1974 Tour de France

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Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Short description Script error: No such module "infobox". The 1974 Tour de France was the 61st edition of the Tour de France, one of cycling's Grand Tours. It took place between 27 June and 21 July, with 22 stages covering a distance of Script error: No such module "convert".. Eddy Merckx was attempting to win his fifth Tour de France in as many races.

In 1974 the tour made its first visit to the United Kingdom, with a circuit stage on the Plympton By-pass, near Plymouth, England.

The race was won by favourite Eddy Merckx, who thus at that point had won all five Tours that he had entered, and had equalled Jacques Anquetil in Tour victories. While he won the race by a comfortable margin, he was not as overwhelmingly dominant as he had been in his previous victories with eight riders finishing within 20:00, two riders within 10:00 and his two top competitors in Luis Ocaña and Joop Zoetemelk absent from the race. Despite other riders finishing closer in the overall standings, Merckx still won an astonishing eight stages. He also won the combination classification. Fellow Belgian Patrick Sercu won the points classification, while Spanish Domingo Perurena won the mountains classification.

Teams

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The 1974 Tour de France had 13 teams, with 10 cyclists each.[1]

The teams entering the race were:[1]

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Pre-race favourites

Eddy Merckx, who had been absent in 1973 after winning four Tours in a row, was present again.[2] Merckx had not been as dominant in the spring as in other years; it was his first year as a professional cyclist in which he did not win a spring classic.Template:Sfn He did win the 1974 Giro d'Italia and the Tour de Suisse, but after winning the latter he required surgery on the perineum, five days before the 1974 Tour started.Template:Sfn

Notable absents were Ocaña and Zoetemelk. Zoetemelk was injured during the Midi Libre and was in hospital with life-threatening meningitis. Between 1970 and 1986 this would be the only Tour Zoetemelk would not start and finish, and would be the only Tour until 1983 that he was not in the top ten.

Ocaña had crashed in the Tour de l'Aude, gone home and was fired by his team for not communicating.

Bernard Thévenet, who was considered a potential winner, had crashed several times in the 1974 Vuelta a España. He did start in the Tour, but was not yet back at his former level.Template:Sfn

Route and stages

The 1974 Tour de France started on 27 June, and had two rest days, in Aix-les-Bains and Colomiers.Template:Sfn The highest point of elevation in the race was Script error: No such module "convert". at the summit tunnel of the Col du Galibier mountain pass on stage 11.Template:Sfn[3]

Stage characteristics and winners[2]Template:Sfn[4][5]
Stage Date Course Distance Type Winner
P 27 June Brest Script error: No such module "convert". File:Time Trial.svg Individual time trial Template:Country flagbio
1 28 June Brest to Saint-Pol-de-Léon Script error: No such module "convert". File:Plainstage.svg Plain stage Template:Country flagbio
2 29 June Plymouth (United Kingdom) Script error: No such module "convert". File:Plainstage.svg Plain stage Template:Country flagbio
3 30 June Morlaix to Saint-Malo Script error: No such module "convert". File:Plainstage.svg Plain stage Template:Country flagbio
4 1 July Saint-Malo to Caen Script error: No such module "convert". File:Plainstage.svg Plain stage Template:Country flagbio
5 2 July Caen to Dieppe Script error: No such module "convert". File:Plainstage.svg Plain stage Template:Country flagbio
6a 3 July Dieppe to Harelbeke (Belgium) Script error: No such module "convert". File:Plainstage.svg Plain stage Template:Country flagbio
6b Harelbeke (Belgium) Script error: No such module "convert". File:Time Trial.svg Team time trial  Template:Cycling data Molteni
7 4 July Mons (Belgium) to Châlons-sur-Marne Script error: No such module "convert". File:Plainstage.svg Plain stage Template:Country flagbio
8a 5 July Châlons-sur-Marne to Chaumont Script error: No such module "convert". File:Plainstage.svg Plain stage Template:Country flagbio
8b Chaumont to Besançon Script error: No such module "convert". File:Plainstage.svg Plain stage Template:Country flagbio
9 6 July Besançon to Gaillard Script error: No such module "convert". File:Mountainstage.svg Stage with mountain(s) Template:Country flagbio
10 7 July Gaillard to Aix-les-Bains Script error: No such module "convert". File:Mountainstage.svg Stage with mountain(s) Template:Country flagbio
11 8 July Aix-les-Bains to Serre Chevalier Script error: No such module "convert". File:Mountainstage.svg Stage with mountain(s) Template:Country flagbio
9 July Aix-les-Bains Rest day
12 10 July Savines-le-Lac to Orange Script error: No such module "convert". File:Mountainstage.svg Stage with mountain(s) Template:Country flagbio
13 11 July Avignon to Montpellier Script error: No such module "convert". File:Plainstage.svg Plain stage Template:Country flagbio
14 12 July Lodève to Colomiers Script error: No such module "convert". File:Plainstage.svg Plain stage Template:Country flagbio
13 July Colomiers Rest day
15 14 July Colomiers to La Seu d'Urgell (Spain) Script error: No such module "convert". File:Mountainstage.svg Stage with mountain(s) Template:Country flagbio
16 15 July La Seu d'Urgell to Saint-Lary-Soulan Pla d'Adet Script error: No such module "convert". File:Mountainstage.svg Stage with mountain(s) Template:Country flagbio
17 16 July Saint-Lary-Soulan to La Mongie Script error: No such module "convert". File:Mountainstage.svg Stage with mountain(s) Template:Country flagbio
18 17 July Bagnères-de-Bigorre to Pau Script error: No such module "convert". File:Mountainstage.svg Stage with mountain(s) Template:Country flagbio
19a 18 July Pau to Bordeaux Script error: No such module "convert". File:Plainstage.svg Plain stage Template:Country flagbio
19b Bordeaux Script error: No such module "convert". File:Time Trial.svg Individual time trial Template:Country flagbio
20 19 July Saint-Gilles-Croix-de-Vie to Nantes Script error: No such module "convert". File:Plainstage.svg Plain stage Template:Country flagbio
21a 20 July Vouvray to Orléans Script error: No such module "convert". File:Plainstage.svg Plain stage Template:Country flagbio
21b Orléans Script error: No such module "convert". File:Time Trial.svg Individual time trial Template:Country flagbio
22 21 July Orléans to Paris Script error: No such module "convert". File:Plainstage.svg Plain stage Template:Country flagbio
Total Script error: No such module "convert".Template:Sfn

