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Henry Anglade

Henry Anglade (6 July 1933 – 10 November 2022)[2] was a French cyclist. In 1959 he was closest to winning the Tour de France, when he won a stage and finished second, 4:01 behind Federico Bahamontes. In 1960 he wore the yellow jersey for two days while finishing 8th overall. He placed in the top five of the Tour on two additional occasions in 1964 and 1965.

Henry Anglade
Anglade in 1960
Personal information
Full nameHenry Anglade
NicknameNapoléon
Born(1933-07-06)6 July 1933
Thionville, France[1]
Died10 November 2022(2022-11-10) (aged 89)
Lyon, France
Team information
DisciplineRoad
RoleRider
Rider typeAllround
Amateur team
Vélo Club du Griffon
Professional teams
1956Alcyon–Dunlop
1957–1962Hutchinson–D'Alessandro
1963–1966Pelforth–Sauvage–Lejeune
1967Mercier–BP–Hutchinson
Managerial team
1976–1978Lejeune–BP
Major wins
French National Road Race Champion (2x)
Dauphiné Libéré
1 stage, Tour de France (1959)

Origins edit

Henry Anglade was born in Thionville, in the Lorraine region of France close to the German border, the son of a soldier. His family moved south to Lyon at the start of the Second World War. There he went to school with a boy called André Camus who went cycling on Sundays and on Thursday afternoons. Anglade turned down his invitation to join him. It was his father who suggested that he should go, offering him the heavy family bicycle "that weighed at least 25kg". He joined Camus and his friends and found they couldn't keep up. One suggested he should try racing and he joined the Vélo Club du Griffon, the oldest club in Lyon. That was when he bought himself a Longoni sports bike and tried racing.[3]

Anglade worked with an engineering company until he could support himself from racing.[4]

Professional racing edit

Anglade turned professional in 1957. In 1959, he won the Dauphiné Libéré, a mountainous stage race over a week; then the national road championship. He came second in the Tour de Suisse and then in the Tour de France, behind Federico Bahamontes but in front of Jacques Anquetil and Roger Rivière. In that Tour, Anglade – riding for the regional Centre-Midi team – was the victim of the tactics of Anquetil, Rivière and others in the French national team. They preferred to see Bahamontes take the Tour de France rather than Anglade, who was unpopular among French riders and, had he won the Tour de France, would have earned more than Anquetil and Rivière in the post-Tour criteriums that were then an important part of riders' incomes. Bahamontes was both Spanish and a poor rider in round-the-houses races and so of little threat. On top of that, Anquetil, Rivière and many other French stars were represented by Daniel Dousset, one of the two agents who divided French cycling, whereas Anglade was represented by the other, Roger Piel.[5] That was why Anglade had been left out of the national team to ride for a regional one.[6]

At the stage finish in Grenoble, Dousset was there to meet Fausto Coppi, who was Bahamontes' sponsor, and the riders in the national team whom he represented. Émile Besson wrote in L'Humanité: "Dousset offered contracts for criteriums by the shovel load for after the Tour of Spain. Anglade's head, second in Paris, had fallen."[6][7] Fans worked out what was going on and Anquetil was whistled and jeered as he entered the Parc des Princes on the last day. Anglade said: "I've got no regrets about it. Racing is like that. And anyway I make it a principle to live without regrets."[3]

Anglade was not the strongest of riders but made up for what he lacked with a good tactical sense. He was an eloquent speaker and popular with journalists. Riders, however, disliked him for what they perceived as his bossiness and gave him the nickname Napoleon, which referred as well to his smallness.

Anglade joined the Pelforth-Sauvage-Lejeune in 1963 and finished the next year's Tour de France in fourth place, behind Anquetil, Raymond Poulidor and Bahamontes. He also came fourth in the 1965 race, behind Felice Gimondi, Poulidor and Gianni Motta.

Anglade's health disturbed his 1966 season and he spent his last season, 1967, as a team rider for Raymond Poulidor. He rode in ten editions of the Tour de France and finished all but his last. His places in the general classification were always in the top 20 aside from his first Tour where he finished 28th, but thereafter he finished 17th, 2nd, 8th, 18th, 12th, 11th, 4th and 4th.

