Sunday, April 28, 2024

The Best Colombian Riders of The Modern Era

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HomeStoriesThe Best Colombian Riders of The Modern Era

A couple of years ago we did a piece about the Colombian influence on European Cycle Sport and the best Colombian riders of the modern era, and at the end of it we mentioned a guy who we believed was going to be a ‘Big’; Senor Egan Bernal by name. Since Bernal has become the first Colombian winner of the Tour de France we thought you make like to see what we said back then…

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They’re part of the landscape now, those Colombians; Chaves, Gaviria, Quintana, Uran all rampaging across Grand Tours and Classics landscapes.

Egan Bernal and Geraint Thomas (both GBR / Team INEOS). Photo©Dion Kerckhoffs

It got me to thinking about Colombians I have known and loved (most of them, that is) since I started following cycling way back in 1970.

Nairo Quintana is riding clear of his challengers. Photo©Gian Mattia D’Alberto

Varese, Italy 1971, the track Worlds and Martin Rodriguez, known as ‘Cochise’ to his fans, won the amateur 4,000 metres pursuit to general surprise but it really shouldn’t have been – Rodriguez was a prolific winner on the South American scene and had broken the amateur world hour record in 1970 with 47.553 kilometres.

I hadn’t realised that cycling was a big sport in South America until the Cycling Weekly magazine printed a picture of Cochise on the phone to the President of Colombia after his Worlds success.

Rodriguez turned pro with Felice Gimondi’s Bianchi team and partnered the great man to a win in the Baracchi two-up time trial in 1973 as well as winning two Giro stages during his time as a EuroPro.

‘Cochise’ with Gimondi.

The next big surprise to come out of Colombia was in 1980 when the man with the ‘Glasgow Hard Man’ look, Alfonso Florez defeated the cream of East European cycling to win the Tour de l’Avenir overall by three minutes.

The Bianchi-Campagnolo stars of 1973 – Marino Basso, Martin Rodriguez and Felice Gimondi.

That one jarred our eyes open, Sergei Soukhoroutchenkov @ 3:10 and Yuri Barinov @ 4:28, that was one serious result; iron man ‘Soukho’ had dominated the Olympic Road race; we realised that these Columbian guys were the real deal.

Florez, who enjoyed huge success in his native Colombia would sadly die, a murder victim in Medelin in 1992.

Colombian hard man – Alfonso Florez.

In 1984 a non-cycling friend came back from holiday in France and said to me; ‘have you heard about the Colombian boy?

In those pre-‘net days, of course I hadn’t, but the French newspapers and TV were full of the story.

The ‘Colombian Boy’ to whom he referred was 24 year-old Bogota amateur rider, Martin Ramirez who with minimal team support usurped none other than Tour winner, Bernard Hinault to win the Dauphine, the number one warm up for le Tour.

The last day was a split stage and Ramirez defended a narrow lead during the morning road stage despite physical and verbal abuse from Hinault and his team.

In the afternoon the Columbian got the better of the Frenchman in the time trial, won by Greg Lemond to win the race overall with Hinault second and Lemond third on GC.

Hinault was his usual unapologetic self;

“For me the honour of the professional class is at stake.

“It’s not right that these pseudo-professionals should be earning two million francs a month while there are numerous pros getting less than 700 francs.”

The Badger at his best.

Ramirez would go on to win the 1985 Tour de l’Avenir too.

Martin Ramirez winning a stage at the Tour d l’Avenir.

Ramirez wins saw the fans go into raptures back home but that was as nothing when Luis ‘Lucho’ Herrera won the 1987 Vuelta.

The little climber who could contrive to fall off even going up hills had won a Tour stage in 1984, sending the Columbian TV commentators deep into laryngitis territory with their screamed reports as Lucho rode to glory.

In ’85 he won two Tour stages and was crowned king of the mountains, a feat he repeated in 1987.

The ’87 Vuelta had looked like it belonged to Sean Kelly but a massive saddle boil was such that even iron man Kelly couldn’t stand the pain and the victory crossed the Atlantic.

