LE
TOUR DE FRANCE - 2008

All photos c. Nigel Dick except where
noted.
Thursday July 3rd.
I have come to France to shoot
footage for a documentary which will be shown on the Sundance
Channel sometime in the summer of 2009. For the first time in my life I
have proper accreditation for the Tour. Like a teenager at a gig with his
first backstage pass I am beside my self with joy. Two
days ago I stumbled off a plane from New York and met David
Smadja - for the next 4 weeks he will drive me around France
chasing the Tour while we get to know each other and live out
of a small motorhome nicknamed HarV as I film the Garmin-Chipotle
squad.
This morning we very nearly ran over pre-race favourite Alejandro Valverde because
we were arguing with Geraldine, the tiny French lady
hidden inside the GPS on our dash who, frankly, has no freakin'
idea where we are most of the time. The team we
are following is sponsored by GPS makers Garmin - Geraldine works for the opposition.
Ironically we cannot seem to lay our hands on a Garmin,
I hope no-one finds out.
Note to self...must remember to stop asking
what the BAND are doing later.
Saturday July 5th - Stage 1:
Brest-Plumelec
There's
stilt walkers, kids getting their faces painted with the Breton flag and
lots of confusion. Everyone is nervous and excited. Revising for
exams is over now - nothing left to do but race. I see all the
Garmin Chipotles and my first glimpses of Zabel, Evans,
Hincapie et al. I've managed to get in the shute with the riders as
they wait to go. I am trying to get a close-up of Gar-Chip rider
Trent Lowe when some-one pushes me backwards and I lose my balance
and stumble and stand heavily on the back wheel of Andy Shleck's
brand spankin' Cervelo. My grasp of conversational Luxembourgian is
limited but my guess is he didn't invite me over to the CSC bus
later to talk about Britney.
I can see
the headine now. "Shleck's tour over after he suffers mechanical at
crucial part of the Tour's first stage." Oops.
The start in
Brest.
Sunday July 6th
- Stage 2 Auray - Saint Brieuc
7am: wake - up. It's
so friggin' cold in here at night: my bedding consists of one thin
blanket 2 sweatshirts, both my rain ponchos, my half-dry towel and
my jeans.
8am: we sneek in and take b-fast in the
hotel. 13 Euros each is a bit steep but is justified by the fact
that we steal lots of food for lunch, spare sugar for Har-V's
kitchen drawer and both grab a trucker's shower in the lobby toilet.
In addition we charged many batteries there for free so I'm saying
it's payback.
10am: I have explained to David Smadja my
helper / driver the old English sailing term Ship-shape and Bristol
fashion. Being Parisian he's convinced I'm off my
trolley.
11am: I'm sitting in big Garmie, my nickname for the
Garmin Chipotle coach, and we're off to the races. The bus has
anti-bac dispensers everywhere and you MUST use them. The Tour is so
stressful to the rider's immune system that no-one wants to get a
cold from film-makers and all the other riff-raff the riders come
into contact with. They start taking pix of me shooting them. I take
this as a promising sign of acceptance.
1pm: They're off and
suddenly Smudger and I have our own race to take part in.The race
book shows us exactly how to get out of town and, while the riders
have their route to follow, we have our own so we follow the orange
signs across the Breton peninsula.
430pm: As we approach St. Brieuc the orange
signs give way to signs of many colours:
We want the green signs (Radio and TV) that will lead us to
our special parking spots. They lead us straight onto the course and we
drive the last 2 k at roughly the speed the riders will be doing it
in half an hour's time: 35mph! The crowd on either side look at us
disconsolantly: "Allez-vous en" I sense them saying; "Piss
off!
432: We approach the finishing straight (uphill) and
our lead-out man in a blue Skoda suddenly slows and we're overtaken
by the municipal cleaning truck.
5pm: We're at the
finishing line with cameras: there's definitely some sort of TdF
finish line heirarchy going on here. I can get close with my
backstage pass but what I have is not ALL ACCESS. It seems those are
only given to people with huge freaking cameras who wear casual
Italian loafers and have an account in Milan's version of Eddie
Bauer. It seems that a heavy dose of attitude is also mandatory. So,
as Thor Hushovd comes hurtling by with a big winner's grin on, I
have to leap out from nowhere and start looking for my guys as the
scrum presses in on TH and the yellow jersey.
Monday
July 7th - Stage 3: Saint Malo - Nantes
I got to the
sign-in today. If the riders don't sign in on time they get fined
for being 'disrespectful to the Tour de France'
Thoughts from
the sign in:
Van Summeran - yup he's very, very tall.
Maurico
Soler - tall, brown and geeky-looking: like a head on two
chopsticks.
Robbie McEwen - amazingly compact, he looks
content
Erik Zabel - ageless, smiling, relaxed
Alejandro
Valverde - does not look special at all despite the sexy yellow
outfit. His crew look serious - I wouldn't like to find them up my
exhaust pipe.
Jens Voigt - my hero: smiling and joking as always.
Good nose.
Carlos Sastre - tiny. Doesn't look like a threat to
me.
Fabian Cancellara - as JV says: "that man's a
motorbike."
Today Smudger asked me a commonly posed enquiry:
"why do cyclists go out on a breakaway when they're always caught
before the finish line? Well, apart from the tactical issues (it
stops other attacks), the commercial reasons (the sponsors get lots
of TV time) one mundane reason is that sometimes that breakaway
actually works.
After the start today we kicked Har-V into
hyper-drive and raced off to catch the Tour 50k down the road. As I
jumped out of the truck and ran towards the course I heard a whisper
about a breakaway and I'll be bugggered but 10 minutes later, as the
breakaway went past, there was Will Frischkorn, one of the riders I'm
following, killing it in a 4 man bunch. Even though the camera's
rolling I couldn't help myself: " Go, Will, go!" I shouted. He
glanced quickly my way - not too many Frischkorn fans out in these
parts - and legged it up the road with his 3 new best
friends.
As we drove south to Nantes the wind and the
rain was battering us and also the riders somewhere West of us. The
breakaway had stuck and our man Will stood a 1 in 4 chance of being
in yellow tonight. Well he missed it by a whisker but he's in the
record books now. I wonder if he'll be saying "what if?" Over and
over for the rest of his life?
Self portrait after the finish
in Nantes.