1959 national championship edit

The 1959 national championship used the car racing circuit at Montlhéry. Anglade was in a leading group with five laps left. Louison Bobet was leading the chase. The commissaires had got as far as clearing following cars out of the way so that the chasers could regain the leaders. Anglade dropped to the back of his group, had something to eat, and set off alone when Bobet and the others were nearly on them. The others hesitated and the chasers eased up when the two groups came together. Anglade was convinced he'd won and eased up with 100m left to raise his hands in victory.

"He thought he'd won," said a report, "and sat up to salute the crowd. L'impudent! He had barely crossed the line when he was passed by Jean Forestier and René Privat, who had also broken away and were sprinting for second place."[8]

1965 national championship edit

The Pelforth team met the night before the championship at a hotel near the circuit. The manager, Maurice de Muer, said: "Anyone intending to be champion of France, raise a hand." Four put up their hands, including Georges Groussard and Anglade. Anglade said: "Right, that's three too many. You three who fancy the jersey, I consider you adversaries. As for the rest of you with no particular ambitions, ride for me because I'm going to be French champion."[8]

Another Pelforth rider, Hubert Ferrer, broke away alone for 170 km. He was caught 30 km from the line. The peloton was tired from chasing and repeated attacks. Raymond Delisle went away when Ferrer was caught. Anglade caught him, the two stayed together for a while and then Anglade went away alone with five laps to go. He said:

I knew that behind me, Jacques Anquetil and Raymond Poulidor would be neutralising each other, so I decided to keep the peloton at a minute. I realised quickly that I had a friend in the announcer. I could hear the loudspeakers perfectly right round the course and when he said '55 seconds', I accelerated. When I heard '1m 5s', I eased back a bit to recover. It worked so well that I crossed the line a minute and five seconds ahead of Poulidor and Anquetil.[8]

General de Gaulle edit

Anglade was in the French national jersey when the race stopped unexpectedly at Colombey-les-deux-Églises to greet Charles de Gaulle, the president, in his village. Anglade said:

I had stopped to relieve myself. I was just coming back up through the following cars when Jacques Goddet called me to say that the General was on the course. He asked me 'Could you imagine stopping?', a strange question to ask me, Napoleon, given that I used to get fined if I put a foot down on the road. I said we could stop but provided there was no penalty. I went up to the front of the race to warn the leaders, Nencini, Adriaenssens. In the wood of La Boisserie [de Gaulle's estate] the bodyguards were already across the road, and so we all stopped. The general came down the slope, he greeted me first and then Nencini, telling him he was going to win, and then he went back and we set off again. I often wondered why he had spoken to me first and then later I got the answer. The General was vising Lyon and I was one of those invited. The chef du protocole introduced me and the General said 'One does not introduce Henry Anglade'. I asked him why and he said 'You were wearing our flag and I owed it to you' [je vous devais bien ça].[9]

It was the first time the Tour had stopped during a stage.

Downhill race edit

Anglade's downhill race with Gastone Nencini has become part of the legend of cycling. Anglade was a proud rider and Nencini one of the fastest down hills. "The only reason to follow Nencini down mountains is if you have a death wish," was how Raphaël Géminiani put it. It was in trying to follow Nencini down a mountain that Roger Rivière missed a bend, crashed over a wall and broke his spine.

Anglade and Nencini met at a col in the Dolomites during the Giro d'Italia. The weather was bad and a snowstorm had forced 57 riders to abandon that day. Anglade said:

I couldn't tolerate the idea that Nencini was the best descender of the peloton. I said to him, call the blackboard man,[10] we'll do the descent together and whoever comes second pays for the aperitifs this evening. So he called the ardoisier and asked him to follow us. The road was of compressed earth. We attacked the drop flat out. I let Nencini take the lead so that I could see how he negotiated the bends before attacking him. In the end I dropped as though I was alone. At the bottom, I had taken 32 seconds out of him, written on the blackboard. I was really tickled. I had beaten Nencini. The next time I saw him was that evening in the hotel I was staying at. He had just bought me an apéritif![3]