Race overview

File:Eddy Merckx Molteni 1973.jpg
Eddy Merckx (pictured in 1973), winner of the general classification, his fifth

Merckx won the prologue, with his teammate Joseph Bruyère in third place. In the first stage, Bruyère was part of a breakaway, and became the new leader.Template:Sfn

The second stage was in Plymouth, the first time that the Tour de France visited England.[6] The riders did not like the experiment, as the British immigration officials made the cyclists wait for a long time when entering the country and again when returning to France.Template:Sfn[6]

Merckx collected bonus time in the sprints, and in the fourth stage took back the leading position in the general classification, with Gerben Karstens in second place. Karstens was also doing well in the points classification, and felt Merckx and Patrick Sercu, the leaders in the general and points classification, were helping each other.Template:Efn Karstens was angry and after the finish quickly went away, but forgot that he had to go to the doping control. For this, he was given ten minutes penalty time, and thus he lost his second place in the general classification.Template:Sfn[7] Karstens complained to the jury, and other cyclists threatened with a strike, so the jury removed the penalty after the fifth stage. Thanks to bonification seconds in that stage, Karstens took the leading position after that stage.Template:Sfn[8]

It was still close in the top of the general classification. Patrick Sercu became the new leader after the first part of the sixth stage, but Karstens regained the lead after the second part of the sixth stage, a team time trial won by Merckx's team, Molteni. Merckx won the seventh stage, and became the next leader.

The Alps were the first serious mountains to be seen, in stage nine. Merckx won the stage, but the surprise of the day was Raymond Poulidor, who at 38 years old was still able to escape during the toughest part of the stage. This also happened in the tenth stage: Poulidor joined the crucial escape, but could not beat Merckx in the final sprint.Template:Sfn

In the tenth stage, the hardest Alpine stage, Vicente López Carril from the KAS team stayed away. Merckx was in the next group, together with Francisco Galdós and Gonzalo Aja, also from the KAS team. Aja was in third place in the general classification, so Merckx was unable to chase Lopez Carril without helping his rival Aja.Template:Sfn

The next stages did not change the general classification. In the fifteenth stage, the Pyrenées were encountered. There was a crash that took down Galdós, now in sixth place in the general classification, and he had to leave the race.Template:Sfn

The Tour was in Spain at that point, and Basque separatist placed bombs on press and team cars. There was violence around France, Andorra and in Corsica from unrelated protests including from farmers and other angry nationalists and in some areas people hung dead pigs from street lamps. The bombings in the Pyrenees took place in the middle of the night in Lourdes where thirteen vacant buses and two parked cars where destroyed. Then a few hours later at Saint-Lary-Soulan several vehicles associated with the Tour de France were targeted and blown up. No one was in them at the time. Leaflets were distributed threatening the fascist government of Spain and telling Spanish riders to leave the race.[9] Other acts of violence against the Tour included many trees being cut down to block the route, which had to be dealt with and removed.

