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Home > Blazing Saddles: The Cruel & Unusual History of the Tour de France
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Blazing Saddles: The Cruel & Unusual History of the Tour de France
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By Matt Rendell
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(10 Reviews)
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List Price: $24.95
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Publisher:
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Velo Press
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Edition:
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Revised
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Published:
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December 31, 1969 |
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Binding:
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Hardcover
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Pages:
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303
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In this fascinating book, award-winning sports writer Matt Rendell covers every corner of "La Grande Boucle," from the eccentric couture of the first Tour winner (white blazer, black trousers, wool socks) to the earliest method of cheating (riding the train). "Blazing Saddles" recounts the famous rivalries and riders that contested the Tour, setting the score straight with complete records of every podium finisher. Rendell's vivid storytelling is complemented with more than 100 classic black-and-white photographs, portraying cycling's heroes and martyrs from Jacques Anquetil to Lance Armstrong.
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Customer Reviews: Add Your Own Review |
A Pocket History of Cycling's Most Celebrated and Eccentric Race, September 6, 2008
By Sprocketboy (Ottawa, Ontario, Canada)
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"Hell, there are no rules here. We are trying to accomplish something."
Thomas Alva Edison
Leafing through the entertaining pages of "Blazing Saddles: The Cruel and Unusual History of the Tour de France" one is struck by the tone of the book, released just in time for this year's Tour. Instead of the usual paeans of praise to the great athletes of cycling history, author Matt Rendell has instead emphasized that the glorious Tour de France, one of the world's great sporting events, is "[a] fine spectacle of life-threatening exertion, bare-faced cheating, roadside sabotage, ludicrous clothing, extreme intimate discomfort and grown men at the absolute end of their tethers..."
At the pinnacle of the gang of eccentrics who populate this volume must stand the founder of the Tour, Henri Desgrange. Clearly a man who loved to give orders, M. Desgrange had a vision of the Tour as the ultimate test of strength and courage and dogged manliness. He once said that the ideal Tour winner would be the sole survivor. To realize this goal, the early Tours were insanely difficult. With staggering stage lengths over terrible roads and often started in the middle of the night, the Tour de France attracted some Very Tough Competitors, men not mollycoddled by technology. Desgrange objected to freewheels ("Are our races seriously threatened with decadence by the freewheel? Will the Tour de France be undermined by this infernal invention?") and although eventually relenting on that he did prevent racers from using variable gearing until 1937, some 15 years after cycletourists began happily shifting their way up the mountains to greet their heroes en route.
Desgrange, as the inventor of the first great national tour (and still the greatest) had to find his way as he went. The recent exclusion of Astana, seemingly based on a change-of-rules-on-the-fly, is in the great tradition of the Tour. Desgrange first prevented riders from working together, then he allowed it; he accepted trade teams and then banned them for national, or even regional ones; he used a time-elapsed system for determining the winner; then he had a points system so complex nobody knew where they stood until a day after the stage was over. He was angry the riders hadn't tried hard enough, so he instituted a Tour that was full of team time trials in 1927, a system that Australian Hubert Opperman called "a crime that should never have been perpetrated on the roads of France." Desgranges soon gave this idea up, but then reverted to only allowing solo riders rather than teams. For a short time. Then he changed the rules again. And again. But there was method in this madness as the popularity of the Tour went from strength to strength.
Of course, the response of the riders, who were, as noted, Very Tough Men, to all these rules was to cheat. As the author notes: "Frame builders, component manufacturers and the riders themselves have always dreamed of weightlessness, so it's hardly surprising some of the latter have tended to dispense with the excess baggage of a conscience." In 1904, there was widespread cheating, the mildest version of which was drafting (against the rules) and the most extreme was getting a lift in a car. Some riders had their supporters dump tacks in the road to slow their competitors. And occasionally it seemed that a bicycle race would break out in the middle of a fistfight between riders and "fans." Desgrange thought this would be the last Tour de France, but on it went. Later editions featured even better cheating: in 1906, two competitors hopped on a train. Starting in 1910 real mountains were added, although Desgrange's scouts were somewhat negligent about whether there were actual roads over the so-called passes or not.
The Tour was dominated by Belgians in its early years but there was wide range of colourful characters-Eugène Christophe being the first to wear the Yellow Jersey in 1919. He apparently complained about it as spectators laughed at him for looking like a canary. This is the same legendary Christophe who had to drag his bike off to a blacksmith's to weld up a new fork not once but twice. The third time he broke a fork, in 1922, he quit on the descent of the Galibier. Interestingly, he was deeply opposed to doping and decades later furiously reproached another old Tour rider who admitted to drinking some champagne before each stage as a cheat.
Other riders were equally as unlucky as Eugène Christophe, although Raymond Poulidor, who never got to wear the Yellow Jersey, must surely be in a class by himself. Reading the book's accounts of his various misfortunes, you simply have to laugh at time because it seems to so unbelievable. Other events, such as Tom Simpson's collapse on Mt. Ventoux, bring the dangers of doping front and centre, and Matt Rendell zeroes in on this element of the Tour into the modern era. How about the 1968 race, nicknamed by organizers as "the Tour of Good Health?" It sure didn't stop doping and Mr. Rendell gleefully catalogues all the chemical disasters. And for more fun, check out his Appendix on statistics, which shows that nobody seems to know the actual distance of each Tour.