Doping edit

Anglade raced at a time when riders made much of their income in the criterium races, for which they were paid start money as well as prizes, that followed the Tour de France. In 1967, in the concern about doping that followed the death of Tom Simpson in the Tour four months earlier, Anglade said: "I've driven 4,000km in three days, I've ridden 400km of race with only six hours in bed. Do you think I could have done that contenting myself with drinking lemonade?"[11]

Retirement edit

Anglade crashed in a criterium at Montélimar in 1966 and broke his spine. He said:

I was mixing it with Raymond Poulidor [on s'amusait à se tirer la bourre avec Poulidor]. I was in front and he was trying to join me. We were approaching a bend and I stepped on the gas and unfortunately my pedal touched the road. I flew off the bike: fractured vertebral column. I was at the end of my contract with Pelforth and it wasn't being renewed. Antonin Magne, the manager of Mercier, going through Roger Piel, my agent, opened the door for me. For me it was a real pleasure. But I never really came back to my old level. So I wrote a letter of resignation, explaining that I didn't deserve to be paid to be a racer. Magne phoned me: he'd never seen such a thing. The book of my career closed.[3]

Anglade left cycling on 13 September to work for the Olympia-Werke typewriter company with one of his cousins. He wanted no more to do with cycling until, in 1975, the Lejeune brothers who ran a bike factory in Paris and sponsored a team invited him to join.[9] He managed Lejeune-BP in three Tours de France, where he managed Roy Schuiten, Ferdinand Bracke and Lucien Van Impe. He said the team lacked leaders and wasn't a success.[9]

 
Stained-glass window at the Notre Dame des Cyclistes

Anglade learned how to make stained-glass windows and designed and created those in the cyclists' chapel, Notre Dame des Cyclistes at Labastide-d'Armagnac in the Landes. He said:

Ever since I was really tiny, I have always admired stained-glass windows. When I was a choir boy, I couldn't follow the Mass because I was in ecstasy in front of a window. Somehow I had it in my skin. Five years ago I went to a demonstration of how the windows were made and I flipped. I signed on for more. I made a window of the Virgin, which I gave to Father Massié for the 40th anniversary of the Notre Dame des Cyclistes at La Bastide d'Armagnac. I was really proud and happy.[3]

The professional cyclist's habit of endorsing commercial products never left him. In 2008, he endorsed the brand of hearing aid that he wore.[12]

Major results edit

1957
Annemasse-Bellegarde-Annemasse
Tour de Champagne 4th stage
1958
Tour de Loire 1st stage
1959
  France national road cycling champion
Tour de France:
Winner stage 13
2nd place overall classification
Dauphiné Libéré
Circuit Drôme-Ardèche
1960
Tour de France:
Wearing yellow jersey for two days
8th place overall classification
1961
Tour de l'Aude: Stages 1 and 2
Bern-Genève: Final classification, stages 1 and 2
Prix des Sables-d'Olonne
1962
Tour de Romandie: stage 2
1963
Tour du Var
1964
Prix de Vayrac.
Tour de France:
4th place overall classification
1965
  France national road cycling champion
Tour de France:
4th place overall classification
Grand Prix du Parisien
1966
Tour de l'Hérault

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on June 15, 2007. Retrieved 2008-11-28.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). memoire-du-cyclisme.net
  2. ^ Henry Anglade est mort (in French)
  3. ^ a b c d e Coup de Pédales, Belgium, undated cutting
  4. ^ Henri Anglade. siteducyclisme.net
  5. ^ McGann, Bill and Carol (2006), The Story of the Tour de France, Dog Ear, USA
  6. ^ a b "L'hydre aux quatre têtes Fait tomber celle d'Anglade". www.humanite.fr. Retrieved 2 February 2022.
  7. ^ A reference to the guillotine.
  8. ^ a b c Cyclo, France, October 1992
  9. ^ a b c Vélo 101 le site officiel du vélo – cyclisme vtt cyclosport cyclo-cross 2018-11-17 at the Wayback Machine. Velo101.com. Retrieved on 2013-10-27.
  10. ^ A motorcyclist who times riders' lead or deficit during a race and displays it on a blackboard
  11. ^ Miroir des Sports, 30 November 1967, p. 16
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on March 30, 2009. Retrieved 2008-11-28.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). Phonak.fr. Retrieved on 2013-10-27.

