the new wave of american cycling

by time news

When he was a child, Quinn Simmons was not really passionate about cycling. The native of Durango, in the mountains of Colorado (USA), says he was a bit “annoyed” to see his father spending so much time in front of the television watching the Tour de France. He was more into ski mountaineering.

Five years later, it is however on the roads of the Grande Boucle that the 21-year-old cyclist drags his smile – rarely masked despite the threat of Covid-19 – for his first participation in the queen event of road cycling. . “The final decision was made during the Tour de Suisse [terminé le 21 juin, avec le maillot à pois de meilleur grimpeur]. In my head I had prepared as if I was going, but we are always a little nervous until the last yes “rejoices the rider of the Trek-Segafredo team.

If Quinn Simmons is the youngest of this 109e edition, he is also one of the seven Americans present at the start of the event, in Copenhagen, on 1is July. Unheard of since 2014. “I am convinced that this number will continue to grow”slipped Kevin Vermaerke (DSM), forced to retire in the 8e stage between Dole (Jura) and Lausanne (Switzerland), on July 9th.

“Less support in the United States”

“There were several American waves on the Tour: in the 1980s with Greg LeMond, then in the early 2000s with Lance Armstrong. We are on the third »says Franco-American photojournalist James Startt, author of Tour de France/Tour de Force. A Visual History of the Worlds Greatest Bicycle Race (Time.news Books, 2000) and thirty-three Grandes Boucles.

What is striking in this new wave is as much its youth as its dissemination in the peloton. Apart from climbers Sepp Kuss (Jumbo-Visma), 27, and Joe Dombrowski (Astana-Qazaqstan), 31, the other five riders are 25 or younger. Above all, all evolve in different teams, when in the past the American contingents rolled for formations flying the flag of the country like 7-Eleven, Motorola or US Postal.

Brent Bookwalter, who spent a large part of his career with one of them (BMC Racing), sees this as a sign of a change in mentality. “As a young rider, as an American, riding for a French or Spanish team involves immersing yourself in a different culture and it could seem very intimidating”develops the native of Albuquerque (New Mexico), consultant on the Tour for the Flo TV channel.

There is another, more prosaic explanation: “There is less support for road cycling in the United States : less races, teams, infrastructure », he summarizes. The fault with the economic situation, but also with the business of doping which had strong consequences on the engagement of the sponsors and the popular enthusiasm.

Armstrong’s Ambiguous Legacy

In the mid-2000s, the United States could boast of having won the Grande Boucle eleven times: Greg LeMond (1986, 1989 and 1990), Lance Armstrong (1999-2005), and Floyd Landis (2006), i.e., at the time, more than Italy and Spain. Controlled with a testosterone level eleven times higher than normal, Floyd Landis will be downgraded. Will follow Lance Armstrong, in 2012.

Ian Boswsell grew up with the exploits of the “boss”. In the eyes of the former rider of the British Sky and Swiss teams Katusha-Alpecin, his heritage remains ambiguous. “Lance is the reason we have invested so much in cycling in the United Statesunderlines the thirty-something. This guy from Texas who manages to dominate the most prestigious event in the world has shown us that it is possible. »

Read also (2019): Lance Armstrong: ‘We did what we had to do to win, it wasn’t legal, but I wouldn’t change a thing’

His fall left a void and his compatriots have long kept an image of runners « sales ». But the biggest worry, he insists, was that a good part of his generation wanted to be general classification riders, “while they would have been probably better on more specific grounds”. Like Tejay Van Garderen, a time trial specialist, but rarely consistent over a three-week race.

From now on, the ambitions are more discreet and varied. “I will probably never be an overall rider on a Grand Tour, but maybe after riding my bump for a few years on the road I could aim for one-week races”explains, for example, Quinn Simmons.

“The figure of the champion”

The results are starting to come. On July 7, 2021, Sepp Kuss crossed the finish line alone in Andorra la Vella, giving the United States their first stage victory in the Tour de France since Tyler Farrar in Redon (Ille-et-Vilaine) , in 2011.

During the first week of this 2022 edition, Neilson Powless (EF Education EasyPost) came within seconds of wearing yellow: never had an American been so close to the top of the general classification since Tejay Van Garderen, in 2018 – equal time with his Belgian teammate Greg Van Avermaet, at the end of the team time trial.

American Neilson Powless (right) during the 5th stage of the Tour de France, between Lille Métropole and Arenberg Porte du Hainaut (Nord), July 6, 2022.

From memory of followers, we see less than Star-Spangled Banner, the flag of the United States, on the sides of the road only during the great hours of Armstrong. In the country, “Road cycling remains closely linked to the figure of the champion”explains James Startt. “I saw it being Tejay’s teammate, accompanying him through the ups and downs of his career: the Americans liked him when he was doing well and jeered at him when he was tough.abonde Brent Bookwalter. This group today can share this burden. It’s not like any of them are being brandished as “the” new face of American cycling that all the hopes are in. » Enough to give them time to find their strengths and make this new wave last.

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