Categories: RacingThe Hardmen

Passista

Danny Pate, passista?  photo:MG/TDWSport.com/Corbis

My first article on Velominati was to introduce one of my favorite cyclists, Eros Poli. I refered to him as a domestique on the Mercatone-Uno team. This faux pas was properly pointed out much later by @KaffeineKeiser, a commenter who suddenly surfaced and unfortunately submerged just as quickly, like Das Boot in the Straits of Gibraltar.*

I do take exception to you calling him a “domestique”. Eros was a “passista” of the highest order. A team position no more or less glamorous than the former, but one that certainly warrants its own designation.

To der Keiser, calling Eros a domestique was to call him a mere bottle carrier. I was completely unfamiliar with the term but in debt to der Keiser for setting me straight. Poli was an Olympic gold medal winner in the four man team trial. He was engine number one on Cipo’s Mercatone-Uno original lead-out train. He raced Paris-Roubaix. I’m sure he carried his share of bottles. Everyone carries bottles up from the team car when necessary. Poli was a passista first, a domestique second.

More light was shed on “passista” when Pez published the excellent Italian for Cyclists a while back.

Passista (pahs SEE stah) – Francesco Moser fits the bill here. The passista is a big, powerful rider able to maintain 50 km/h for an hour at the front of the peloton. Their strength and toughness make them naturals in the northern classics.

By that definition, Jensie Voigt is a classic modern passita, our own Frank Strack too. Tom Boonen is absolutely one judging from the work he has been doing this week at the head of the peloton in Paris-Nice. Boonen’s elbow infection foiled his usual preparation for the Spring Classics so he signed up for a week-of-beauty spa called Paris-Nice. Need some fitness? Ride from Paris to the Mediterranean at ass hauling speed, do hour sessions at the front of a professional peloton. On the rainy cold days, do even more.

Passista is a type of rider rather than just a job description within the team. I don’t think there are designated bottle carriers these days. One can’t be really good at just riding back and forth to the team car. A friend who has done it told me how damn hard riding back to the field at high speed towing an additional seven kilos really is. No one makes it to the pro ranks on their bottle carrying savy. The fact that one is on a team for a particular race means one is a badass, except for the newbies who are just hoping to finish and gain some race experience (like Andy Schleck). If this is their mission, then either they are future badasses or their team lacks any depth and therefore sucks. Julian Dean may have carried bottles during each stage during the Tour but he still had to man up for the last twenty km and be faster than everyone except his team’s designated sprinter. He was the lead- out guy.

If I had chosen my parents perfectly, I too would aspire to be a passista. Pure climbers- too small, pure sprinters- too crazy; who wouldn’t want to be a big cobble crushing beast that can can just ride people’s legs off when required?

*Yes, for you Das Boot fans, I know that was an imperfect metaphor.

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Gianni

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  • Team Sky has a virtual monopoly on these guys.  Stannard tops the list for me...

  • @ChrisO

    Kiriyenka in Paris-Nice seems to be a passista in the making - 30km on the front including reeling in the breakaways.

    Speaking of badass, have a look if you can at the coverage of Tirreno yesterday, or photos. Not often you see pros WALKING up hills - even Sagan and the climbers were having to zig-zag across the road to keep their speed on a 27% gradient.

    Apparently the entire grupetto decided to abandon the race, which left poor Taylor Phinney to do 120km on his own, because he wanted to do the TT today. But he missed the time cut and was eliminated.

    I'm in two minds - it was a good stage because it produced some decisive racing, and it is a rare thing to see a breakaway finish group consisting of riders like Nibali, Sagan and Rodriguez. On the other hand a stage where 50 riders abandon is not ideal - maybe partly to do with timing. If today had been a sprint stage they would have had something to stay in for.

    I agree.  Too tough.  Didn't they do the climb three times too?   At least the race director was good enough to admit as much immediately afterwards - which was acknowledged by none other than passista-veloce,  Mr F. Cancellara.

  • @ChrisO think the problem may have been scheduling the stage before a final very short TT stage. No point in team riders continuing. I think it was abeautiful stage -and could have been improved by scheduling it a day before team riders were needed.

    Sagans effort was nothing short of extraordinary. A

  • And very interesting to see Evans working hard in the second group. Doing favors on a rainy day for another rainy day. Or just training when it's raining?

  • Thanks, Gianni for bringing a new word into my velolife! Very cool. I have a question - can someone under 175 cms be a passista or does the job require being a bit of a hulk?

    ChrisO - I was able to catch the last 50km of T-A yesterday. It was great to watch as it made me feel much, much better about the times I've had to zig-zag across the road on a particularly insane climb. The toughness of the climb, the walking, and the admission by the director all bring up an interesting point in light of all that has/is going on - is including such a wild parcours the type of thing that forces racers to seek out "help" or is it just part of the job of a PRO? Sagan, Nibali, and Lil' Prince all seemed to handle it.

    I'm of the mindset that it's still exciting, no matter how slowly they're going up a hill. Just curious how others feel.

  • @PT

    @ChrisO

    Kiriyenka in Paris-Nice seems to be a passista in the making - 30km on the front including reeling in the breakaways.

    Speaking of badass, have a look if you can at the coverage of Tirreno yesterday, or photos. Not often you see pros WALKING up hills - even Sagan and the climbers were having to zig-zag across the road to keep their speed on a 27% gradient.

    Apparently the entire grupetto decided to abandon the race, which left poor Taylor Phinney to do 120km on his own, because he wanted to do the TT today. But he missed the time cut and was eliminated.

    I'm in two minds - it was a good stage because it produced some decisive racing, and it is a rare thing to see a breakaway finish group consisting of riders like Nibali, Sagan and Rodriguez. On the other hand a stage where 50 riders abandon is not ideal - maybe partly to do with timing. If today had been a sprint stage they would have had something to stay in for.

    I agree. Too tough. Didn't they do the climb three times too? At least the race director was good enough to admit as much immediately afterwards - which was acknowledged by none other than passista-veloce, Mr F. Cancellara.

  • @Skinnyphat

    Team Sky has a virtual monopoly on these guys. Stannard tops the list for me...

    I read someone describe them as Skyborgs the other day.

  • @ All This is what @chris was reffering too.  You tube at about 42:30  (Tirreno - Adriatico 2013 - [30%] FULL RACE stage 6 - Porto Sant'Elpidio "º Porto Sant'Elpidio)  .

    Tirreno - Adriatico 2013 - [30%] FULL RACE stage 6 - Porto Sant'Elpidio "º Porto Sant'Elpidio

     
  • @freddy nice, Bauer was a hardman and always on the cusp.  I wish he had just a little more in the tank at Paris-Roubaix...

  • Speaking of Ted King, anybody remember him pulling for just about the entire Tour of Cali last year?  He was on point for huge amounts of time.

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