Tuesday July 8th:
Stage 4: Cholet - Cholet (ITT)
Some call it The Race of
Truth, the French call it Le Contre le Montre the normal description
is Individual Time Trial.
I call it Silly Bike
Day.
One by one the riders go out on a bike that's worth more
than your car wearing something a stripper would blush to wear and a
big plastic thingy on their heads - and the winner is the fastest
guy home. It's great for me because I can shoot all day long and
stay in one place.
Which is how I got to bump into 2 very
important men at the Tour...
Our key man to shoot today was
David Millar and, as he was preparing to ride, I was rushing from
one spot to another 50 yards away to get a 2nd angle on him and
barrelled straight into the arms of Christian Prudhomme, the grande
frommage of the Tour. "Ah, you're that crazy Engleesh/American I've
heard about who wants to make many movies about cycling" he said in
excellent English "we must talk!"
Actually he said no such
thing. He just stared at the man with the camera, the head-phones
and the crazy look on his face and stepped politely to one side to
let me through.
And then there was The Devil! Didier Senft
(think that's his name) is some large bearded German bloke who
dresses up as the Devil and follows every stage of the Tour with his
nicely painted yellow pitchfork. The Devil (who my sources tell me
is rather smelly and as potty as a row of portaloos) is such an
institution at the Tour that his pitchfork and uniform now carry
sponsorship logos.
So I'm scanning the crowd and there,
across five rows of don't-pass-here barriers and behind hundreds of
spectators was Didier and his pitchfork. I turned on the camera and
waved and Didier did his special Devil dance for us.
And M. Prudhomme
thinks I'm crazy...

View from front of
Team Car - ITT.
Wednesday July 9th -
Stage 5: Cholet - Chateauroux
Everyone riding the Tour has a number stuck on
each side of the back of their shirts. Today all the Garmin
Chipotles were given yellow numbers as they are currently leaders of
the team prize and Will Frischkorn, who created the winning
breakaway 2 days ago, was wearing a red number today as the panel of
judges voted him most aggressive rider. He gets 2,000 euros for that
but told me he will share it with his team mates.
Trent Lowe's yellow number.
The announcer always calls him "Trenty Luvver."
Many of the most famous riders have nicknames:
Il Pirata, Il Grillo. Today we met and interviewed Le Blaireau (the
Badger) otherwise known as Bernard Hinault and arguably one of the
greatest living cyclists second only perhaps to Eddy Merckx (the
Cannibal). Hinault won the Tour 5 times and was the last Frenchman
to reach Paris in Yellow.
The Badger seemed to be quite
compact and broad about the shoulders though still quite lean. His
face is tanned and lined and his eyes sparkle when he smiles yet his
teeth suggest he is a man not troubled much by vanity. He is a good
advert for the Tour - relaxed, neatly dressed and happy to talk. I
asked him questions in my appalling French and he happily replied
discussing his fears about Le Dopage and his admiration for the
Garmies and their pursuit of clean cycling.
Later, on the
road, I wished I'd asked for a picture with this hero of the Tour
but the images I have in my head of this tough rider, arms and hands
throttling the bars while his teeth are gritted and his legs humble
his opponents on some distant Alpine pass, would not sit well with a
happy snapshot in a parking lot on a sunny morning.
I wonder what name they'll give this year's
Tour winner.
Thursday July 10th - Stage 6: Aigurande -
Super-Besse
I' ve been promised ride in a Team Car. I know
this will mean lots of cool footage of the riders coming back to
discuss tactics, pick up drinks and power bars; a chance to hear
what they say over those radios; and a first class view of some
amazing countryside. Even more importantly it means I get to find
out what the drivers do about pee breaks following the Tour 6 hours
at a time.
I'm in Car Two and on a stage like today, where
the peloton sticks together for 5 hours of the day, I quickly
discover that the reality is that what I'm really going to see is 6
hours of the back of the Team Columbia car (we travel in an order
established by the TdF organisation) and an awful lot of my lovely
driver, Lionel, chatting with his pals in the other team cars in a
variety of languages. Most people in the peloton are at least
bilingual - one of the riders I'm following, Magnus Backstedt,
speaks 5 languages fluently, Swedish, English, Dutch, French,
Italian and can tell jokes in German. Boy, do I feel
inadequate.
The cars travel very close together and often at
great speed. For the first three hours I see but one rider racing
back to the front after a flat. However what I do see lots of
is a number of men standing by the roadside, near to a brightly
colored team car, with their equipment in hand taking a leak. It
seems that the directeur sportifs stop for a bathroom break whenever
they please. Indeed it is at this point that the true raison d'etre
for car #2 is revealed as the radio comes to life for the only time
all day: "Lionel! Take over - we're stopping to pee," yells car #1.
While car #1 pulls over car# 2 jumps in to take its place. That's
what car #2 does? Covers for car#1 while it stops to pee? Five
minutes later we' re back where we belong staring at the brake
lights of Columbia #2.
We're 5k behind the action as the true
heroes of the Tour fight for the line. Tour radio announces the
results fluently in three languages. As has been the case much of
the day the crowds view us like hyenas at the zoo as we pass - we're
strange, we're watchable but we're not sexy, huggable or famous like
the lions, tigers and leopards up the front of the race who are
already at the finishing line.
We're a part of the Tour? Hell
yes! But let's not get carried away here - after all we're only car
#2.
Friday July 11th - Stage 7: Brioude -
Aurillac
I have been making my own cycling
documentary (separate from this one) for the last couple of years about
the rider who comes last in the Tour.www.rougefilm.com But you can
only be last in the race if you actually reach Paris.
Each
day there is a Time Cut. This time cut is a margin of time added to
the winning rider's time. Perhaps on a stage which takes 6 hours for
the winner to cross the line that additional margin may be 25
minutes. If you don't make it home inside that 25 minute cushion
you're out of the race. End of story.
Today one of the Garmin
riders failed to make the time cut. Magnus Backstedt (the guy who
speaks 5 languages) is a big, lovable, powerful man known for
drilling it at the front and leaving lesser men gasping for breath
in his wake. Yesterday he was one of those gasping men and for the
last 100k he rode alone fighting to stay in the
race.
Competitive cycling is about suffering and Maggie
suffered nobly yesterday but still crossed the line 4 minutes
outside the cut. If he had made it would he have recovered enough to
keep on going? He, for one, is as mystified as the rest of us as to
where his form has gone.
