The Link: Cyclo-cross à Melun, 1924

The Link: Cyclo-cross à Melun, 1924

Early cyclo-cross: winter training for roadies or preparation for war?

Cyclo-cross Racing

If the origins of ‘cross remain unclear, the notion that road riders founded the discipline as a base winter fitness routine is rubbished by a letter sent to the French Cycling Union in 1901. 

Daniel Gousseau, formerly a private in the French army, sought official sanction from the governing body for racing involving no set route, taking in fields, streams, stone walls and any other obstacles nature might throw in the riders’ way, as training and preparation for war – a sound idea at the time, perhaps, but hardly sufficient for the carnage of the Flanders battlefields 13 years later. 

Early cyclo-cross was, much like road racing at the time, brutally hard. Actually riding the bike was a rarity. Here, Paris champion Nicolas Urme trudges uphill with the banks of the Seine in the background. 

Suggested by Graeme Stewart

THE LINK SO FAR

17.1 – Stybar slips on the Carrefour de l’Arbre, 2013

17.2 – Cancellara outwits the sprinters in Compiègne, 2007

17.3 – Tony Martin’s amazing 175km solo break, 2013

17.4 – Philippe Tesnière and the battle for lanterne rouge, 1980

17.5 – Lance Armstrong’s bully tactics, 2004

17.6 – Ivan Basso’s off-road excursion, 2003

Your photo suggestions to follow on from this story for issue 17.8 please.

A suitably tough modern equivalent of early ‘cross, perhaps? Carrying a bike when it should clearly be ridden? Email the connection and the story to link@rouleur.cc

The post The Link: Cyclo-cross à Melun, 1924 appeared first on The world's finest cycling magazine.

Cyclo-cross Racing

READ MORE

Joe Pidcock's lonely solo ride at Paris-Roubaix: 'The cobbled sectors were full of people walking'

Joe Pidcock's lonely solo ride at Paris-Roubaix: 'The cobbled sectors were full of people walking'

The Yorkshireman was the last rider to cross the line at Paris-Roubaix, 53 minutes and 40 seconds after the winner

Read more
A Roubaix romance: Why this is sport's greatest stadium

A Roubaix romance: Why this is sport's greatest stadium

The finish of Paris-Roubaix is like no other and the velodrome will be home to legends for years to come, writes Rachel Jary

Read more
‘Van Aert said he would work for me’ - How Paris-Roubaix’s youngest rider became Visma-Lease a Bike’s unexpected co-leader

‘Van Aert said he would work for me’ - How Paris-Roubaix’s youngest rider became Visma-Lease a Bike’s unexpected co-leader

19-year-old Matthew Brennan impressed in his debut performance at the Hell of the North, at times appearing to be the strongest rider in his team’s...

Read more
‘He will be like Merckx’ - Paris-Roubaix is proof that Tadej Pogačar will win all five Monuments

‘He will be like Merckx’ - Paris-Roubaix is proof that Tadej Pogačar will win all five Monuments

The world champion narrowly missed out on a victory at his Hell of the North debut – his performance is a menacing sign for years...

Read more
'It's quite exceptional' – Is Mathieu van der Poel this century's greatest Classics rider?

'It's quite exceptional' – Is Mathieu van der Poel this century's greatest Classics rider?

The Alpecin-Deceuninck rider has now won eight Monuments, and next year will be looking to equal the record number of Paris-Roubaix victories.

Read more
‘This was my first time ever on a velodrome’ - Rosa Klöser, from the Kansas flint hills to the Roubaix cobbles

‘This was my first time ever on a velodrome’ - Rosa Klöser, from the Kansas flint hills to the Roubaix cobbles

The Canyon//SRAM rider finished the Hell of the North after a dramatic but rewarding first experience on the cobbles

Read more

READ RIDE REPEAT

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Get closer to the sport than ever before.

Enjoy a digital subscription to Rouleur for just £4 per month and get access to our award-winning magazines.

SUBSCRIBE