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词条 Raymond Poulidor
释义

  1. Early life and amateur career

  2. Professional career

     The Anquetil years  Anquetil-Poulidor: the social significance  Poupou, the nickname  The Merckx years  Poulidor and Dr Mabuse 

  3. Doping

  4. Retirement

  5. Career achievements

     Major results  Grand Tour general classification results timeline 

  6. References

  7. External links

{{Redirect|Pou-Pou||Poo-poo (disambiguation)}}{{Infobox cyclist
| name = Raymond Poulidor
| image = Raymond Poulidor, Tour de France 1966 (cropped).jpg
| caption = Poulidor at the 1966 Tour de France
| fullname = Raymond Poulidor
| nickname = Poupou
The Eternal Second
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1936|4|15|df=y}}
| birth_place = Masbaraud-Mérignat, France
| height =
| weight =
| currentteam =
| discipline = Road
| role = Rider
| ridertype =
| amateuryears1 =
| amateurteam1 =
| proyears1 = 1960–1977
| proteam1 = {{ct|Mercier|1960}}
| majorwins = Grand Tours

Vuelta a España

General classification (1964)

4 individual stages

Tour de France

7 individual stages

Stage races

Critérium International (1964, 1966, 1968, 1971–72)

Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré (1966, 1969)

Paris–Nice (1972–73)

One-day races and Classics

Milan–San Remo (1961)

La Flèche Wallonne (1963)

Grand Prix des Nations (1963)


| medaltemplates ={{MedalCountry|{{FRA}}}}{{MedalSport|Men's road bicycle racing}}{{MedalCompetition|World Championships}}{{MedalSilver |1974 Montréal|Road race}}{{MedalBronze |1961 Bern|Road race}}{{MedalBronze |1964 Sallanches|Road race}}{{MedalBronze |1966 Nürburgring|Road race}}
}}

Raymond Poulidor (born 15 April 1936), nicknamed "Pou-Pou", is a French former professional bicycle racer, who rode for {{ct|Mercier}} his entire career.

His career was distinguished, despite coinciding with two great riders - Jacques Anquetil and Eddy Merckx. This underdog position may have been the reason Poulidor was a favourite of the public. He was known as "The Eternal Second", because he never won the Tour de France despite finishing in second place three times, and in third place five times (including his final Tour at the age of 40). Despite his consistency, he never once wore the yellow jersey as leader of the general classification in 14 Tours, of which he completed 12. He did win one Grand Tour, the 1964 Vuelta a España.

Early life and amateur career

Raymond Poulidor was the son of Martial and Maria Poulidor, small farmers outside the hamlet of Masbaraud-Mérignat, where the Creuse region east of Limoges meets the département of Haute-Vienne. He was born in the same year that his eventual directeur sportif, Antonin Magne, became world road race champion. Poulidor began working on the farm where, he remembered, "the soil was poor and we had to work hard; farming incomes were poor."[1] The need for working hands on the farm meant he left school at 14 even though he wanted to continue his studies. Local entertainment went little further than village fairs, with coconut shies, sack-races, competitions for bottles of home-made jam... and inter-village cycle races.[1]

Poulidor rode on a bike given to him by André Marquet, who ran a cycle shop in nearby Sauviat-sur-Vige. Marquet took Poulidor to his first races by motorcycle.

Success on a local level came quickly and Poulidor added the money he won — which he said could be considerable at the time because the crowd put up prizes all through the race — to the family's income. He acquired his first racing licence when joined La Pédale Marchoise at La Forêt-Montboucher when he was 17. He came seventh in his first race, at St-Mareil. He wanted to ride the local round of a national youth competition called the Premier Pas [First Step] Dunlop. It fell in the middle of harvest, however, and Poulidor could train only at night after 15 hours in the fields. He raced for three years as an amateur, once beating Louison Bobet.