Last night's other news was that
Manuel (Tricky) Beltran was ejected from the Tour for using EPO, the
infamous drug that helps with recovery. After all the months of
deprivation, suffering and hard training both men left the Tour
today and will watch their team-mates arriving in Paris on TV.
The difference is
that one man is looking at a doubtful future and possibly jail-time
while the other can hold his head up high knowing that he did his
best.

David Smadja (Dick's helper), Julian
Dean, Neal Rogers (Velo News), Dick
Saturday July 12th
- Stage 8:Figeac - Toulouse
Oh the glamour of it
all.
Everyone got wet today: the fans, the press / TV folk
(that would be us), and of course the riders. When they came
hurtling past us, in the shute in Tolouse this afternoon, only one
of them was smiling and that would be stage winner Mark Cavendish
who, up close, looks like a teenage scallywag off down the pub to
meet some girls.
The rest of the lads were drenched and
filthy, their faces caked with dirt like old-school racing drivers.
They went straight for the bus and not one of them said a word. Then
that Garmin bus was out of the parking lot faster than a Formula One
Racing Car.
30 minutes later we had tracked the bus down
again outside their hotel. We requested a chance to chat with a
rider during their post-race pumelling but not one
replied.
My guess is that right now they're warming up in
their rooms with hot baths and food to follow. Meanwhile in the
glamorous world of film-production, just a few metres and a whole
world away, an instant meal and a pile of petty- cash receipts to be
added-up awaits me in Har-V.
I think we're all nervous now.
We're 8 stages in and the next big test of the Tour is coming
tomorrow: the first mountain stage in the Pyrenees. It will be a
restless night for the true contenders have to strut their stuff
tomorrow and there'll be no hiding behind doors when the mountains
come.
Sunday July 13th - Stage 9: Toulouse -
Bagneres-de-Bigorre
I suppose you think that because I'm
at the Tour I'm really clued in about the race. Fat
chance.
Over the last days I've started to notice the same
faces outside Big Garmie and, as we wait like desperate camera and
mic weilding vultures for cycling carrion, we chat. After 7 days of
keeping my race-confusion under my hat I let slip that I had very
little clue about everything that was really going on in the race.
Imagine my surprise when many of them nodded their heads with
a weary resignation and agreed they shared my situation.
This
is where the cold reality of what television has done kicks in. You
can be right there beside the road but it's the TV coverage that
gives you a real perspective on what's going on. One of my fellow
Garmie stalkers, an experienced journalist who's covered the race 9
times, told me she needs to watch the race in the press room on TV
to get a proper idea of what's going on! On occasion she's even rung
up her husband in the States to check a detail.
Well this
Garmie-stalker doesn't have access to the press room or TV (or
electricity most nights). Today we shot the start in Toulouse, shot
race coverage in 2 spots along the route, shot the end of the race
AND got a 1 on 1 interview with David Millar in his hotel room in
Pau and I saw it all through the viewfinder. We've also driven
almost 300km today and had no Phil Ligget, Paul Sherwen or Bob
Roll giving us the low-down. I'm amazed to realize that I can't wait
to get home so I can turn on the Tivo and watch the
race!
Tonight marks the end of our second week travelling in
Har-V. So far we've done nearly 3,000km and we decided to celebrate
with real food for dinner - perhaps somewhere typically French yet
affordable. But in Pau at 9pm on a Sunday night near the ring road
that meant that Smudger and I dined at Quick - the French version of
McDonalds.

Our first view of the Pyrenees on
the road to Bagneres-de-Bigorre.
Monday July 14th - Stage 10: Pau -
Hautacam
We drove to the top of the Hautacam in Har-V.
It's a beautiful drive with lovely views of the valleys below. Not
quite as dramatic as the Alps perhaps but it's a relentless 15 km
climb and there's only one way up and only one way
down..
When you have those magic stickers on your wagon, as
we do, you skirt the rest of the day's course and then jump onto the
Tour route for the final hill. This means you see a rider's eye view
of the insanity lining the road - and those beer tents, fires, miles
of campers, daft signs and names painted on the road certainly add a
flavor which must be missing at any other time of year.
When
you reach the top they send you round the back to park high above
the finishing line and suddenly you find yourself surrounded by the
vehicles and the drivers and entertainers of the publicity caravan -
the jolly folk who throw brightlly colored freebies and swag at the
fans who line the road. This morning they were brash and smiling as
they left from Pau and now here they are, high above the tree-line,
sullen and weary, waiting for the road to clear so they can drive
back to their hotels and get warm again.
The riders arrive
an hour after we do and their faces speak volumes about their
abilities in the mountains - some are almost relaxed, if breathless,
and ready to talk while others are gaunt, concerned and
silent.
Now it's all done for the day there's the long drive
home and the wonderful news that tomorrow is a day
off.

Self-portrait atop the
Hautacam.
Tuesday July 15th - Rest Day Pau
I'
ve often heard it said on rock 'n roll tours that, when you're on
the road, there's no such thing as a day off.
And when
I asked one of our esteemed rouleurs the other night if it
was true that riders need to ride, even on a day off, to
keep things from seizing up, he replied, "Bollocks!"
So what
do they do on their day off? Well right now I'm not too sure because
I am sitting in a Lavomatique on the wrong side of Pau guarding our
washing while the Aide de Camps is filling up Har-V, topping up our
cell phones and photocopying more release forms.
However a
Rest Day on the Tour is pretty much what it says on the box. Some of
the guys do a ride, some of them do an interview and maybe a
sponsors lunchtime thingy. Mostly I think they take
naps.
Wouldn't you?
Wednesday July 16th -
Stage 11: Lannemezan - Foix
Of course the Tour de France
is just that and I am realising that I'm not getting quite as much
France as I'd expected with my Tour...
Today's stage ended in
Foix and the bit of Foix I saw felt almost Italian in the way those
houses were stacked up on top of each other by the river. Then, as
we waited for the riders to come in, I suddenly imagined the street
in front of me full of excited fans and in monochrome as if we were
at a Tour in the fifties. Even better today's stage was won by the
breakaway which made my black and white Tour image even more
complete.
