Why would any sane person choose to suffer? The answer to this question is a primal one and of particular relevance to society in the current age: control. With chaos and uncertainty creeping from every corner of life, cycling provides us with control over physical suffering; to suffer at our own will provides us the control we viscerally crave. This control then provides us the courage to face uncertainty in life with the confidence that we can handle anything it can throw at us.
There is no challenge within Cycling which more comprehensively embodies this notion than The Hour Record, which represents the only event that pits the rider not against a course, but against Time itself; how far can the rider propel themselves in the span of sixty minutes while also suppressing their nausea as they turn left endlessly?
The cruelty is hard to grasp. As cyclists we suffer, but our suffering is normally proportional to it’s intensity – certainly it hurts to ride harder, but the harder we ride, the sooner the pain will subside. In the Hour, the duration of the suffering is uniform: the effort will last 60 minutes and no amount of increased suffering will shorten it, unless, of course, you believe Al Einstein’s Special Theory of Relativity, which states that for a body moving at speed, time moves relatively slower than it does for a body at rest. According to Al, then, the rider will experience a marginally reduced Hour measured not by a clock moving with the rider, but by a clock sitting at rest at the side of the track. (While this amount of time is mathematically negligible, it does explain why intervals on the trainer feel comparatively more interminable than intervals on the road.)
Eddy Merckx himself made the following observation after setting the benchmark effort of 49,431 meters in 1972:
The pain was very, very, very significant. There is no comparison with a time trial. There you can change gear, change your cadence, relax even if it is only for a few instants’ respite. The Hour is a permanent, total, intense effort, which can’t be compared to anything else.1
Knowing that the Prophet’s bunkmate was The Man With the Hammer, the triple use of the word “very” is somewhat panic-inducing.
In recent years, the Hour Record has sadly seen a decline in interest, with the last attempt by world-class rider having been made by Chris Boardman in 2000. Boardman was at the center of the Hour’s Golden Era in the early Nineties which saw Graeme Obree kick off a frenzy of attempts to raise it ever higher by first breaking the record in his innovative tuck position as an amateur in 1993. Boardman broke it a few months later, before Obree reclaimed it in his even-more radical Super-Man position. This was a period where Boardman, Obree, Miguel Indurain, and Tony Rominger all traded the record for the better part of a decade, each going ever-farther in evermore innovative riding positions.
The UCI put a halt to the interest in this record by establishing two records, the (Athlete’s) Hour Record and The Best Human Effort. The Hour restricts the equipment to that of a standard double-triangle frame with drop bars, while the Best Human Effort has no such restriction. While the intent was to establish a more equal judgement of the athlete instead of the focus on equipment, it misses the point that advancement, evolution, and innovation are all basic elements of what it means to be Human, and by eliminating these elements from The Hour, they eliminated the appeal in what is our sport’s most primal effort. After all, there were few riders willing to go head to head with Merckx in his time, and so there are few who are willing to do so today.
Chris Boardman stands apart in this regard and indeed went after the new record, which he broke by a whopping 10 meters3. Over the course of his career, he set the record three times, which makes him possibly both the toughest and slowest-learning human currently living; even Merckx declared he would never attempt the Hour a second time, despite having fallen short of his personal goal of 50,000 meters. Boardman describes the Hour in simple, physiological terms: with every push of the pedals, you break down the fibers in your muscles such that for each subsequent revolution, you have a little less functional muscle mass available to sustain your current speed and power through to the end. In a word, devastation. It is not the sort of thing one attempts more than one needs to.
To gauge an effort of this type is perhaps the most pure description of The V; you ride not as hard as you know you can, but as hard as you hope you might. Boardman, on the Hour Record:
You have three questions going through your mind:
How far to go?
How hard am I trying?
Is the pace sustainable for that distance?
If the answer is “yes”, that means you’re not trying hard enough. If it’s no, it’s too late to do anything about it. You’re looking for the answer “maybe”.2
Despite all the training, preparation, and technical advancement that goes into any attempt on l’Heure, it remains a matter of the Human element, one of imprecise precision.
1,2 These quotes are taken from William Fotheringham‘s biography of Eddy Merckx, Merckx, Half Man, Half Bike.
3 It has been broken since by other, lower-profile riders since.
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Thanks Frank, this is a great subject, unlike any other sport perhaps? I could spend many hours in pub discussing this whole subject.
Many have attempted the hour and almost all get off the bike in the first 15 minutes as once you drop below the necessary pace, it's over. You can't recover. I believe Eddy started off too fast and had to recover and just Rule V it out. He waited until the end of the season to make his Mexico City attempt.
I'm still hoping Fabian recovers his old mojo and sets his sights on this record, he is the only rider of this generation with the motor to attempt it. Fuck it, I'd go to Europe to watch a spectacle like that.
I'm with snoov; you keep writing, I'll keep reading.
@frank
More prose, less code!!!
Is L'Heure unique in sports? Is there another sport with something similar? I can't think of anything. In athletics its about speed over distance or points in an event. Swimming it's distance. Marathons - distance. B'ball, f'ball and hockey are points and goals. Only in L'Heure is the competitor facing an implacable, relentless, ruthless, invisible enemy - time.
Can you imagine if they had an hour record for runners? How about an Olympic Hour? Every four years. What an amazing event that would be!
Ultra running has 24 hr events where its the same setup. Its a different kind of intensity though. They'll stop and rest, eat, poop, etc. I don't think it'd be comparable of the pain/intensity of the Hour.
After reading the Fotheringham Merckx book i've been interested in trying an hour attempt (of sorts). I live near to the second oldest track in the world - Preston Park Velodrome. Built way back in 1877 its long (580m) and only slightly banked>
My rough plan is to train there over the winter, mainly at night and then see how far I can get in an hour sometime next spring.
I've given no consideration to how i'll actually train and it'll be on a standard road bike and kit, no aero bars etc.
At this stage I have no idea how far i'll get and thats the most exciting thing about it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nqjEvDlFqdM&feature=player_detailpage
Froönk, you could have written a book and it would not be boring. The hour is the sine non qua of cycling. There is no other mark that matters because it is pure with no variables or at least ones that matter. If the UCI had let things go it would have been about the man with better machines as it has been for the last 100 years. The only thing to control was fairings and I believe they did that after Oscar Egg in about 1920 something.
I do not think there is an equivalent in any other sport because we have the most beautiful and elegant sport in the world, not to mention the hardest!
I have a strange, rather morbid fascination with the hour record, having watched the Chris Boardman documentary and Jorgensen Leth's "The Impossible Hour" both many times whilst turbo-training late at night in the gimp cupboard*. I was hoping that Spartacus might revive the event and have a go, thus proving that he truly is the stand out cyclist of his generation, and is a deity who walks amongst us... But I fear his window of opportunity is passing. I did tweet him on it, but he hasn't got back to me yet... Obviously thinking of a pithy, witty response.
Frank... As ever, your words capture the essence of the topic. Well done, my freakishly tall, foul-mouthed friend
* The laundry room where washing machine, tumble dryer, hot water tank and my turbo trainer reside. As the manager says, the room with all the equipment I either don't understand or I don't care for. For me, in "Roadslave525-world", I am Eddie Merckx, on my rollers in my garage... Except without the good looks, the wattage, the magnificent stroke, and the god-awful medieval music
This comment belongs somewhere on the site, maybe not here.
Today's Jen's quote from Cycling News:"It felt like the good ol' days with Jensie off the front, everyone chasing from behind, people hating me because I'm attacking all the time.......It was beautiful," he said. "Like I always say: 'It's better to be on the giving end of pain rather than on the receiving end'."