Top Banana: Tour de France 2018 stage 2 – Lawson Craddock

Top Banana: Tour de France 2018 stage 2 – Lawson Craddock

They make ’em tough in Texas. No-one would have blamed Lawson Craddock for calling it a Tour after yesterday’s horror crash, but despite being bloody, bruised and broken, he races on. Top Banana, and then some.

Lawson Craddock Racing Team EF Team EF Education First Drapac p/b Cannondale Top Banana Tour de France Tour de France 2018

Lawson Craddock didn’t have to do more than turn up to take today’s Top Banana prize. Still, given the kicking he took yesterday, that one thing was no small ask. Had the unlucky number 13 packed it in the moment the race rolled out of Mouilleron-Saint-Germain, we’d still have given it to him. As it was he made it to the arrivé in La Roche-sur-Yon this evening. 

The crash occurred in the feedzone, halfway through the opening stage. It was caused, his team said, by a carelessly discarded bidon that sent Craddock careering into the crowd. It left him with “a small fracture along the spine of his left scapula”, a cut above his eyebrow requiring stitches and probably a very uncomfortable night’s sleep. 

Emerging from the Team EF bus this morning with his shoulder wrapped in natty argyle medical tape – as well as a left eye that would not have looked out of place at Saturday’s Cure concert in London – the Texan expressed his determination to ride on for as long as he felt able. For every stage he completes he will donate $100 to support racing at the Alkek Velodrome, in his hometown of Houston. Feel free to chip in a few bucks yourself.

If Craddock makes it to Paris, it would not be the first time a rider has ridden through the pain barrier for 20-plus stages. Sam Bennett famously carried on after falling victim to an opening day bunch sprint smash at Utah Beach two years ago. In his determination not to abandon, Bennett drew on reserves he didn’t know he had, enduring more than a few dark days on the bike. As he looks to be in for some of the same, Craddock might want to ask the Irishman how he managed it.

 

A few on the sidelines have said it’s foolhardy for him to continue. But we cannot know how the rider is feeling, and we have to trust him to know what his body can endure. We also have to trust that the team and its doctors will not risk the rider’s long-term health, merely to avoid a DNF. 

The Tour de France is suffering, even for the rider in peak health and fitness. It’s also the pinnacle of the sport, so what’s a little bit more in the scheme of things? There’s no shame in quitting, of course there isn’t, but the Lanterne Rouge is often the rider who has had the hardest time at the Tour and carried on regardless. Today’s is truly an honourable Top Banana. 

Two down. Nineteen to go.

Top Banana: Tour de France 2018 stage 1 – Yoann Offredo

The Rouleur Top Banana goes to an unsung hero of each stage of the Tour de France – not the winner, not the yellow jersey – but a rider whose efforts deserve recognition

 

The post Top Banana: Tour de France 2018 stage 2 – Lawson Craddock appeared first on The world's finest cycling magazine.

Lawson Craddock Racing Team EF Team EF Education First Drapac p/b Cannondale Top Banana Tour de France Tour de France 2018

READ MORE

Richard Carapaz at the Giro d'Italia

Courageous or crazy – Could different tactics have won Richard Carapaz the Giro d’Italia?

The EF Education-EasyPost rider made an attack early in the stage but failed to capitalise off his work, ending up third on the general classification

Read more
Isaac del Toro at the Giro d'Italia 2025

Opinion: UAE Team Emirates-XRG lost the Giro a long time before the Colle de Finestre

Isaac del Toro loses the pink jersey to Simon Yates who attacked on the legendary Colle delle Finestre

Read more
How to win a Grand Tour – Inside Visma-Lease a Bike’s tactical Giro masterclass

How to win a Grand Tour – Inside Visma-Lease a Bike’s tactical Giro masterclass

Simon Yates took the pink jersey on the penultimate day of racing after his team executed a perfect performance

Read more
‘It was Finestre where he lost everything, and Finestre where he won it all back’ - Simon Yates proves fairytale endings exist

‘It was Finestre where he lost everything, and Finestre where he won it all back’ - Simon Yates proves fairytale endings exist

The Visma-Lease a Bike rider rode into the pink jersey after stage 20 of the Giro d’Italia, finally achieving redemption in the race which has...

Read more
Giro d'Italia 2025 stage 21 preview: Roman finale

Giro d'Italia 2025 stage 21 preview: Roman finale

The Giro's final stage is one for the sprinters on a flat finish in the Italian capital

Read more
The Giro d'Italia 2025

It’s not over until the Finestre is conquered: Giro’s Cima Coppi set to decide the maglia rosa

The race enters favoured terrain for second-place Richard Carapaz, can he use it to usurp the pink jersey Isaac del Toro?

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