- Jun 12, 2010
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pmcg76 said:LeMond was no longer with the US Olympic programme by 84, he had been pro since 81 and already shown his abilities before 84.
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At the Junior World Championships in 1979 in Argentina Lemond won the road race, took silver in the individual persuit and a bronze as a member of the TTT team. I was a member of the British TTT team in my international debut.
I had the oppertunity to watch Lemond in the individual persuit and RR and he was massivly impressive.
In 83 , just 4 years later he was World Pro Champ In Switzerland and again I was fortunate to witness his victory being there myself as part of the British team for the 100km TTT.
Lemonds last lap atack was one of the most amazing attacks I`ve ever seen not so much for its speed ( obviously high) but for his courage descending.
In 89 I rode the early seson Tour Of Americas in my debut with Teka, the Spanish team and Lemond was in the field. He appeared out of condition and a few pounds over weight but whats important he wasnt geting dropped but gritting his teath and hanging in there.
That by July he was in condition to win by the closest margin in TDF history ( a victory owed to his final TT use of Tri bars was no miracle..he just worked bloody hard.
At the time I was gobsmaked by that TT..as was everyone I knew...but then very few people had any idea what the actual advantage was to tri bars and no one I knew thought it would be as great as it`s turned out to be.
Also worth remembering that Fignon had a severe saddle boil which would not only be painfull but would sugest an infection, so that certainly would not have helped his cause. Secondly, and I always felt somat a lot off peeps failed to notice, Fignons choice of a front disc wheel alone ( and subsequent handling issues) might have made the differance between being beet by 8 seconds for GC or Winning by 1.
Taking absalutly nothing away from Greg but it realy would be fair to describe that tour as the one Fignon lost rather than the one Lemond won.
It broke Fignon.