It was only when Poulidor was taken into the army for compulsory national service in 1955 that he first travelled in a train. Pierre Chany, a French reporter who followed 49 Tours de France, drew the comparison with Poulidor's eventual rival, Jacques Anquetil: by the time Poulidor first stepped into a train, Anquetil had already been to Helsinki, ridden the Olympic Games, won a medal for France, turned professional and won the Grand Prix des Nations. Yet there was less than two years between them.[2]

The army sent Poulidor to the war then going on in Algeria, where he worked as a driver and put on 12 kg through lack of exercise. In 1960 he dedicated himself to cycling again and lost the weight in a month.[1] He won his first race after army service by six minutes. When he then came second in the GP de Peyrat-le-Château and won 80,000 old francs, he calculated that he had won more in one race than he would have earned in six years on the farm.

His farming background went before him and whenever he won a prize, other riders would laugh: "Hey, Pouli [his original nickname] can buy himself another cow!" Poulidor referred to his background throughout his career, once remarking: "No race, however difficult, goes on as long as a harvest." {{Citation needed|reason=Reliable source needed for the interview|date=March 2018}}

Professional career

Poulidor was discovered in 1959 by another French rider, Bernard Gauthier, who said in the Belgian publication Coups de Pédales:

It was me who brought Poulidor to Mercier where, like Desbats and me, he spent all his career. In a criterium, I saw this unknown who was riding all around us. I saw him again in the Bol d'Or and I spoke to him. He said he hadn't yet got a team but that he was in talks. When I got home, I spoke straight away to Antonin Magne, who asked me: "You're sure that he rides well?" I said I was and he contacted him and took him on.

Poulidor said it happened at Peyrat-le-Château, near St Léonard-de-Noblat. Gauthier had just won his fourth Bordeaux–Paris, but... "...that day, I lapped him, I took four laps out of him, even though it was a very difficult circuit. He was very impressed."[3]

Magne offered Poulidor 25,000 old francs a month. Poulidor asked for 30,000. Magne countered that that was more than he paid Gauthier and Louis Privat and refused. Later, aware that he had a rival for Anquetil, he conceded.[4]

Gauthier's confidence was justified when in 1961 Poulidor won Milan–San Remo in his second season as a professional. He started the race stung by Press criticism of his tactical sense; he had attacked but been caught by the bunch five kilometres from the finish of the Grand Prix de Nice. Poulidor got off to a bad start in Milan–San Remo when he punctured before halfway and lost two minutes. Magne insisted that he chase back to the race, which he did, catching up in time to ride the Capo Verde hill with 20 km to go. He recovered fast enough to counter an attack by Jean-Claude Annaert, catching him with the Dutchman Ab Geldermans, who had won the previous year's Liège–Bastogne–Liège. Poulidor attacked and dropped Annaert, then left Geldermans. He had a lead of 20 seconds at the summit. He stayed clear alone to win by three seconds from Rik Van Looy of Belgium.

The Anquetil years

Poulidor's rivalry with Anquetil is a legend in cycling. While a good climber, Poulidor had a hard time matching Anquetil in the individual time trial, often having victory snatched from him by losing time in time-trial stages of the Tour de France.

Poulidor's riding style was aggressive and attacking, whereas Anquetil preferred to control the race in the mountains and win time in the time-trials. Poulidor became the darling of the French public, to the ire of Anquetil. Poulidor's mid-France upbringing and his slow Limousin speech also contrasted with Anquetil's northern background and sharper accent. Poulidor's face was deeply tanned and furrowed; Anquetil had high cheekbones, a smoother face and brushed-up blond hair.

Poulidor's best chance of defeating Anquetil came in the 1964 Tour de France, in the finish on the Puy de Dôme. Anquetil rode beside Poulidor but both were so exhausted that only in the last few hundred metres could Poulidor take nearly enough time to threaten Anquetil's first place in the general classification.[5] The Tour organiser, Jacques Goddet, was behind the pair as they turned off the main road and climbed through what police estimated as half a million spectators.

Anquetil rode on the inside by the mountain wall while Poulidor took the outer edge by the precipice. They could sometimes feel the other's hot gasps on their bare arms. At the end, Anquetil cracked, after a battle of wills and legs so intense that at times they banged elbows. Poulidor says he was so tired that he has no memory of the two touching, although a photograph[6] shows that they did.[5] Of Anquetil, the veteran French reporter Pierre Chany wrote: "His face, until then purple, lost all its colour; the sweat ran down in drops through the creases of his cheeks." Anquetil was only semiconscious, he said. Poulidor gained time but when they reached Paris, Anquetil still had a 55-second lead and won his last Tour de France thanks to the time-trial on the final day.