External links edit

  • Henry Anglade at Cycling Archives
  • Official Tour de France results for Henry Anglade

henry, anglade, july, 1933, november, 2022, french, cyclist, 1959, closest, winning, tour, france, when, stage, finished, second, behind, federico, bahamontes, 1960, wore, yellow, jersey, days, while, finishing, overall, placed, five, tour, additional, occasio. Henry Anglade 6 July 1933 10 November 2022 2 was a French cyclist In 1959 he was closest to winning the Tour de France when he won a stage and finished second 4 01 behind Federico Bahamontes In 1960 he wore the yellow jersey for two days while finishing 8th overall He placed in the top five of the Tour on two additional occasions in 1964 and 1965 Henry AngladeAnglade in 1960Personal informationFull nameHenry AngladeNicknameNapoleonBorn 1933 07 06 6 July 1933Thionville France 1 Died10 November 2022 2022 11 10 aged 89 Lyon FranceTeam informationDisciplineRoadRoleRiderRider typeAllroundAmateur team Velo Club du GriffonProfessional teams1956Alcyon Dunlop1957 1962Hutchinson D Alessandro1963 1966Pelforth Sauvage Lejeune1967Mercier BP HutchinsonManagerial team1976 1978Lejeune BPMajor winsFrench National Road Race Champion 2x Dauphine Libere1 stage Tour de France 1959 Contents 1 Origins 2 Professional racing 2 1 1959 national championship 2 2 1965 national championship 2 3 General de Gaulle 2 4 Downhill race 2 5 Doping 3 Retirement 4 Major results 5 References 6 External linksOrigins editHenry Anglade was born in Thionville in the Lorraine region of France close to the German border the son of a soldier His family moved south to Lyon at the start of the Second World War There he went to school with a boy called Andre Camus who went cycling on Sundays and on Thursday afternoons Anglade turned down his invitation to join him It was his father who suggested that he should go offering him the heavy family bicycle that weighed at least 25kg He joined Camus and his friends and found they couldn t keep up One suggested he should try racing and he joined the Velo Club du Griffon the oldest club in Lyon That was when he bought himself a Longoni sports bike and tried racing 3 Anglade worked with an engineering company until he could support himself from racing 4 Professional racing editAnglade turned professional in 1957 In 1959 he won the Dauphine Libere a mountainous stage race over a week then the national road championship He came second in the Tour de Suisse and then in the Tour de France behind Federico Bahamontes but in front of Jacques Anquetil and Roger Riviere In that Tour Anglade riding for the regional Centre Midi team was the victim of the tactics of Anquetil Riviere and others in the French national team They preferred to see Bahamontes take the Tour de France rather than Anglade who was unpopular among French riders and had he won the Tour de France would have earned more than Anquetil and Riviere in the post Tour criteriums that were then an important part of riders incomes Bahamontes was both Spanish and a poor rider in round the houses races and so of little threat On top of that Anquetil Riviere and many other French stars were represented by Daniel Dousset one of the two agents who divided French cycling whereas Anglade was represented by the other Roger Piel 5 That was why Anglade had been left out of the national team to ride for a regional one 6 At the stage finish in Grenoble Dousset was there to meet Fausto Coppi who was Bahamontes sponsor and the riders in the national team whom he represented Emile Besson wrote in L Humanite Dousset offered contracts for criteriums by the shovel load for after the Tour of Spain Anglade s head second in Paris had fallen 6 7 Fans worked out what was going on and Anquetil was whistled and jeered as he entered the Parc des Princes on the last day Anglade said I ve got no regrets about it Racing is like that And anyway I make it a principle to live without regrets 3 Anglade was not the strongest of riders but made up for what he lacked with a good tactical sense He was an eloquent speaker and popular with journalists Riders however disliked him for what they perceived as his bossiness and gave him the nickname Napoleon which referred as well to his smallness Anglade joined the Pelforth Sauvage Lejeune in 1963 and finished the next year s Tour de France in fourth place behind Anquetil Raymond Poulidor and Bahamontes He also came fourth in the 1965 race behind Felice Gimondi Poulidor and Gianni Motta Anglade s health disturbed his 1966 season and he spent his last season 1967 as a team rider for Raymond Poulidor He rode in ten editions of the Tour de France and finished all but his last His places in the general classification