Nobody was hurt, but cyclists were scared: Spanish champion Lopez Carril did not wear his national champion's jersey, afraid to become a target because of the Spanish flag on it.Template:Sfn

In the sixteenth stage, with an uphill finish, Poulidor won, his first Tour stage victory since 1965. Merckx finished in fourth place, losing time to Poulidor, Lopez Carril and Pollentier.Template:Sfn[10]

In the seventeenth stage, Poulidor again won time, finishing second after Jean-Pierre Danguillaume, and jumped to the third place in the general classification, behind Merckx and Lopez Carril.Template:Sfn Danguillaume also won the eighteenth stage, the last mountain stage. The favourites stayed together with Merckx, and at that point Merckx was more or less certain of the victory, with two time trials remaining, in which he normally would gain time on the others.Template:Sfn

Poulidor battled with Lopez-Carril for the second place. After the time trial in the second part of stage 21, Poulidor captured the second place by just one second. Surprisingly, Merckx was in second place in that time trial, beaten by Michel Pollentier.Template:Sfn In the last stage, Poulidor increased the margin to Lopez Carril to five seconds due to bonus seconds in an intermediate sprint. At the finish of that last, Sercu finished first in a sprint, but he had blocked the way of Gustaaf Van Roosbroeck, so the jury decided to set him back, and the second rider to finish (Merckx) was declared winner of the stage. Normally, a rider penalized for blocking another rider during a sprint would be set back to the last place of the group that he finished in, but that would have meant that Sercu would have not only lost the stage victory to Merckx, but also the points classification. The jury then declared that only three riders were really sprinting for the stage victory, so Sercu would be set back to the third place; this enabled him to keep his victory in the points classification by 13 points.[11]

Doping

Cyrille Guimard, who had won the first part of stage eight, tested positive for piperidine[12] after stage thirteen.[13] Three other cyclists tested positive:Claude Tollet, for amphetamine; Daniel Ducreux, for piperidine; Carlos Melero, for piperidine.[12]

Classification leadership and minor prizes

There were several classifications in the 1974 Tour de France, three of them awarding jerseys to their leaders.Template:Sfn The most important was the general classification, calculated by adding each cyclist's finishing times on each stage. The cyclist with the least accumulated time was the race leader, identified by the yellow jersey; the winner of this classification is considered the winner of the Tour.Template:Sfn

Additionally, there was a points classification, where cyclists got points for finishing among the best in a stage finish, or in intermediate sprints. The cyclist with the most points lead the classification, and was identified with a green jersey.Template:Sfn

There was also a mountains classification. The organisation had categorised some climbs as either first, second, third, or fourth-category; points for this classification were won by the first cyclists that reached the top of these climbs first, with more points available for the higher-categorised climbs. The cyclist with the most points lead the classification, but was not identified with a jersey in 1974.Template:Sfn

Another classification was the combination classification. This classification was calculated as a combination of the other classifications, its leader wore the white jersey.Template:Sfn

The fifth individual classification was the intermediate sprints classification. This classification had similar rules as the points classification, but only points were awarded on intermediate sprints. In 1974, this classification had no associated jersey.Template:Sfn

For the team classification, the times of the best three cyclists per team on each stage were added; the leading team was the team with the lowest total time. The riders in the team that led this classification were identified by yellow caps.Template:Sfn There was also a team points classification. Cyclists received points according to their finishing position on each stage, with the first rider receiving one point. The first three finishers of each team had their points combined, and the team with the fewest points led the classification. The riders of the team leading this classification wore green caps.Template:Sfn

In addition, there was a combativity award, in which a jury composed of journalists gave points after certain stages to the cyclist they considered most combative. The split stages each had a combined winner.Template:Sfn At the conclusion of the Tour, Eddy Merckx won the overall super-combativity award, also decided by journalists.Template:Sfn The Souvenir Henri Desgrange was given to the first rider to pass the memorial to Tour founder Henri Desgrange near the summit of the Col du Galibier on stage 11. This prize was won by Vicente López Carril.Template:Sfn

