A Significant Other: Riding the Centenary Tour de France with Lance Armstrong

A Significant Other: Riding the Centenary Tour de France with Lance Armstrong

by Matt Rendell (Author)

Synopsis

Lance Armstrong's place in the cycling history books is assured. Winner of the Tour de France a record-breaking six times, he is regarded as one of the greatest individual talents the sport has ever seen. Perhaps his most compelling victory was in 2003 when he won the coveted Centenary race. However, without the team of brilliant athletes assembled to support him - the domestiques - victory in the Tour would have been impossible. Not only do these superbly trained athletes ride alongside the team leader, supplying water and equipment, but they also create a moving stream of energy that is vital for competitive success. In 2003, Lance Armstrong's domestique, Victor Hugo Pena, actually took over the yellow jersey and stepped into history. A Significant Other is the story of that race but also of these unsung heros of the sport.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 192
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Phoenix
Published: 05 May 2005

ISBN 10: 0753818744
ISBN 13: 9780753818749
Book Overview: Hardback was a top ten bestselling sports book - over 12,000 hardbacks sold Our book on the Tour de France Centennial has sold over 50,000 copies at 25, which makes this a bargain Paperback published in the run up to Tour de France 2005, when Lance Armstrong will try to make it 7 wins in a row 'A Significant Other is a tour de force of endeavour, landscape, history, and -something rare in the world of sport though central to the world of cycling- altruistic generosity' Jim Crace 'Rendell elegantly elucidates the tactical technicalities of cycling's unique mixture of co-operation and competition, teamwork and individualism...Through Pena's transcribed first-person accounts, Rendell places us right in the midst of the swarming bunch' Guardian 'You won't find a better analysis of the extraordinary collective feat that is a team of cyclists working together at speed' Independent on Sunday.

Author Bio
MATT RENDELL survived Hodgkin's Disease and lecturing at British and Latvian universities before entering TV and print journalism. He has written for the BBC, ITV and Channel 4, including British coverage of the Tour de France, and he edited The Tour de France Centennial 1903-2003 (Weidenfeld and Nicolson 2003). The National Sporting Club named Matt Rendell 'Best New Sports Writer 2003'