As we escaped from Foix the warm air hung over the
harvested fields and we drove along a road lined with trees. And now
this evening we find outselves camped out miles from anywhere and
it's one of those gorgeous summer evenings you never get in LA and
I've been transported back to my youth when summer evenings seemed
endless and the future was infinite. I'm in France at
last.
Thursday July 17th - Stage 12: Lavelanet -
Narbonne
Let us commence, aujord hui, with a statement
of the bleedin' obvious: you cannot compete in, let alone win, the
Tour de France without a bike.
Unlike the riders who come in
all shapes, weights, heights and sizes the bikes have to obey
certain rules: they must all have wheels the same size have
seatposts etc at certain angles and they must weigh at least 15
pounds and change (can't recall the exact weight). The theory is
that no rider gets an unfair advantage over another by having a
special bike. However the arrival of carbon fibre and all the rest
of the other crap available to your average 21st century bike
builder means that you could shave about 7 pounds off that minimum
weight if you really wanted to. As a consequence many of the bikes
here are tricked out with super-sexy gizmos that your average velo
don't have - partly because the engineers need to make the bikes
heavier in order to match or exceed that weight
requirement.
This team is now called Garmin Chipotle because
they have a big new sponsor: Garmin - the people who make GPS
devices for your car. And guess what - each rider's bike sports a
big bronze Garmin thingy on the handlebars. (See pic below of
David Millar's bronze thingy...and also his very sexy aerodynamic
handlebars) The bronze Garmin thingy not only helps the bike hit the
right weight but also tells you all kinds of things your average
rider never knew he needed to know:
How far away the next
climb is...
Where the wind is blowing from...
What to watch
out for ahead...
His power output...
His heart-rate...Etc.
Etc.
But the funniest thing is that now the members of the
Garmin Chipotle have one extra thing that they cannot afford to
forget. And it here's how Jonathan Vaughters (team uber-boss) put it
at the final team meeting before the Tour started:
"We now have a major
sponsor, Garmin, producer of the world's leading GPS systems. So
here's one thing you have to remember. From now on, whatever
situation you may find yourself in, don't ever, ever let me or
anyone else hear you say that you're lost!"

David Millar's Garmin and his sexy aerodynamic
handlebars.
Friday July 18th - Stage 13: Narbonne -
Nimes
At first glance the members of the peloton are
mostly very handsome and very healthy young men and there's not an
ounce of spare fat between the lot of them.
When you look
downwards you notice a number of things: they have huge thighs,
their legs are all shaved and deep brown and all of them, but all of
them have a frightening array of cuts, bruises, scars and, in George
Hincapie's case, many frightening looking varicous veins.
The
other night I filmed Garmin's sprinter Julian Dean having his
daily massage after the race. Julian is a compact, quiet yet warm
and friendly man and he hails from New Zealand. The more observant
of you may notice that his team kit is black and white with ferns on
it and not the usual Garmin Chipotle blue and white. This is because
he is the New Zealand National Champion and the rules say that all
champs have to wear their national colors at the race. In fact
Julian is one of at least three national champs on the Garmin bus.
As Julian lay back and talked the Soigneur massaged his
muscles and I was stunned by the array of scars on his body. It
quickly came apparent that he is a man of steel...literally. I think
he said he has three steel plates in his body and was it a dozen or
twenty screws? The laundry list of gashes, crashes, dislocations,
sprains, fractures, other wounds and operations he shared with me
took up minutes and minutes of tape.
As our conversation
wound down I asked Julian what he 's got coming up next. "The
Olympics in Beijing, I suppose," he replied casually. Of the eight
riders left on the bus at this point at least 2 will be travelling
to Beijing and a 3rd would be going if not for previous infractions.
Back in Boulder the Garmin team has at least one more Olympic
athlete travelling to China.
After all the hard work training
on the bike, riding these killer days on the Tour and getting ready
for the Olympics I wondered where Julian would go on holiday if he
had the chance? "I'd like to travel through South
America."
"Oh yeah? How?"
"On me mountain bike..."

Julian Dean - man of steel.
Saturday July 19th - Stage 14: Nimes -
Dignes-les-Bains
Sometimes even a magic sticker isn't
quite magic enough.
Each day the official Tour guide lists
the route of the Tour (them) and then a separate route which is
described as the Off Race Itinerary (us). Once the Tour has left Le
Depart we all jump in our vehicles and gas-it down the ORI to the
end of the race. If we're lucky the ORI will take us close enough to
the riders' route that we can grab one or even two looks at the
Tour. Mostly the race travels on B roads and the ORI travels on the
autoroute so, presumably, even HAR-V can out-run the
peloton.
Presumably.
This being a Saturday and in the
height of the holiday season the autoroute was packed and somewhere
around the Peage in Aix-en-Provence I sensed we had a race on our
hands.
As we reached L'Arrivee at Digne-Les-Bains we saw the
familiar face of Fabian up ahead - one of the red-T-shirted
organisation dudes who directs us to a parking spot at day's end
every day - and his face told the whole story: we were 1.5 km shy of
the finishing line and we weren't getting any closer.
I
grabbed the camera my spex and my camera bag and started
running.
As I reached the final roundabout of the day's
course I was still in the lead. I grabbed a quick shot of the Flamme
Rouge (the red flag hanging above the road that marks the
1km-to-go-point) and hit the afterburners. Undeterred by the
narrowness of the pathway and the density of the fans beside
the course I ploughed on.
It was somewhere around the 800m to
go flag that I knew my own personal breakaway was doomed: I could
hear the helicopters and the crowd was starting to cheer - unfairly
it seemed that one man of a certain vintage with bag, camera and a
lot of determmination was simply no match for a bunch of
twenty-something world class athletes riding a lot of carbon-fibre
bikes.
I had no choice but to slow down, push through
to the fence and point the camera at the sprinters racing for the
line. I'd missed the end of the race but perhaps there was still
time for that all important post-race interview with our man Julian
Dean - I heard them announcing he'd come in 4th behind Freire, Zabel
and one other.
I raced and pushed through the crowd but
around the 100m mark it was clear I had to take drastic
action.
I turned hard left, scrambled down the bank and onto
the rock-strewn shore of the Bleone river, behind me I could hear
other desperate camp-followers coming after me. I forded a small
stream (only one sock wet) came around behind the finish-line and
scrambled my way back up to street level. Now it was a clear 300m
shot to where the team's bus lay in the
distance.