Classification leadership by stage[14][15]
Stage Stage winner General classification
File:Jersey yellow.svg
Points classification
File:Jersey green.svg
Mountains classificationTemplate:Efn Combination classification
File:Jersey white.svg
Intermediate sprints classification Team classifications Combativity award
By time By points
P Eddy Merckx Eddy Merckx Eddy Merckx no award Eddy Merckx no award Template:Cycling data Molteni Template:Cycling data Miko–de Gribaldy no award
1 Ercole Gualazzini Joseph Bruyère Joseph Bruyère Lucien Van Impe Eddy Merckx Herman Van Springel
2 Henk Poppe Gerben Karstens no award
3 Patrick Sercu Patrick Sercu Willy Teirlinck Template:Cycling data Molteni Jean-Luc Molinéris
4 Patrick Sercu Eddy Merckx Domingo Perurena Template:Cycling data Frisol Template:Cycling data Brooklyn Gerrie Knetemann
5 Ronald De Witte Gerben Karstens Roger Pingeon
6a Jean-Luc Molinéris Patrick Sercu
6b Template:Cycling data Molteni Gerben Karstens Template:Cycling data Molteni
7 Eddy Merckx Eddy Merckx Barry Hoban Herman Van Springel
8a Cyrille Guimard Template:Cycling data Mercier Jean-Pierre Danguillaume
8b Patrick Sercu
9 Eddy Merckx Template:Cycling data KAS Vicente López Carril
10 Eddy Merckx Raymond Poulidor
11 Vicente López Carril Vicente López Carril
12 Jos Spruyt Fedor den Hertog
13 Barry Hoban Michel Coroller
14 Jean-Pierre Genet Jean-Pierre Genet
15 Eddy Merckx Raymond Delisle
16 Raymond Poulidor Raymond Poulidor
17 Jean-Pierre Danguillaume Raymond Poulidor
18 Jean-Pierre Danguillaume Jean-Pierre Danguillaume
19a Francis Campaner Francis Campaner
19b Eddy Merckx
20 Gerard Vianen Gerard Vianen
21a Eddy Merckx Eddy Merckx
21b Michel Pollentier
22 Eddy Merckx
Final Eddy Merckx Patrick Sercu Domingo Perurena Eddy Merckx Barry Hoban Template:Cycling data KAS Template:Cycling data Mercier Eddy Merckx

Final standings

Legend
A yellow jersey. Denotes the winner of the general classification A green jersey. Denotes the winner of the points classification
A white jersey. Denotes the winner of the combination classification

General classification

Final general classification (1–10)[16]
Rank Rider Team Time
1 Template:Country flagbio A yellow jersey. A white jersey. Template:Cycling data Molteni 116h 16' 58"
2 Template:Country flagbio Template:Cycling data Mercier + 8' 04"
3 Template:Country flagbio Template:Cycling data KAS + 8' 09"
4 Template:Country flagbio Template:Cycling data Brooklyn + 10' 59"
5 Template:Country flagbio Template:Cycling data KAS + 11' 24"
6 Template:Country flagbio Template:Cycling data Bic + 14' 24"
7 Template:Country flagbio Template:Cycling data Flandria + 16' 34"
8 Template:Country flagbio Template:Cycling data Gitane–Campagnolo + 18' 33"
9 Template:Country flagbio Template:Cycling data Mercier + 19' 55"
10 Template:Country flagbio Template:Cycling data Miko–de Gribaldy + 24' 11"

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Team classification

Final team classification (1–10)[17]
Rank Team Time
1 Template:Cycling data KAS 350h 24' 27"
2 Template:Cycling data Mercier + 15' 26"
3 Template:Cycling data Molteni + 31' 23"
4 Template:Cycling data Gitane–Campagnolo + 49' 02"
5 Template:Cycling data Bic + 49' 50"
6 Template:Cycling data Brooklyn + 53' 04"
7 Template:Cycling data Jobo + 1h 01' 09"
8 Template:Cycling data Peugeot + 1h 15' 24"
9 La Casera–Peña Bahamontes + 1h 34' 47"
10 Template:Cycling data Miko–de Gribaldy + 1h 36' 35"
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Aftermath

With his fifth Tour victory, Merckx equalled Jacques Anquetil. Moreover, Merckx had won the first five Tours that he entered. Merckx set a few new records after winning the 1974 Tour:Template:Sfn

  • Total number of stage victories: 32 (surpassing André Leducq, who had won 25)
  • First man to win the Tour de France, Giro d'Italia and Tour de Suisse in one year.

Merckx had already won the 1974 Giro d'Italia earlier that year, and after winning the 1974 Tour de France also won the world championship, and became the first cyclist to win the Triple Crown of Cycling.

Notes

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References

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Bibliography

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Further reading

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External links

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