Anquetil-Poulidor: the social significance

Anquetil unfailingly beat Poulidor in the Tour de France and yet Poulidor remained the more popular. "The more unlucky I was, the more the public liked me and the more money I earned", he said.[5] Divisions between fans became marked, which two sociologists studying the impact of the Tour on French society say became emblematic of France old and new. Research showed that more than 4,000 newspaper articles appeared about him in France in just 1974 and that no other rider "had ever incited so many sociological investigations, so many university theses, seeking to find the cause of his prodigious popularity.[4]

Poupou, the nickname

Poulidor's original nickname was Pouli. It was Émile Besson[7] of the daily newspaper L'Humanité who first wrote of Poupou. The name was taken up throughout France, leading to headlines such as "Poupoularité" in L'Équipe. A poupée is a doll and the nickname hints at that and follows the French tradition of repeating the first syllable of a word in childspeak. Poulidor has never liked the name but accepts it.

The Merckx years

The end of the Anquetil era presented opportunities for Poulidor to finally win the Tour de France. This was not to be due to injuries in 1967 and 1968, and the arrival of Eddy Merckx in 1969. Poulidor was no match for Merckx, although he offered much resistance.

In the 1973 Tour Poulidor almost lost his life on the descent from the Col de Portet d'Aspet when he plunged into a ravine, taking a serious blow to the head and crawling out with the help of the race director, Jacques Goddet.

Poulidor and Dr Mabuse

Antonin Magne remained manager of Poulidor's Mercier team until 1970, when he was replaced by another former rider, Louis Caput. Caput brought with him as deputy directeur sportif a man who described himself as a homeopath, Bernard Sainz.

Sainz is known in cycling as Dr Mabuse, after a pulp-fiction character created by Norbert Jacques. Mabuse is a criminal mastermind who becomes rich through hypnotic powers. He plots to take over the world but is foiled by the police. From his cell he masterminds criminal plots by writing endless gibberish. Sainz recognises the nickname and used it in the name of his autobiography.[8]

He is a former velodrome rider of national level who stopped racing after a fall and became involved in horse racing, where he was twice convicted of maltreating horses. It was in horse-racing, where he turned unremarkable animals into champions,{{Citation needed|date=April 2010}} that he acquired his nickname. He has been repeatedly investigated by police and has been convicted of illegally practising medicine and incitement to doping. He claims that he only engages in homeopathic treatment, though whatever methods he engages in are effective, casting doubt on this claim.[9]

Louis Caput approached Edmond Mercier, the bicycle-maker behind Poulidor's team, and asked to bring Sainz into the team management. Mercier agreed, said Sainz, because he was already treating Mercier for his own health problems. Mercier had also brought in the insurance company, GAN, as main sponsor. GAN, said Sainz, demanded that Poulidor be in the team photo even if all he did was train with the team at the start of the season. In 1971 Poulidor had decided against riding any more. The tactic, Sainz said, was bluff, to increase his motivation. In Paris–Nice, the first important stage race of the season, Poulidor was 22 seconds behind Eddy Merckx on the morning of the last day. Poulidor attacked from the start, setting a speed record on the Col de la Turbie that stood for more than 10 years and won Paris–Nice by two seconds. Next year he won Paris–Nice again and also the Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré.