were always in the top 20 aside from his first Tour where he finished 28th but thereafter he finished 17th 2nd 8th 18th 12th 11th 4th and 4th 1959 national championship edit The 1959 national championship used the car racing circuit at Montlhery Anglade was in a leading group with five laps left Louison Bobet was leading the chase The commissaires had got as far as clearing following cars out of the way so that the chasers could regain the leaders Anglade dropped to the back of his group had something to eat and set off alone when Bobet and the others were nearly on them The others hesitated and the chasers eased up when the two groups came together Anglade was convinced he d won and eased up with 100m left to raise his hands in victory He thought he d won said a report and sat up to salute the crowd L impudent He had barely crossed the line when he was passed by Jean Forestier and Rene Privat who had also broken away and were sprinting for second place 8 1965 national championship edit The Pelforth team met the night before the championship at a hotel near the circuit The manager Maurice de Muer said Anyone intending to be champion of France raise a hand Four put up their hands including Georges Groussard and Anglade Anglade said Right that s three too many You three who fancy the jersey I consider you adversaries As for the rest of you with no particular ambitions ride for me because I m going to be French champion 8 Another Pelforth rider Hubert Ferrer broke away alone for 170 km He was caught 30 km from the line The peloton was tired from chasing and repeated attacks Raymond Delisle went away when Ferrer was caught Anglade caught him the two stayed together for a while and then Anglade went away alone with five laps to go He said I knew that behind me Jacques Anquetil and Raymond Poulidor would be neutralising each other so I decided to keep the peloton at a minute I realised quickly that I had a friend in the announcer I could hear the loudspeakers perfectly right round the course and when he said 55 seconds I accelerated When I heard 1m 5s I eased back a bit to recover It worked so well that I crossed the line a minute and five seconds ahead of Poulidor and Anquetil 8 General de Gaulle edit Anglade was in the French national jersey when the race stopped unexpectedly at Colombey les deux Eglises to greet Charles de Gaulle the president in his village Anglade said I had stopped to relieve myself I was just coming back up through the following cars when Jacques Goddet called me to say that the General was on the course He asked me Could you imagine stopping a strange question to ask me Napoleon given that I used to get fined if I put a foot down on the road I said we could stop but provided there was no penalty I went up to the front of the race to warn the leaders Nencini Adriaenssens In the wood of La Boisserie de Gaulle s estate the bodyguards were already across the road and so we all stopped The general came down the slope he greeted me first and then Nencini telling him he was going to win and then he went back and we set off again I often wondered why he had spoken to me first and then later I got the answer The General was vising Lyon and I was one of those invited The chef du protocole introduced me and the General said One does not introduce Henry Anglade I asked him why and he said You were wearing our flag and I owed it to you je vous devais bien ca 9 It was the first time the Tour had stopped during a stage Downhill race edit Anglade s downhill race with Gastone Nencini has become part of the legend of cycling Anglade was a proud rider and Nencini one of the fastest down hills The only reason to follow Nencini down mountains is if you have a death wish was how Raphael Geminiani put it It was in trying to follow Nencini down a mountain that Roger Riviere missed a bend crashed over a wall and broke his spine Anglade and Nencini met at a col in the Dolomites during the Giro d Italia The weather was bad and a snowstorm had forced 57 riders to abandon that day Anglade said I couldn t tolerate the idea that Nencini was the best descender of the peloton I said to him call the blackboard man 10 we ll do the descent together and whoever comes second pays for the aperitifs this evening So he called the ardoisier and asked him to follow us The road was of compressed earth We attacked the drop flat out I let Nencini take the lead so that I could see how he negotiated the bends before attacking him In the end I dropped as though I was alone At the bottom I had taken 32 seconds out of him written on the blackboard I was really tickled I had beaten Nencini The next time I saw him was that evening in the hotel I was