The V Moment of the Year isn’t an award so much as acknowledgment of the moment during the season when the sport demonstrated the most pure example of spirit of The V. This is more than pushing hard en route to glory; the V Moment is the one point in time at which, despite a rider’s body and mind screaming to sit up in acquiescence, they instead fight on in the face of almost certain defeat.
In the first season in recent memory during which, despite some solid efforts, the story of The Needle and Blood Bank took a backseat to the story of Good Bike Racing, I am glad to report that fists were slammed on the Velominati boardroom table in defence of the many moments deserving this honor. The season saw both the domestique and the star take highest honors in the big races: a Dutchman returned to his machine after being torn to shreds on a barbed-wire fence; an Australian took the first Tour de France for the Antipodes; a Walloon took an astonishing quantity of quality races using the same tactic time and again from the season’s start to end; two riders stood out as the only big names willing to gamble on (and lose) a Merckxian long-distance charge rather than on a last-minute dash. In a season such as this, a unanimous vote was impossible and even as some V-Pints clinked in agreement, ale spilled from others at they were shaken in dissention. Bretto was last seen staggering off to the loo muttering, “Cadel [indecipherable] Galibier [censored]…” That was two weeks ago. I do hope he’s alright.
It’s a classic racing tactic; send a teammate up the road and force the other teams to work to bring back the break while you sit on, sip tea, and nibble on biscuits. In Professional Cycling, nine times out of ten, the break is brought back at the decisive moment of the race and the favorites are let off the leash to play out the finale while the lambs who have sacrificed their day toiling for another’s glory are left to limp to the finish largely forgotten.
Johan Van Summeren is one such rider, usually racing in the service of his team captains. Off to the front with you, Johan – time to bring the break back. Johan, the break has two minutes – you’d better bridge up there solo and get the other teams to chase. Hey, Johan – you don’t climb anywhere near well enough for your weight, why don’t you make sure the break that gets away before the mountains doesn’t get too much time – then beat the time limit over the cols.
Despite his role as loyal domestique, he showed promise on the brutal Pavé du Nord; in the service of Leif Hoste, he finished 10th in 2008 and in 2009 he placed 5th even after stopping and waiting for his fallen captain. And so it was to be again in 2011, though this time for a new captain – World Champion, Thor Hushovd.
The Sector of Pavé known as the Carrefour de L’Arbre is perhaps the most decisive of the race. Though it starts flat, it ends on a slight uphill stretch which makes the particularly brutal stones feel even more antagonizing. As they approached, Van Summeren was told by his team leadership that should the break not yet be caught when they enter the sector, he would be given free reign to ride for himself. They came within 11 seconds of being brought back before they began to pull away again. Sensing his chance, Van Summeren hit the Carrefour sector on the front of his group, put it in the big ring, and rode away from his companions.
His gap never seemed big enough, but he continued to fight even as he felt the favorites’ breath on his back as they overtook the remnants of his group. The story might end there, speaking of a domestique leaving the favorites at the Trouée d’Arenberg to stay away until the finish, and a good story it would be. The underdog had taken his chance and looked to have gotten away with it when the unthinkable happened. My bike feels slower than it did a minute ago – is my brake rubbing? Aren’t the last sectors of cobbles easier than the previous ones? Then why are they so rough? Indeed, the air was popping out of his back tire for a rest; yet he still managed to hold off a late-race charge from pre-race favorite and reigning World Time Trial Champion, Fabian Cancellara. Into the finish and over the line, he sought not the reporters of the press, but his girlfriend to whom he promptly proposed. (“Most people give a ring, I give a rock.”)
For taking a chance almost 100 kilometers from the line in the hardest race on the calendar, and for holding off the fastest rider in the world while rattling over the roughest road in Europe on a flat tire, Johan van Summeren gave us the V Moment of the Year at Paris-Roubaix. Goed gedaan, meneer.
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View Comments
@Marko
Spot on - that's a great point and one I wish I would have thought to make! The sheer joy, it felt like we were all celebrating together. And he's as tall and possibly even lankier than me. What's not to love?
@Dr C
! Great! His girlfriend was adorable...The Flemish newscasters were talking about her and the cameras following her around in the velodrome...she was wandering around like a chicken with its head cut off...just awesome.
@scaler911
Occupy VM Keepers...Gold!
@minion
I forget where I read it, but someone official had a similar comment..."all the big names will ride the Tour and we'll depend on Europcar and others to make the race watcable..."
@TommyTubolare
JOHNNY PRIKKELDRAAD!! Fantastic! Into the Lexicon with that one we go...
@roadslave
We'll discuss this more in a bit, methinks...
@King Clydesdale
Don't forget, its the moment - not the rider. What he did at the Tour was fantastic. What he did at the classics was not. I'm the first to tell you I love the shit out of Thor.
...and I think some of you are jumping to conclusions based on my deliberately misleading statement earlier...
@eightzero
Oh. That's a though.
@Ron
Spot on. And I love the fact that there is no-one tougher to compete against than yourself.
@James
Merckxonian...where are the pedants when you need them? Which is it? I think they both sound great!
@Ron
You're not the first one to have that happen! G'rilla and I have been doing hill repeats on a local climb and every time the false flat at the top has us checking our brakes and wondering about flats. Brutal!
@marcus
It was an absolutely spectacular moment and the highlight of the Tour, at least where the favorites were concerned. For me, though, the moment is muddied by the fact that his ride up the Galibier was very last-minute...I think my theme for 2012 is to be Anti-Last-MInute-Effort. Brilliant tactic, of course, and it won him the Tour - but not a very bold move. On the other hand, compare it to the Grimplette's 60 k hail-mary. Sure, he lost the Tour, but that was an inspired move and the only one from a favorite that wasn't just the same-old, same-old. Also Merckxian. We could do this all day.
@marcus
Wow. Just...Wow.
@Ron
Meh. Hard to say. I'm with @Buck Rogers in that they've got decent results behind them...but Flecha to me is a tier below and so is Ballan. His win in RVV was great, though - as he kept a guy I can't stand in the least (not even Roast Beast) from winning.
I think they're below the others but good enough to win if it all works out in their favor...
@rhys
I was torn on this, too. He was a class act for sure, but at the same time, he do wonder how he could keep himself together like that. Maybe he knew the car driver just made him famous and his career was made!
Seriously! What of it? You got THIRD? YOU FUCKING GIT.
@frank
The Grimplette's Hail Mary was no less last minute than Cadel's chase, there would be no more Tour winning opportunities after it. Some might even argue that he'd already left it too late by that point.
@frank
Oh, I thought The Merckxonian would be an institution founded for the increase and diffusion of cycling knowledge