Doping

Raymond Poulidor was the first rider to be tested for drugs in the Tour de France.[10] Testers arrived at the Tour for the first time in 1966, in Bordeaux, although only after word had spread and many riders had left their hotels. The first competitor they found was Poulidor.[10]

A few other riders were found, including Rik Van Looy, and some obliged and others refused. Next morning, the race left the city on the way to the Pyrenees and stopped in the suburb of Gradignan, in the university area of La House. The riders climbed off and began walking, shouting protests in general and in particular abuse at the race doctor, Pierre Dumas, whom some demanded should also take a test to see if he'd been drinking wine or taking aspirin to make his own job easier. Riders also criticised Poulidor for accepting to be tested. He dismissed their protests and stayed at the back of the strike. Other prominent riders, including Jacques Anquetil, were at the front. Poulidor said his indifference to the controls and the strike harmed his relations with fellow riders. "After that, they did me no favours in the peloton", he said.[5]

Retirement

Poulidor has several times accepted that his career was handicapped by a lack of ambition and by the psychological domination of Jacques Anquetil. Poulidor said in an interview in 1992: I knew straight away that I was getting places everywhere. I got all the leaders' jerseys but I used to lose them. Tonin [Magne] said to me "Raymond, you're always in a daydream!" And was that true? Were you distracted? It was true. I thought what was happening to me was already marvellous enough. I never thought of winning. Never, ever, did I get up in the morning with the idea of winning![11]

On 25 January 1973 Poulidor was made a Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur. In 2003 the President, Jacques Chirac increased the award.[12] Poulidor also has a rose named after him, reflecting his love of gardening in general and roses in particular.

He lives with his wife Gisèle in Saint-Léonard-de-Noblat, east of Limoges, where he makes short trips on his mountain bike. Their daughter, Corinne, is married to the former world cyclo-cross champion and Tour of Flanders winner Adri van der Poel.[13] His grandsons David and Mathieu are also cyclists. Mathieu van der Poel became cyclo-cross world champion himself in the junior race in Koksijde in 2012 (Koksijde) and in 2013 in Louisville, and with the elite in 2015 (Tabor) and 2019 (Bogense).

Poulidor works in public relations for one of the subsidiary sponsors during the Tour, has bicycles made under his name by the France-Loire company, and has appeared in television commercials aimed at older people.

When asked about his longevity compared to fellow cyclists, Poulidor said he took things in moderation and did not overstretch himself.

Poulidor has written several biographies, the first of which was Gloire sans le Maillot Jaune, written in 1964. Poulidor Intime was published in May 2007 by Éditions Jacob-Duvernet in France. In 2004 he helped write Poulidor par Raymond Poulidor with the radio reporter Jean-Paul Brouchon. The preface is by Eddy Merckx.

Career achievements

Major results

Source:[14][15]

{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
1959

3rd Grand Prix d'Oradour-sur-Vayres

1960

1st Bordeaux–Saintes

1st Overall Prestige Pernod

2nd Nice–Mont Agel

3rd Grand Prix de Fourmies

3rd Overall Super Prestige Pernod

4th Grand Prix du Midi Libre

5th Road race, UCI Road World Championships

7th Paris–Tours

10th Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré

1961

1st National Road Race Championship

1st Milan–San Remo

1st Mont Faron hill climb

1st Overall Challenge Yellow

2nd Overall Four Days of Dunkirk

2nd Nice–Mont Agel

2nd Monaco–Mont Agel

2nd Overall Prestige Pernod

3rd Gênes–Nice

3rd Grand Prix du Midi libre

3rd Grand Prix de Cannes

3rd Road race, UCI Road World Championships

3rd Overall Super Prestige Pernod

7th Bordeaux–Paris

9th Overall Paris–Nice

9th Paris–Bruxelles

1962

3rd Overall Tour de France

1st Stage 19

2nd Overall Prestige Pernod

3rd Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré

3rd Grand Prix de Nice

5th Paris–Roubaix

7th Overall Paris–Nice

7th Overall Super Prestige Pernod

8th Grand Prix du Midi Libre

1963

1st La Flèche Wallonne

1st Grand Prix des Nations

1st Gran Premio di Lugano

1st Overall Challenge Yellow

1st Critérium National

2nd Grand Prix de Cannes

2nd Trofeo Baracchi (with Jacques Anquetil)

2nd Gênes–Nice

2nd Overall Prestige Pernod

3rd Overall Super Prestige Pernod

3rd Paris–Tours

3rd Paris–Luxembourg

5th Road race, UCI Road World Championships

5th Liège–Bastogne–Liège

8th Overall Tour de France

9th 1963 Tour of Flanders

1964

1st Overall Critérium National

1st Stage 2b (ITT)