staying at He had just bought me an aperitif 3 Doping edit Anglade raced at a time when riders made much of their income in the criterium races for which they were paid start money as well as prizes that followed the Tour de France In 1967 in the concern about doping that followed the death of Tom Simpson in the Tour four months earlier Anglade said I ve driven 4 000km in three days I ve ridden 400km of race with only six hours in bed Do you think I could have done that contenting myself with drinking lemonade 11 Retirement editAnglade crashed in a criterium at Montelimar in 1966 and broke his spine He said I was mixing it with Raymond Poulidor on s amusait a se tirer la bourre avec Poulidor I was in front and he was trying to join me We were approaching a bend and I stepped on the gas and unfortunately my pedal touched the road I flew off the bike fractured vertebral column I was at the end of my contract with Pelforth and it wasn t being renewed Antonin Magne the manager of Mercier going through Roger Piel my agent opened the door for me For me it was a real pleasure But I never really came back to my old level So I wrote a letter of resignation explaining that I didn t deserve to be paid to be a racer Magne phoned me he d never seen such a thing The book of my career closed 3 Anglade left cycling on 13 September to work for the Olympia Werke typewriter company with one of his cousins He wanted no more to do with cycling until in 1975 the Lejeune brothers who ran a bike factory in Paris and sponsored a team invited him to join 9 He managed Lejeune BP in three Tours de France where he managed Roy Schuiten Ferdinand Bracke and Lucien Van Impe He said the team lacked leaders and wasn t a success 9 nbsp Stained glass window at the Notre Dame des CyclistesAnglade learned how to make stained glass windows and designed and created those in the cyclists chapel Notre Dame des Cyclistes at Labastide d Armagnac in the Landes He said Ever since I was really tiny I have always admired stained glass windows When I was a choir boy I couldn t follow the Mass because I was in ecstasy in front of a window Somehow I had it in my skin Five years ago I went to a demonstration of how the windows were made and I flipped I signed on for more I made a window of the Virgin which I gave to Father Massie for the 40th anniversary of the Notre Dame des Cyclistes at La Bastide d Armagnac I was really proud and happy 3 The professional cyclist s habit of endorsing commercial products never left him In 2008 he endorsed the brand of hearing aid that he wore 12 Major results edit1957 Annemasse Bellegarde Annemasse Tour de Champagne 4th stage 1958 Tour de Loire 1st stage 1959 nbsp France national road cycling champion Tour de France Winner stage 13 2nd place overall classification dd Dauphine Libere Circuit Drome Ardeche 1960 Tour de France Wearing yellow jersey for two days 8th place overall classification dd 1961 Tour de l Aude Stages 1 and 2 Bern Geneve Final classification stages 1 and 2 Prix des Sables d Olonne 1962 Tour de Romandie stage 2 1963 Tour du Var 1964 Prix de Vayrac Tour de France 4th place overall classification dd 1965 nbsp France national road cycling champion Tour de France 4th place overall classification dd Grand Prix du Parisien 1966 Tour de l HeraultReferences edit Henry ANGLADE Archived from the original on June 15 2007 Retrieved 2008 11 28 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link memoire du cyclisme net Henry Anglade est mort in French a b c d e Coup de Pedales Belgium undated cutting Henri Anglade siteducyclisme net McGann Bill and Carol 2006 The Story of the Tour de France Dog Ear USA a b L hydre aux quatre tetes Fait tomber celle d Anglade www humanite fr Retrieved 2 February 2022 A reference to the guillotine a b c Cyclo France October 1992 a b c Velo 101 le site officiel du velo cyclisme vtt cyclosport cyclo cross Archived 2018 11 17 at the Wayback Machine Velo101 com Retrieved on 2013 10 27 A motorcyclist who times riders lead or deficit during a race and displays it on a blackboard Miroir des Sports 30 November 1967 p 16 Henry Anglade ancien professionnel de cyclisme et atteint de presbyacousie et equipe d un intra auriculaire Claro Archived from the original on March 30 2009 Retrieved 2008 11 28 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Phonak fr Retrieved on 2013 10 27 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Henry Anglade Henry Anglade at Cycling Archives Official Tour de France results for Henry Anglade Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Anglade amp oldid 1199190433, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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