Herrera would go on to win the Dauphine in 1988 and 1991 as well as winning stages and the mountains classification in the Giro.

Lucho Herrera. Photo©AFP/Getty

Herrera’s team mate, Fabio Parra wasn’t just a man of the mountains, he could contend for GC and was the first Colombian to make the Tour podium with third place in 1988 and was second to Pedro Delgado in the 1989 Vuelta.

Robert Millar used to say that his name was derived from ‘Parra-chute’ because if there was a big crash, the Colombian would always be at the bottom of the pile.

A young Fabio Parra racing in Colombia.

Every year, my buddy John and I used to go down to Barcelona for the Euro season closing Escalada a Montjuich.

In 1991 we watched the classy Columbian Oliverio Rincon win the massed start stage and the individual time trial to run away with the overall honours.

Despite winning stages in all three Grand Tours and finishing top five in the Vuelta and Giro the slim man from Duitama never fully realised his potential as a stage race rider.

Álvaro Mejia.

Similarly Álvaro Mejia had the class and look of a Grand Tour contender, he was best young rider in the 1991 Tour and in the 1993 Tour looked to be headed for the podium coming in to the final time trial, Indurain was impregnable but the podium was up for grabs.

But as Mejia told Matt Rendell in an interview earlier this year;

“As I approached the finish, I was feeling bad and my head was full of doubt.

My only hope was that perhaps Rominger or Jaskuła had had a bad day too, and I could keep my podium place.

Then my directeur sportif told me that my time was not enough for third place.

The podium had gone.”

Despite that disappointment Mejia won the Volta a Catalunya, Route du Sud, Vuelta a Murcia and Vuelta a Galicia during his pro career with Postobon and Motorola.

Santiago Botero.

If ever there was an unlikely Tour de France king of the mountains winner then it was Santiago Botero, he first caught the eye with some decent rides in Portugal in 1998, the following year he was a Paris-Nice stage winner and by 2000 had wrestled and bludgeoned his machine to a stage win and Tour king of the mountains title.

Definitely not one of the sport’s great stylists he took the world time trial championship in 2002 with more Tour and Vuelta stages along the way.

His involvement in Operacion Puerto – albeit “potential evidence provided against him by Spain’s Civil Guard was not validated by the correct judicial authority,” put paid to his Euro career but he went back to racing in Columbia, which he did very successfully, winning his national time trial championship as recently as 2010.

KoM Mauricio Soller was no tester but looked great in this Tour TT all the same. Photo©Martin Williamson

Another sad story but on a different track is that of Mauricio Soler who after a winning start to his career in his homeland moved to Europe and started very promisingly with a win in the 2007 Circuit des Mines.

A year later he was a Tour de France stage winner and king of the mountains.

He never quite performed at that level again but in the 2011 Tour de Suisse with an excellent stage win under his belt he seemed be back to his best – but the tall man from Ramiriqui suffered a horror crash later in the same race which ended his career before his true potential was fulfilled.

Rigoberto Uran – Possible Grand Tour winner? Photo©Martin Williamson

Rigoberto Uran in second place in the Tour with minimal team support was a surprise to many but the former track rider has been a European professional for a decade and has twice been second in the Giro in recent years.

It was back in 2007 when he won a stage in the Tour de Suisse and has been around the business end of races ever since.

Can he win a Grand Tour?

Maybe – but not the Tour de France.

Nairo Quintana in the Vuelta. Photo©Martin Williamson

It was 2010 when Nairo Quintana first ‘blipped’ on our radar screens, winning the Tour de l’Avenir and picking up on the fine tradition established by Florez and Martinez.

The stats speak for themselves: 2012, Vuelta a Murcia and Route du Sud; 2013, Tour of the Basque Country, Vuelta a Burgos and second in Le Tour; 2014, Giro, Burgos and San Luis; 2015, Tirreno and second in Le Tour; 2016, Vuelta, Romandie, Catalonia, Route du Sud and third in Le Tour.

This year saw him take Tirreno and Valencia then place second to Dumoulin in the Giro as part on of an ill-advised Giro/Tour bid.