The book generally covers two Tours briefly per chapter and is best taken in small doses, like a particularly ripe blue cheese. Much of the information contained in it can, in truth, be found in other histories of the Tour. What sets "Blazing Saddles" apart is its unwillingness to worship at the Tour de France altar and Matt Rendell's enthusiasm to hold up elements that are ridiculous, unsporting or even unsavoury to the light. As the 95th Tour de France is underway, read this book, enjoy its often hilarious photos (I loved René Pottier's "milkmaid cap") and ponder this rich event that mixes so much of the human condition, for better and for worse, into three immortal weeks.
13 of 13 people found the above review helpful.
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A 'must have' reference that is as entertaining as it is informative, October 10, 2008
By Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA)
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The Tour De France is the most prestigious race in cycling, but it didn't become that way overnight. "Blazing Saddles: The Cruel and Unusual History of the Tour De France" chronicles the races one hundred and five year history, full of memory quotes and events throughout the history of the race. With each year covered with statistics covering the length of the course, the top three finishers and their times, it lends a bit of history to each of the races. For any fan of the race, "Blazing Saddles" is a 'must have' reference that is as entertaining as it is informative.
1 of 1 people found the above review helpful.
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What could be dry is somewhat entertaining, November 29, 2008
By I used induction to reveal ne.. (Milwaukee WI)
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Buddhist-like, this book takes the middle path - it is neither a dry encyclopedia nor an engrossing "best of" Tour de France book. Yet for its attempt to be comprehensive, it yaws more toward the latter than the former.
The book manages to hit the highlights of EVERY TdF in an entertaining fashion; and while it is apparent that some TdFs deserve little-to-no mention while books should be (and have been) written about several others...well, Blazing Saddles shows that sometimes the middle ground is a fertile place.
1 of 2 people found the above review helpful.
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Bit & bit, August 25, 2008
By James Thompson (Milwaukee, WI USA)
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This is a fun read for the anecdotes and characters - I thoroughly enjoyed it - but it needs a bit more to link through as a full story.
I still recommend it, even if you don't know a lot about cycling. I'm still bombing around on a 30 year old Gitane.
1 of 2 people found the above review helpful.
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Poor writing, October 23, 2008
By Ty A. Ketlinski
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This book is packed with information and great photos. However, the writing is so poor that it was hard to follow at times.
1 of 3 people found the above review helpful.
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Bit & bit, August 25, 2008
By JimmyT (Milwaukee, WI USA)
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This is a fun read for the anecdotes and characters - I thoroughly enjoyed it - but it needs a bit more to link through as a full story.
I still recommend it, even if you don't know a lot about cycling. I'm still bombing around on a 30 year old Gitane.
1 of 2 people found the above review helpful.
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Interesting Concept; Some funny Stories, March 6, 2010
By James L. Witherell, Author, Bicycle History
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After looking at the other reviews, I have to say that I pretty much agree with most of them. The writng is good, but not great; The stories are intersting but many of them are not new if you're already a big fan of the Tour, and the telling of the tales of the latter years does tend to be kind of dry.
Still, if you are a casual fan of the race, this book could be quite helpful in catching you up with the rest of us on some of the stranger, wierder, and more unusual things that have happened over the course of the race's long, colorful history. Also there are some interesting quotes, and the stats at the end of the book are fairly informative.
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A wasted idea, October 30, 2009
By T. Werts
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When I picked up this book, I was hoping for a nice collection of anecdotes and history about the TdF. Instead, I sat through a recitation of statistics, with a writing style either as dry as a textbook, or so littered with misplaced analogies, bad metaphors and flowery writing that it would make a romance novelist blush. Though there are some interesting anecdotes taken from other histories about the very early years of the tour, nearly every year after WWII is completely bereft of anything beyond who won, and on what stage they took the yellow jersey. Much of the book feels like it was dumbed down for non-cyclists, but really, who besides cyclists are going to read this book?
Perhaps most frustrating is the inclusion of doping scandals in the book. From the very beginning the author makes it clear that doping has always been a part of the tour, ever since the first year. Yet somehow, the introduction of EPO into the peleton suddenly changes the entire history of cycling. The recaps of the last 10 tours focus almost entirely on the doping scandals of the year. We heard enough about that while the race was being run. The author needs to either accept that doping has been a part of the tour for its entire history, and ignore it for the sake of the book, or change the name of the book to Doping saddles, and forget about trying to praise the tour for it's sordid history. This book just didn't have room for both.
On the plus side, the 2-3 page recaps of each year make the book perfect for bathroom reading, and if you read carefully, there are a few moments of entertaining stories and interesting facts, hiding among the dribble.
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Tour, August 30, 2008
By RANDY WOOLEY
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Highly recommend for Tour de France and cycling buffs! Now i know much more of the details of how the race began and how it evolved and the some what odd history of the greatest cycling race!
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Don't judge a book by it's cover, November 11, 2011
By lambschwarma (CA, US)
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The cover suggests a book exploring some of the more outrageous aspects of the tour in a fun tone. The actual book has a very dry tone to it and covers the history of the tour de france in broad strokes. I would've liked more details and more joy to the writing. Not a bad book on the history of the tour de france but doesn't live up to what the cover promises.
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