Wednesday, November 27, 2019

An imaginary champion in Athol, Mass


The bikes I dreamed about were not being made in the Schwinn factory in America, but were designed and manufactured in Italy. Eddy Merckx, a famous bike racer of the 1970s, was having bikes hand-built by Ugo de Rosa in Milan, a bike-building legend in his own right. I would pretend that I too, like Eddy, was racing my bike for the final win in the Triple Crown of Cycling. A feat never before accomplished, I was about to win the Giro d’Italla, the Tour de France, and the Road World Cycling Championship all in one season. The crowd went wild as I flew from the maple-lined streets of town through winding pastureland roads with giant white pines standing like gendarmes at every intersection, and finally across the uptown metal girder bridge to the finish line in the common across from the Congregational church. By the end of his career, Merckx, a native of Belgium, had become a national hero and an international cycling superstar. In 1974, Eddy gave his winning De Rosa to the Pope, who prominently displayed it in the Chapel of the Madonna del Ghisallo in Rome, a church dedicated to bicycle racing. I walked over and triumphantly leaned my Schwinn against the steps of the Congregational church, feeling satisfied.     

Merckx winning the Tour De France 1971
Molteni team in the 1971 Tour de France