The strength of the slow and the last
There are those who would not watch a game of tennis from one year until the next, but avidly follow every match at Wimbledon; judging by the extensive live television coverage and the highlights programmes, there are others for whom the Tour de France has a similar fascination. As tennis can have points difficult for the casual onlooker to understand, so even the business of racing a bicycle from one point to another is not as straightforward as it might seem.
Having watched the Tour de France for more than twenty years, since the days when coverage was limited to thirty minutes on Channel 4 each evening, there has been a long process of learning the subtleties of the race. Understanding that the main group of riders was called the peleton seemed simple. Understanding that each team would have different people with different objects was straightforward: there were sprinters and climbers and general classification contenders (who had to be good climbers) and each team of nine included “domestiques,” whose task it was to support their team members who were in contention for one of the prizes. It took some time to realize that riding as a team, where each person took a turn at the front, was important because someone riding behind another rider might use twenty per cent less energy. What remained a mystery was the dozens of riders who brought up the rear of the race, sometimes far behind the peleton, who seemed often to cross the line as a group and all be content to be given the same time.
In previous years, commentators had referred to the trailing group in the mountain stages as the “autobus,” but in this year’s race a commentator called it the “grupetto” and explained its function.
The grupetto is organised by the riders who compose it, even though they are from rival teams. They are not concerned to compete, only to reach the end of the stage in a time sufficient to prevent them from being excluded from the race. Some of them will be sprinters, whose strength is on the flat stages; some of them are domestiques, whose main work is on the flat stages, or who have completed as much of their task as they are able in the uphill climbs; their common purpose is to encourage each other to the line.
The grupetto seems a fascinating group, they will talk and laugh and cheer, they will share food and drink; and, on some of the downhill stretches, they will sometimes make faster progress than the leaders because the sprinters will give them a lead.
Pondering the spectacle of riders cycling roads that would be a challenge in a motor car, there was the thought that if the grupetto were mirrored in the conduct of nations the world might become a different place.
I watch Le Tour because it’s one of the few major sports that I can at some level participate actively. And one that doesn’t include the intercession of a turf accountant As far as the Olympics goes I’m reduced to the Archery nowadays, where once I was a fair athlete.
Le Tour fascinates me. The sheer mental and physical strength is extraordinary.