1st Grand Prix de Cannes

1st Grand Prix de Soissons

1st Ronde de Seignelay

1st Overall Vuelta a España

1st Stage 15 (ITT)

1st Stage 1 Circuit du Provençal

1st Overall Super Prestige Pernod

1st Overall Prestige Pernod

1st Overall Challenge Yellow

2nd Overall Tour de France

1st Stage 15

2nd Milan–San Remo

2nd Grand Prix d'Antibes

2nd Overall Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré

1st Stages 2 & 4a (ITT)

2nd Overall Tour de Haute-Loire

3rd Road race, UCI Road World Championships

7th Overall Paris–Nice

1st Stage 7

1965

1st Overall Escalada a Montjuïc

2nd Overall Tour de France

1st Stages 5b (ITT) and 14

2nd Overall Vuelta a España

1st Stages 4a (ITT) and 16 (ITT)

2nd Overall Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré

2nd Overall Prestige Pernod

4th Overall Super Prestige Pernod

3rd Grand Prix des Nations

4th Overall Paris–Nice

4th Trofeo Baracchi (with Georges Chappe)

6th Giro di Lombardia

1966

1st Overall Critérium National

1st Stage 2b (ITT)

1st Overall Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré

1st Stage 7b (ITT)

3rd Overall Tour de France

1st Stage 14b (ITT)

1st Stage 2 (ITT) Paris–Nice

1st Subida a Arrate

1st Overall Challenge Yellow

1st Overall Prestige Pernod

2nd Trofeo Baracchi (with Georges Chappe)

3rd Road race, UCI Road World Championships

3rd Giro di Lombardia

3rd Grand Prix d'Aix-en-Provence

3rd Grand Prix de Monaco

3rd Overall Super Prestige Pernod

5th Grand Prix des Nations

7th Milan–San Remo

1967

1st Bol d'Or des Monédières Chaumeil

1st Circuit de l'Aulne

1st A Travers Lausanne

1st Overall Escalada a Montjuïc

2nd Overall Critérium National

3rd Giro di Lombardia

3rd Polymultipliée

3rd Grand Prix du Midi Libre

4th Overall Prestige Pernod

8th Overall Vuelta a España

1st Stage 15b (ITT)

9th Overall Tour de France

1st Stage 22b (ITT)

7th Paris–Roubaix

1968

1st Overall Critérium National

1st Overall Escalada a Montjuïc

1st Subida a Arrate

2nd Overall Prestige Pernod

3rd Overall Four Days of Dunkirk

1st Stage 3 (ITT)

1st Stage 3 Tour of Belgium

3rd A Travers Lausanne

5th Milan–San Remo

6th Paris–Roubaix

7th Road race, UCI Road World Championships

8th Overall Tour de Suisse

1969

1st Overall Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré

1st Stages 1a & 5a

1st Overall Tour du Haut Var

1st Overall Challenge Yellow

1st Overall Prestige Pernod

2nd Overall Paris–Nice

1st Stage 1a (ITT)

3rd Overall Tour de France

1st Stage 4a (ITT) Tour of the Basque Country

2nd Grand Prix des Nations

2nd Grand Prix d'Aix-en-Provence

4th Grand Prix du Midi Libre

4th Overall Super Prestige Pernod

5th Giro di Lombardia

1970

2nd Setmana Catalana de Ciclisme

2nd A Travers Lausanne

2nd Overall Prestige Pernod

4th Overall Paris–Nice

7th Overall Tour de France

8th Liège–Bastogne–Liège

8th Grand Prix des Nations

10th La Flèche Wallonne

1971

1st Overall Critérium National

1st Setmana Catalana de Ciclisme

1st Overall Étoile des Espoirs

1st Stage 5

2nd Overall Tour of the Basque Country

3rd Overall Prestige Pernod

4th Overall Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré

6th Grand Prix des Nations

9th Overall Vuelta a España

1972

1st Critérium des As

1st Overall Critérium National

1st Overall Paris–Nice

1st Stage 7b (ITT)