He was nowhere in the Tour and looked tired with a capital ‘T.’

Despite any claim to the contrary he’ll want to joint that exclusive club of riders who have won all three Grand Tours so it’ll be ‘all for the Tour in 2018.’

Esteban Chaves. Photo©Martin Williamson

One year after Quintana’s l’Avenir win, along came Esteban Chaves to emulate him and introduce himself as the next Colombian ‘big thing.’

His pro career started well with a win the GP Citta di Camaiore and sixth in the 2012 U23 Worlds but 2013 was a right off after a bad crash in the season opening Trofeo Laigueglia.

The Australian Orica squad saw the potential, signed him, stuck by him and he repaid them with stages in California and Switzerland in 2014.

Season 2015 was even better with two Vuelta stages and a stage/GC double in Abu Dhabi.

Last year was outstanding with a stage and second overall in the Giro, third in the Vuelta and wins in Emilia and Lombardia.

Meanwhile 2018 has been a non-event; a knee injury, the death of his friend and personal soigneur, Diana Casas and then a crash in Emilia have made it a season to forget.

Can he come back and win a Grand Tour?

The Giro or Vuelta perhaps – but Le Tour?

Unlikely.

All of the Colombians we’ve mentioned so far have one thing in common; they’re climbers.

Fernando Gaviria crashed out of Milan Sanremo a couple of years ago. Photo©Gazzetta

But that’s not the ‘bag’ of our next man for the spotlight, Fernando Gaviria who this season has underscored his rep as one of the fastest there is – he’s closed his season on 14 wins this year.

Not many of us would have noticed his winning two world junior track titles in 2012, the omnium and Madison.

But we did sit up when he beat Cav twice in San Luis in 2015; since then he’s won a classic, Paris-Tours and was the top fast man in this year’s Giro.

Gent-Wevelgem and Milano-Sanremo must beckon?

Young Colombians for the future?

Jarlinson Pantano is actually out of the sport at the moment following a postiive test for EPO.

There’s Jarlinson Pantano and Winner Anacona of course but I’d chose two others before them…

Miguel Angel Lopez.

Miguel Angel Lopez won l’Avenir (naturally) in 2014.

Since then he’s been moving seamlessly up and on – 2015, fourth overall and a stage in Burgos, seventh overall in the Tour de Suisse; 2016 saw him win the Swiss tour, Milano-Torino and take a stage in Langkawi whilst this season saw a stage and third overall in the Tour of Austria, fourth overall and a stage in Burgos and two stages in the Vuelta.

He’s the real deal.

And finally – last year we were consoling Pro Continental team Androni’s manager because his squad hadn’t made the Giro.

He told us that whilst that was a disappointment he had struck gold with a lad who had just won the Tour of Bihor-Bellotto in Romania, a certain Egan Bernal.

Egan Bernal with Androni team boss Gianni Savio. Photo©Yuzuru Sunada

Bernal finished fourth in the 2016 l’Avenir but moved up to win it this year, taking two stages along the way.

He also won two stages and the GC in the Tour des Pays de Savoie and two stages in the GC in the Sibiu Tour in Romania.

We’re not sure that signing for Sky was the right thing to do for his development – but as AC/DC say; ‘Listen to the Money Talk.’

Ed Hood
Ed Hood
Ed's been involved in cycling for over 50 years. In that time he's been a successful time triallist, a team manager and a sponsor of several teams and clubs. He's also a respected and successful coach and during the winter months was often working in the cabins at the Six Days for some of the world's top riders. Ed remains a massive fan of the sport and couples his extensive contacts with an inexhaustible enthusiasm for the minutiae and the history of our sport. In February 2023 however, our dear friend and beloved colleague Ed suffered a devastating stroke and faces an uncertain future; Ed has lost his ability to speak, to read, and has lost movement on the right side of his body. He's working with speech and physical therapists on rehabilitation, but all strokes are different and each patient responds differently, so unfortunately recovery is one day at a time. Ed ran his own business installing windows, and will probably not be able to work again. Please consider joining us to make a contribution to Ed's GoFundMe page to help stabilise and secure his future.

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