Unsurprisingly the whole team was already safe
inside the large blue whale and I'd missed the boat. Which only goes
to show that over 180kms on a sunny Satuurday in France a bike is
faster than a motorhome.
Postscript: Julian kindly granted me
an interview - which was about the time I found I'd lost my spex. I
later found them on the river-bank bent, battered but,
mercifully, not broken.
Sunday July 20th - Stage
15: Embrun - Prato Nevoso
Cycle teams, like rock bands,
have roadies. The roadies pro cycling teams have are broken down
into three sub-groups: doctors, mechanics and soigneurs.
The
doctors obviously look after all the medical stuff (and in the past
some stuff they shouldn't have), the mechanics keep the bikes
working and make sure all the team cars are clean and shiny in the
morning...and the soigneurs?
Soigneur is apparently a French
word which means helper and the Soigneurs, or 'swannies' as
the Garmins call them, do a lot of helping. So far I've established
they do the following:
In the morning they make sure all
the riders have full water bottles on their bikes and that each team
car is loaded with spare water bottles (bidons) in ice
chests along with food, power bars etc. They even make sure there's a
sandwich in the team cars for any guests - that will be me on
Tuesday I hope.
On the journey in the bus to the start of the
stage another swannie is on hand to fire up the coffee machine and
keep the liquids flowing. Meanwhile I assume another Soigneur is
taking care of the guys' bags which miraculously appear in their
hotel rooms later in the day.
Once the riders have set off to
race another Soigneur is already half-way along the course at the
Feed Zone waiting with musettes, small cotton bags, filled with more
food, snacks and goodies so the riders can keep stoking their
engines as they race past. Be careful - such is the confusion at the
Feed Zone as the riders pedal past and pick up their musettes from
their various Soigneurs that it's not uncommon for an accident to
happen.
At the race finish a Soigneur waits
with towels, chilled water (available from the Vittel stand found at
the finish line) and maybe spare dry clothes if the weather demands it -
at the end of the Hautacam stage there was no room for the team buses so
the riders changed from their sweat-sodden kit in the cold mountain
air and freewheeled 15k back down the hill to where the buses were
waiting in fresh kit.
On the bus after the race a Soigneur is
churning out bowls of oatmeal and other snacks to help those bodies
recover.
Once back at the hotel the Soigneurs perform what is
possibly their most important function - giving each rider a
relaxing and invigorating massage which makes sure the blood is
flowing and those tired muscles are able to recuperate.
From
this list of tasks you must assume there are 10 Soigneurs hard at
work but, as far as I can establish, the Garmins have four. Last
night one of the Soigneurs told me a poll was published of the 10
worst jobs in professional sports.
Soigneurs came in with a
bullet at #9.
Monday July 21st - Rest Day Cuneo
(Italy)
I often tell a joke about the difference between
heaven and hell which defines, in cliches, the difference between
English, French, German and Italian people. If I needed
another illustration for a part of my joke I got it on Sunday as we
raced from France into Italy with the Tour.
At the end of
every stage in France, as we reach our destination, the sides of the
roads are littered with the cars of all the eager fans trying to get
to the race. Most of the parking is illegal and random but at least
you can get by and reach L'Arrivee.
So, sunday
afternoon - we've crossed the border into Italy and we're racing to get
to the end of the stage and suddenly the road is filled with
cars parked randomly on both sides of the small feeder road
just like France...but, unlike France, they we're also parked in the
right lane and the left lane and all the vehicles in both lanes pointed
at the course. The road was completely blocked. We'd been driving hard
for hours and we had to get to the end of the race, I
wasn't going to give up that
easily.
David, intrepid co-pilote, set out to see what he
could do. A Carabinieri appeared with an impressive hat, a Peter
Sellers moustache, a whistle and a small plastic bat which he began
to wave furiously at all the abandoned Fiats and Alfas. I half
expected Sophia Loren to emerge from the crowd at any
second.
Just like in the movies David and the Italian
cop magically parted the red sea - but as we
reached the road junction ahead we heard the helicopters coming, we had missed our chance
to get to the end of the race for the second day running.
The
difference between heaven and hell? In heaven the Italians organise
the parties, in hell they run the trains...

Racing across the border into
Italy.
Tuesday
July 22nd - Stage 16: Cuneo (Italy) - Jausiers
(France)
Tuesday morning found me quivering with
excitement for I had been promised a seat in Car #1. I was going to
be right there in the thick of the action, camera in hand on a
mountain stage, and I was ready to rock. JV, team owner,ex-rider and
all around good-guy, took one look at my camera and quite small
camera bag - filled with spare tapes, batteries, headphones etc -
and said harshly, "What's that? Do you need that?" They were the
first nasty words I have ever heard JV utter.
When I looked
at my space in car #1 I had a new perspective on JV's concern: in
the backseat along with Kris the mechanic, his toolbox, a dozen
bidons, a couple of boxes of food and 2 expensive wheels was a very
small piece of real estate which was going to be my operating
platform for the next 5 hours.
Minutes later we were racing
along the flat Italian roads behind the peloton and I was getting
some excellent shots of the back of our driver Matty White's head.
Whitey, as many call him, is as Australian as a box of marsupials
and is the Garmin Directeur Sportif who, despite his casual
day-at-Bondi-Beach look, has proven himself to be an excellent
tactician; like most in his position he's an ex rider.
In one
of the vehicles at the front of the car convoy is a faceless man who
narrates the Tour's own radio station and speaks in flawless French
and English. Suddenly amongst the ceaseless tour radio chatter we
heard him say, "Garmin rider punctured, stopping on the
right."
Kris the mechanic leapt from the car as Trent Lowe's
small figure, standing forlornly by a roundabout with a wheel in his
hand, hove into view. Seconds later Lowe was back in action and
pedalling like a maniac while JV was looking backwards egging him on
as the road suddenly went upwards and Lowe lost contact with the
peloton. "Heck of a time to flat," said Whitey as an elaborate
ballet took place in which Car #1 overtook other cars in the convoy
to resume its correct place and, with assistance from other team
cars, dragged Lowe along behind it. They say the race referees turn
a blind eye to this tactic but clearly Car #1 had comitted some Tour
crime as one of the comissaires (mounted on the back of a moto and
wearing a red helmet) roared up and gave Whitey a telling-off in
French.
