in The Flying Scotsman where the "UCI" starts to make up rules about the saddle and being able to buy equipment at the race start.

  • @brett

    So I'm intrigued as to how this panned out Brett... did you recognise her (which is quite surprising, as it's not like she's in the news every day) or were you just chatting up every attractive woman and in the course of conversation she revealed her connection ?

    Or did she have a badge, saying 'Future Mrs JVS'.

  • @brett

    @Marko


    @Buck RogersIts Van Summerens fiancé. She was standing on the side of the road as we walked past. Lovely woman.

    I prefer to call her Justine...

    you will make a very good impression on your next date, dear sir. Her name is Jasmine...

  • @brett

    My favourite photo from the trip...

    That poor women. First she has to kiss that idiot who she ended up marrying while he was covered in crap, then she has to have a photo taken with you. Will someone give her a medal, for Merckx's sake

  • @minion

    @brett

    My favourite photo from the trip...

    First she has to kiss that idiot who she ended up marrying while he was covered in crap,

    He didn't have a shower before the wedding ???

    In that case I give it three months... especially now Brett is on the scene.

  • @JC Belgium

    @brett

    @Marko

    @Buck RogersIts Van Summerens fiancé. She was standing on the side of the road as we walked past. Lovely woman.

    I prefer to call her Justine...

    you will make a very good impression on your next date, dear sir. Her name is Jasmine...

    @minion

    @brett

    My favourite photo from the trip...

    That poor women. First she has to kiss that idiot who she ended up marrying while he was covered in crap, then she has to have a photo taken with you. Will someone give her a medal, for Merckx's sake

    Grapevine has it that rather than being upset by Brett getting her name wrong, she's somewhat starstruck.

    "Ninth, whatever?! I just met that bloke from Bad Santa!"

    (Mrs JVS's mental image of the photo)

  • @il ciclista medio
    Nice article. Chapeau. I've not had a chance to watch this years race yet and I was trying to avoid any cycling related sites until after I watched it but the are enough photos of Boonen crossing the line that resistance proved futile. My own thought's of riding some of the route last weekend are similar, although with a lot less V, to Theo De Rooij's.

    When I got off the bike in the velodrome last Saturday, I was so glad I'd ridden a chunk of Paris Roubaix, it was a great experience, but it felt like one of those that I was happy to tick off the list and move on from. There was no question that I'd want to do it again. Apart from the first few sections, up to the end of the Arenberg, the pavé hurt too much and took away from my enjoyment of the rest of the ride. That is not to say that I didn't enjoy riding with everybody on the Keepers Tour - in that sense, it was awesome.

    I guess it's a fine line between not minding that it hurts and enjoy the ride and the pain cancelling out the enjoyment that is to be had from a hard ride.

    A couple of days after the ride I began to question the notion of not riding it again, thinking that my lack of enjoyment was merely a result of weakness and my inability to ride the cobbles in the manner that they should be.

    In the last couple of days I've found that not only do I want to go back and do it again, just faster and stronger but I am also looking back on the ride with a smile. I'm sure that it'll hurt just as much if not more the next time but I know that it's easier to do something that at first seemed so momentous a second time because I know what is required and can push harder.

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