Description
Bernard Thévenet
Bernard Thévenet (born 10 January 1948) is a retired professional cyclist. His sporting career began with ACBB Paris. He is a two-time winner of the Tour de France and is known for ending the reign of five-time Tour champion Eddy Merckx.
Bernard Thévenet at the 1977 Tour de France with Kuiper and Zeotmelk following close behind.
Origins
Thévenet was born to a farming family in Saône-et-Loire in Burgundy and lived in a hamlet called Le Guidon (The Handlebar). It was there in 1961 that he saw the Tour de France for the first time, on a 123 km stage from Nevers to Lyon. At the time, Thévenet was a choirboy at a village church. He said: “The priest brought forward the time for Mass so that we could watch the riders go by. The sun was shining on their toe-clips and the chrome on their forks. They were modern-day knights. I had already been dreaming of becoming a racing cyclist, and that magical sight convinced me definitively. It was never that magical when I was actually in the peloton of the Tour!”
From age six, he went to school on the rack of his sister’s bike. He got his bike a year later and pedaled the 10 km round journey himself. His first adult bike, not a racing machine but a sporty cross between a racer and a touring bike, came as a present for passing school examinations at 14. His parents needed him on the farm too much to be keen on his racing, but they knew their son’s ambitions. Thévenet rode his first race, and his parents found out about it only when they read the local paper. There was a row, and the club president intervened by inviting the parents to see their son’s next race. Thévenet won it.
He was champion of Burgundy in 1965 and 1966 and French junior champion in 1968. In 1967, Mickey Weigant, the manager of the ACBB club in Boulogne-Billancourt, drove to his house to enroll him. The ACBB was an accepted development team for professionalism, particularly for the Peugeot team. During 1968, he rode for the amateur team of Jean de Gribaldy, Cafés Ravis-Wolhauser-de Gribaldy, which won the amateur Route de France. After that Thévenet did his military service in 1969.
Thevenet, winner of the 1977 Tour de France
Professional career
He turned professional with Peugeot-BP-Michelin in 1970. He rode the Tour de France for the first time in 1970 as a last-minute stand-in. He said: “I wasn’t even a reserve in 1970 but because two riders in the team had fallen ill at Peugeot, the directeur sportif picked me two days before the start.” Gaston Plaud had to call a neighbor in the village because neither Thévenet’s nor many other families had telephones. Thévenet had left to train with a friend, Michel Rameau, and his mother got a message to him at Rameau’s house.
Thévenet asked the advice of Victor Ferrari, a friend who rode the Tour in 1929. Thévenet said: “He was probably afraid that I’d hesitate and he said: ‘You’re not going to say No, are you crazy? Go on, go…'” Thévenet remembered:
- I can remember perfectly getting to Limoges [for the start]. I was anxious and scared at the same time but full of pride. I was given a new suitcase, seven jerseys, six pairs of shorts, overclothes, sweaters, shirts, and so on. Everyone else had a brand new bike, but not me because I wasn’t on the team’s entry list.
Thévenet won a mountain stage ending at the ski resort of La Mongie, most of the way up the Tourmalet in the Pyrenees. He said: “That evening, it was all clear [j’ai compris bien des choses]. That I’d saved my season and, because of that, my job because the obligatory two-year contracts for new professionals didn’t exist then.”
In the 1972 Tour, he crashed badly on a descent and became temporarily amnesic. As he began to regain his memory, he looked down at his own Peugeot jersey and wondered whether he might be a cyclist. On recognizing the team car, he exclaimed, “I’m riding the Tour de France!”
He refused to abandon the race and four days later won a stage over Mont Ventoux. In the 1973 Tour, he finished second, behind Luis Ocaña, but in 1974, he was forced to abandon the Tour on Stage 11 due to illness.
In the 1975 Tour, Thévenet attacked Eddy Merckx on the Col d’Izoard on 14 July, France’s national day. Merckx, who was suffering stomach pain from a punch by a spectator, fought back but lost the lead and never regained it. Pierre Chany wrote:
- Those who were there will be slow to forget Bernard Thévenet’s six successive attacks in the never-ending climb of the Col des Champs, Eddy Merckx’s immediate and superb response, the alarming chase by the Frenchman after a puncture delayed him on the descent of the col, the Belgian’s attack on the way to the summit of the Allos, his breath-taking plunge towards the Pra-Loup valley, his sudden weakening four kilometers from the top and, to finish, Thévenet’s furious push. The end of the race was frenetic. Has Eddy Merckx’s long reign in the Tour de France come to an end on the Pra-Loup. Some think so; others believe that it will happen tomorrow.
A British writer, Graeme Fife, wrote:
- Thévenet caught Merckx, by now almost delirious, 3km from the finish and rode by. The pictures show Merckx’s face torn with anguish, eyes hollow, body slumped, arms locked shut on the bars, shoulders a clenched ridge of exertion and distress. Thévenet, mouth gaping to gulp more oxygen, looks pretty well at the limit, too, but his effort is gaining; he’s out of the saddle, eyes fixed on the road. He said he could see that one side of the road had turned to liquid tar in the baking heat, and Merckx was tire-deep in it.
Beside the road, a woman in a bikini waved a sign that said: “Merckx is beaten. The Bastille has fallen. “Thévenet – who had taken the climb on the larger chainring – went on to win the Tour, which that year finished on the Champs-Élysées for the first time. Merckx finished second, three minutes behind.
Thévenet won his second and last Tour in 1977. That winter, he was hospitalized with a liver ailment he attributed to long-term use of steroids. Several months later, Thévenet lined up for the 1978 Tour de France but had to abandon the second mountain stage in an ambulance. He left the Peugeot cycling team after 1979 and signed up for the Spanish team Teka, where he won two races and a six-day race with Australian rider Danny Clark.
In his final year, 1981, he returned to a French team, where he won a stage in the Circuit de la Sarthe.
Thevenet, 1973 Grand Prix des Nations
Retirement
Thévenet became directeur sportif in 1984 of the La Redoute team of Stephen Roche, then of RMO in 1986 and 1987. He became a television commentator and opened a company selling cycling clothes bearing his name. When asked whether it was hard being a racing cyclist, he replied that being a French farmer was harder.
Thévenet became race director of the Critérium du Dauphiné in 2010 after the Amaury Sport Organisation took over the race’s organization.
Photos from The Horton Collection Archives
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