1st Overall Challenge Yellow

1st Overall Prestige Pernod

2nd Overall Setmana Catalana de Ciclisme

1st Stage 1 (ITT)

2nd La Flèche Wallonne

2nd Overall Super Prestige Pernod

3rd Overall Tour de France

4th Grand Prix des Nations

4th Grand Prix du Midi Libre

7th Overall Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré

10th Paris–Roubaix

1973

GP de Soissons

1st Grand Prix du Midi Libre

1st Overall Paris–Nice

1st Overall Challenge Yellow

2nd Overall Prestige Pernod

3rd A Travers Lausanne

4th Liège–Bastogne–Liège

7th Overall Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré

9th Grand Prix des Nations

9th Overall Super Prestige Pernod

10th Paris–Roubaix

1974

2nd Overall Tour de France

1st Stage 16

2nd Overall Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré

1st Stage 6b

2nd Road race, UCI Road World Championships

2nd Overall Prestige Pernod

4th Overall Super Prestige Pernod

5th Overall Paris–Nice

5th Overall Tour de Romandie

1st Prologue (ITT)

1975

2nd Overall Tour du Limousin

1st Stage 3

2nd Overall Prestige Pernod

3rd Paris–Bourges

4th Overall Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré

7th Grand Prix du Midi Libre

1976

3rd Overall Tour de France

2nd Overall Prestige Pernod

4th Grand Prix du Midi Libre

5th Giro di Lombardia

7th Overall Super Prestige Pernod

8th Liège–Bastogne–Liège

1977

6th Overall Paris–Nice

{{div col end}}

Grand Tour general classification results timeline

Grand Tour196219631964196519661967196819691970197119721973197419751976
Giro d'Italia
Tour de France382239DNF373DNF2193
Vuelta a España1289
Legend
Did not compete
DNF Did not finish

References

1. ^Colin, Jacques (2001): Paroles de Peloton, Éditions Solar, France
2. ^Penot, Christophe (1996), Pierre Chany, l'homme aux 50 Tour de France, Éditions Cristel, France
3. ^Interview Jérome Benoît, http://jerome.benoit.free.fr/poulidor.htm, retrieved December 2007
4. ^L'indemodable, L'Équipe, France, 27 June 2003
5. ^Le Tour m'a tout donné, L'Équipe, France, 13 July 2004
6. ^The negative has vanished, which Poulidor said added to the "mystery of Poulidor; Le Tour m'a tout donné, L'Équipe, France, 13 July 2004
7. ^Émile Besson joined the Resistance, became a communist and worked all his life for the communist press, first the Union Française d'Information and then the daily paper, L'Humanité. He started as a messenger and ended on Humanité's sports desk, where he stayed until he retired in 1987. He pioneered western interest in the Peace Race, run between Warsaw, Berlin and Prague and at one time the biggest amateur race in the world.
8. ^Sainz, Bernard (2000): Les Stupéfiantes Révélations du Dr Mabuse, J.C. Lattes, France
9. ^http://sports.espn.go.com/oly/cycling/news/story?id=5005374
10. ^Poulidor, Raymond: "J'appartiens à la légende",
L'Équipe, France, 12 July 1999
11. ^Vélo, France, January 1992
12. ^Poulidor et Jalabert honorés, L'Équipe, France, 26 June 2003
13. ^http://tour2003.dna.fr/162/index.html, retrieved December 2007
14. ^{{cite web|title=Raymond Poulidor|url=http://www.cyclingarchives.com/coureurfiche.php?coureurid=4000|publisher=Cycling Archives|accessdate=27 September 2017}}
15. ^{{cite web|title=Palmarès de Raymond Poulidor (Fra)|language=French|trans-title=Awards of Raymond Poulidor (Fra)|url=http://www.memoire-du-cyclisme.eu/palmares/poulidor_raymond.php|work=Mémoire du cyclisme|accessdate=27 September 2017}}

External links

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10 : 1936 births|Living people|French male cyclists|French Tour de France stage winners|French Vuelta a España stage winners|Vuelta a España winners|Sportspeople from Creuse|Vuelta a España cyclists|Tour de France cyclists|Union Cycliste Internationale Hall of Fame inductees

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