JV was not
pleased with the censure and a furious exchange took place between
the team-owner and the moto-mounted commisaire. As they yelled at each other the commisaire pointed
at me and told me to turn the camera
off.
If the ascent of the first major climb of the
day, la Lombarde Pass, was attractive, scenic and impossibly perfect
the descent on the other side made any ride at a Hollywood theme
park look like a long relaxing bath in warm, milky cotton
wool.
At each hairpin bend Car#1 lurched while 2 of its
wheels spun uselessly in the air and the other pair quivered
nervously at the edge of a vertiginous drop; I could feel the car's
suspension groan underneath me . On the same bend, barely inches
away, a motorcycle was taking the inside line while its passenger
blithely checked his camera or talked on his microphone. At one
corner a moto whizzed past with the passenger standing up, camera
held in front of him. Commisaires over-took us, fans cheered and
screamed. Meanwhile the cyclists descended with such elan we
couldn't keep up. Backmarkers would overtake us furiously swapping
race information or quickly snacking on energy bars, stoking the
engine for the next mountain that lay ahead.
Whitey was
obviously loving it, JV was looking ashen and Kris the mechanic was
checking his cell phone.
As we crossed back into France
another mountain lay ahead - the massive La Bonette Resteford
Pass.
Whereas the first hill of the day had been wooded and
charming, like a steeply sided backdrop for a Bilbo Baggins / Lord
of the Rings follow-up, the Bonette was a vast beast with a massive
and ugly topping that would frighten any mortal - even on a sunny
afternoon like this one.
Half-way up we came across our lead man
Christian VandeVelde, separated from the yellow jersey group. A cold cloud
of disappointment descended on the car as Whitey modified his
earlier plan, whereby a rider waited ahead to help Christian over
the top, to a rescue operation to bring Christian back into
contention.
Back behind the driver's seat my emotions were at
odds. The bike fan in me wanted the rider to overcome, the
film-maker in me was feasting on the drama. But most of all I was
gutted that Christian, a man I have come to like and respect a lot,
was losing time.
From where I sat I could only see the man's
butt as he cranked away, dragging himself up the climb limiting his
losses.
As we reached the peak Christian escaped from view
and was gone. His descent was so rapid that, despite falling from
his bike and losing another 2minutes, we never saw him again till
the race was done.
As I climbed from Car#1 at the race's end
I asked JV if all days in the team car were that scary and dramatic.
"On a scale of 1 to 10? I'd say it was a nine and a
half."
Whitey's Aussie
reflection was a touch more pragmatic. "Where else can you drive
like that on public roads?!" He chuckled and went in search of some
food.

The back of Whitey's head &
Italy before the mountains.
Wednesday July 23rd
- Stage 17: Embrun - L'Alpe-d'Huez
L'Alpe d'Huez is the
Lords, the Wrigley Field, the Wimbledon, the Monaco Grand Prix of
cycling. There are certainly bigger and nastier mountains but 'the
Alpe' is the one we all want to ride up.
Bourg d'Oisans is a
small picturesque Alpine town in a long winding valley with massive
rock walls climbing steeply upwards on both sides. You leave the
centre of town, pass the Casino supermarket on your left, go across
the roundabout towards the swimming pool and then start climbing and
climbing and climbing.
Alpe d'Huez is known for its 21
virages (bends) and they say up to half a million fans line the 14km
climb in a good year. The road up the mountain is spectacular
whether you ride it or just go in the car, but what struck me the
most this year was not the views but how ugly the village at the top
is. Just another collection of rather garish resort buildings made
for processing human beings so that they enter excited at one end
and are ejected from the other, tired and cash-free.
I'd now
like to share with you my thoughts on the last great mountain-top
finish on this year's Tour but, as I was waiting at the finish
surrounded by other, better equipped newshounds (they have earpieces
and producers telling them what's happening) who blocked my view of
the TV monitors I have no opinions of my own.
What I can
reveal is that at the Club Med hotel after the race Michael Douglas,
Mr. Zeta Jones himself, was introduced to Whitey, Lionel and other
members of the team. I was allowed to film the event for posterity
and slyly rolled tape as they all shook hands in the lobby and then
repaired to the bar downstairs.
As Mr. ZJ and his entourage arrived down below
a frisson of whispers and glances accompanied his journey to a quiet
spot in the corner. He sat, and then, like he was the king, everyone
else sat. And as I watched through my viewfinder I noticed he was
alone and no-one dared talk to him, so he did what we all do at such
times - he pulled out his Blackberry and sent the wife an
e-mail.

Finish line at Alpe d'Huez before the
riders arrive.
Thursday July 24th - Stage 18: Bourg
d'Oisans - Saint- Etienne
The night before Stage 17 to
l'Alpe d'Huez we found ourselves outside a hotel in Gap
imaginatively titled Gapotel.
In the cold evening light the
mechanics and soigneurs were downloading the gear from their trucks
that they would need high up on the mountain the next day as the
truck and team bus would not be able to make it to the top of the
Alpe. They squeezed everything they could inside the team cars and
went to bed as did we.
After 5 hours sleep we awoke and went
to buy coffee before our long drive North. The door of the hotel was
ajar as the dawn light crept into the empty lobby. In the breakfast
room a rumpled man dressed all in white like a baker was filling
coffee pots and cutting baguettes.
To the left of the coffee
pots leant up against some tables and chairs and completely
unguarded I noticed a bunch of bikes.
Thousands upon thousands of
dollars worth of Garmin velos were lying behind the coffee, not so much as a
bike lock in sight, and anyone could have walked in off the street
and pinched one!
Garmin Chipotle bikes in the
coffee shop at dawn.
Friday July 25th - Stage 19: Roanne -
Montlucon
I have attracted the
personal attention of my very own TdF security guy - and not in a
good way. At the end of every day's race only people with bibs are
allowed in the 100metres immediately after the finish line. I am
making a film about the Garmin Chipotle team and one of their guys,
Christian VandeVelde, is in 5th. When Christian gets to the finish
line every day he's surrounded by media folk and it's my job to get
in there and record what he has to say. If I don't get that shot
then most of my day has been wasted. So for the last two weeks,
bib or no bib, I've managed to infiltrate this hallowed zone
unnoticed and got right up close with CVV at the finish.
But the honeymoon
period is over and a man with a pony-tail hair do that only a
Frenchman could get away with has now identified me as an interloper: someone
without the magic bib. For the last few days Mr. Pony Tail has
made it his job to chuck me out whenever he sees me. Today's ejection
was delivered with a forceful push and extra bile and disdain. "You!
Go away! Go very far away!"

Stage 19: David Millar (198) chats with Robbie McEwen
(6) before the start.
Saturday July 26th - Stage 20:
Cerilly - Saint-Amand-Montrond (ITT)
The final Time
Trial day of this year's Tour started for David Millar at 8am with
my camera in his face and a massive swig of water. Breakfast
followed - an impressive selection of bowls of cereals.
Back
in his room Millar selected an unwashed racing kit and downed more
water chased by handfuls of mineral supplements. Minutes later
his elegant six foot three frame was bent over the bike he famously
threw over a fence at the Giro d'Italia (see YouTube) as his legs
pounded out imaginary kilometres as his bike was clipped into a home
trainer and wasn't going anywhere.
The team were staying in
an inexpensive hotel - part of a complex that included acres of
parking space and concrete, a large supermarket and a McDonalds -
and round the back of one of the buildings, the kind of place where
a homeless man might seek shelter from the rain, he faced a
wall under an overhang as his legs spun faster and faster. Soon a
circle of bystanders appeared as a large puddle of perspiration
collected under his bike: he wasn't sweating bullets but golfballs.
3 more bidons of water went down the hatch as his legs spun at a
speed and frequency that suggested an athlete of extaordinary
strength and stamina. The work-out continued for 40 minutes and I
wondered later why he would expend such a huge amount of energy on
such an important morning: "To remove the stiffness from yesterday's
racing," he explained bored with a question he was tired of
answering.
He showered, lay on his bed, drank a large bottle
of Vittel laced with sugar and pushed his legs into huge inflatable
tubes connected to a pump designed to squeeze all the blood back to
his heart sooner and thereby aid recovery.
At 1045 he was
back in the dining room eating a plate of plain pasta with 2 fried
eggs and drinking more water.
Noon: In the small town of
Cerilly 300k south of Paris, Millar sat outside the team bus reading
l'Equipe - fluent in French and Spanish Millar is a well-read and
deeply thoughtful, eloquent man. He then moved inside the team bus
and shifted languidly from one seat to another playing and supping
with another bottle of water filled with sugar gel and munching on a
power bar - I realised that if I'd spent the morning drinking and
eating the way he had I would, by this time, be physically
sick.
"Going to put my skin suit on now," he announced, "this
is the worst part of the day." The skin suit is a one-piece outfit
made from hi-tech fabric that aids the passage of wind over the
athelete's body and, as Millar is the current British TT champion,
his is all in white with a horizontal red and blue stripe. He
grunted and groaned as he contorted his body to slip inside the skin
tight layer. Now Millar bent over like a patient at the
proctologist's while the soigneur pinned his racing number to his
back - all those thousands of dollars in the wind-tunnel to get the
right position on the bike and that special fabric and now he was
having a small sail safety-pinned to his arse.

The worst part of the day.
1pm: Millar is
bent over sweating again warming-up on another trainer outside the
bus. Fans watch in awe as the wheels spin faster and faster and all
we can hear is an impressive whooshing sound as the spokes slice
through the air. He's chugging more water, listening to techno music
and focused on some spot below him deep inside the earth and trying
not to think of the hour of torture he's about to put himself
through. As Millar continues to pedal the team doctor pulls a
special vest from the ice chest and throws it on Millar's back.
There's some carefully thought-out medical reason for this and the
whole crowd shudders as they watch Millar's body twist with the
shock as his core temperature drops fast.
1358: Millar is in
the starting gate on his aerodynamically designed TT bike with its
Union Jack wheels and an aerodynamic bottle filled up to a roughly
etched half-way mark.
"Daviide Millarrrre, specialiste du contre la
montre!" Says the man with the mic and he's off.
For the next
53km I watch from the team car as Millar's frame slams out a tempo
that is just unbelievable. Even on these flat roads the car has
trouble keeping up. JV talks to Millar through the radio unit in his
space-age TT helmet: "Keep your head down, follow the white line,
don't break on this corner, come on, David, full gas! Full gas!"
Like a complex toy David is guided along the course by JV
who rode it himself two days previously noting every bump and twist
and turn. "Second drink point coming up, then 5k of false flat. Full
gas, David, c'mon, full gas!"
Millar cranks it out and at one
point nearly hurtles off the road; there's a collective gasp and
then nervous chuckling inside the car.
En route Millar sets
new split-times all along the course and overtakes not one but two
of the men ahead of him. As he hurtles over the finish line 65
minutes after he started he's set a new fastest time but current
world TT champion Fabian Cancellara is right behind him and almost
immediately he's demoted to second.
Minutes later he's
drinking water again, buckets of it, and patiently dealing with the
press geeks. "How do you feel David? A good ride?"
He looks
into the far distance the way he does. "I feel like shit actually,
the last 2 weeks have been hard. My main job today was to set times
for Christian and let him know what the course was like."
In
the end Millar comes 5th in the stage at an average speed of 49 kph.
Later I find him hidden behind the trailer relaxing. Some
fans discover him too. They have a big box of beer with
them.
"Fancy a drink David?"
"Yeah, love one."

Dick on right chases Millar on left. Millar
wins. pic by Lindsey Miller.
Postscript: CVV is racing for his top 5
slot at the Tour. When he arrives I have to get in there and get his
reaction but Mr. Pony Tail is on my case. I hover at the back of the
shute waiting for my moment, trying to keep hidden. When CVV finally arrives
I dodge, sprint and slide through the crowd to the front
of Christian's wheel. I am on my knees and looking up at Christian
and the mics, faces and cameras of my fellow Tour-hounds who have pushed
forward to interview him. As my heart pounds I have to hold
this shot steady...it's possibly the best shot of the whole 3 weeks.
Then a hand reaches through the legs and grabs the viewfinder of my
camera - it's Mr. Freakin' Pony-Tail and he's going to break my
$7,500 camera if I don't let him have his way. Next his other hand
is on my collar and he's dragging me away. I shout at him, "I'm on
his team!" which is kind of accurate. Everyone stops. Christian and
all the press turn and stare for a second. Clearly this kind of
behavior is not acceptable at the Tour.
I slink off, hurt.
Mr. Pony Tail has won.
Sunday 27th July - Stage 21: Etampes - Paris
Champs-Elysees
After 3 weeks of sun, rain, crosswinds,
storms, flat stages, sprint finishes, brutal climbs and mountain-top
finishes the peloton moves out of Etampes on a hot Sunday
morning with much fanfare and very little energy.
There's
joy, exuberance and champagne coming from the CSC cars, they have a
man in yellow, and nervousness and fear from the Gerolsteiner cars,
they've had a great Tour but have no sponsor for next year. Along
the roadside I see Cadel Evans, the great Aussie hope, taking a pee
alone, stone-faced as always. He's on the podium for sure but once
again has come away with nothing - the Nearly Man of Antipodean
cycling.
Jens Voigt, locomotive of CSC and my personal hero,
comes by to chat with Whitey.
"Jensie! Are you
retiring?"
"My kids want a swimming pool and my wife wants a new
car so I guess I'm signing up for 2 more years of this crazy shit!"
Everyone laughs and Voigt pushes himself away from the
car and pedals up the road.
Why doesn't everyone race on
the final day on the way into Paris? That's what people want to
know. Partly it's tradition, partly its respect for the race and
partly, as David Millar told me the other night, its pure
pragmatism: anyone who attacks the yellow jersey will get shut down
awful fast.
After the soft breezes of the past days Paris is
hot and humid. The domestiques shuttle back to their Team cars for
the last time and stuff their shirts with bidons for their fellow
riders. There are no longer empty hedgerows where the riders can pee
- instead they're lined up along walls letting it all hang out as
they get ready for the final explosive kilometres of the
Tour.
The Champs Elysees is crowded and cheering and very
bumpy. In a car those bumps are part of the romance of Paris, after
3 weeks on a bike it must be hell . After one circuit they kick me
out of the Team car - there are a line of sponsors wanting rides and
bottom feeders like me need to make space for the
heavy-hitters.
The lead-out trains form up and the sprinters
make a final effort - a victory in Paris on these cobbled Elysian
Fields could be a career-defining moment.
After 85 hours of
pedalling the Tour is over - the wives are kissed and the babies
hugged - and the riders form up with their Directeur Sportifs who
are riding spare bikes and looking out of place in their civvy
clothes and 40-something bodies. Each team sets out on a lap of
honor pedalling slowly towards l'Arc de Triomphe.
Garmin DS
Jonathan Vaughters is trying to stand on his pedals and keep
stationary, the way cyclists do at the lights. He's having some
trouble with the cobbles. He was a previous lieutenant of
Lance Armstrong, held the TT record up Ventoux and rode 4 or 5 Tours
but famously never made it to Paris. He's visibly excited - it's the
first time he's ridden a victory lap on The Champ.
Garmin's
number 5 GC man, Christian Vandevelde, has snagged a stars and
stripes from a bystander and wears it proudly over his shoulders.
Ryder Hesjedal snags a Canadian one and does the same. Tiny Trent
Lowe borrows an Aussie flag on a little stick and Julian Dean finds
some Kiwis in the crowd to have his picture taken
with.
Christian Prudhomme, CEO of all things TdF shakes
everyone's hands and smiles.
I shout across to one of the
ladies from the Slipstream office in another team car: she's a single
Mom of a certain age, has never been to France, and here she is
riding a Team Car down the Champs Elysees as the crowds cheer her
on.
"Will anyone ever
believe you if you tell them this was your first drive into Paris?"
She's visibly moved as we all are.
As I hang out of the side of the Team Car I see Mr. Pony Tail one last time.
He's clearly not happy I've slipped past his personal cordon and gained access to a
team car for the victory lap - I
hope he has a short memory and doesn't hold grudges: I want
to come back next year.
Twenty minutes later the big blue whale of a team
bus has gone and the riders have ridden off on their bikes to their
hotel. After all these tough weeks on the bike they can't get seem
to get off. Half the team were rookies and they've all made it to
Paris - their bodies have changed while I've watched the ride and
they've all suffered horribly.
For me there is a quick meal and 2 hours
packing in a smelly RV parked on the edge of the
Place de la Concorde. It's been an extraordinary journey - we've driven nearly 4,000 miles
and shot over 85 hours of film - but right now all
I want to do is go home and hug my girl who I love so much ...and
ride my bike.

Hanging out of
the Team Car, Victory Lap, Paris. pic by Bonnie Ford
Postcript:
My comment from Stage 3 about Carlos Sastre
("Tiny, doesn't look like much of a threat.") has proven to be
wildly inaccurate - he wins the 95th Tour de France. Months later
Christian VandeVelde is promoted from 5th to 4th after another rider
is sacked for taking drugs. When I get home to LA the folk at Garmin
kindly send me one of their GPS units. It is vastly superior to the
device that we had in France though I do miss Geraldine's voice and
her constant advice to make a 180 degree turn: "Prenez un demi-tour
avec prudence."
YouTube
Want to go behind
the scenes with Har-V & Co? Check out this short video filmed in
glorious Handicam:
Adventures with Har-V & Geraldine
With thanks to:
Magnus Backstedt, Jon Cassat,
Sloane Cooper, Nick Davis, Julian Dean, Doug Ellis, Tom Ennis,
Graeme Fife, Bonnie Ford, Eric Fostvedt, Will Frischkorn, Lucas
Gilman, Inaki Goiburu, Ryder Hesjedal, Paul Kimmage, Allen Lim,
Trent Lowe, Lionel Marie, Martijn Maaskant,David Millar, Lindsey Miller, Alyssa
Morahan, Danny Pate, Marya Pongrace, Neal Rogers, Beth Seliga, Joachin
Schoonaker, David Smadja, Prentice Steffen, Brandi Thomas, Christian VandeVelde, Jonathan
Vaughters, Matt White Kris Withington & everyone at Team
Slipstream Garmin Chipotle.
A note about the
pictures:
Except where otherwise noted all pictures in
this diary are copyright Nigel Dick 2008. The pictures were taken with a
Blackberry. I apologise there are not more pictures of the
Tour itself but I was paid to shoot
the Tour - not take snaps of it!