It’s 30th June 2006 and Britain’s Nicole Cooke is in the town of Valréas, some 65km north of Avignon in southeast France. She is standing astride her bike, waiting for the start of the fourth stage of the 2006 Grande Boucle Féminine Internationale, the women’s equivalent of the Tour de France.
As she waits in front of the crowd, she finds an inner calm; all noise fades away as her thoughts turn back in time. She sees her 12-year-old self – the girl who had sat at home in the Vale of Glamorgan every summer and watched Tour de France highlights on TV; the girl who was inspired by seeing Robert Millar climbing in the Alps and Pyrenees; the girl who dreamed that one day she would do the same.
Ahead is a 115km ride to l’Isle-sur-laSorgue. It is a special stage with one of cycling’s most revered climbs – Mont Ventoux – on the route. Cooke is wearing yellow. She has been in the leader’s jersey since her Stage 1 time-trial victory in the Pyrenean ski resort of Font Romeu, and is now nearly one minute ahead of the second placed rider. Her Univega teammates have also been enjoying success, picking up two more stage wins as the peloton crossed the southern reaches of France.
Just one stage remains after today and Cooke is in pole position. There is no need for her to do anything drastic – she has never ridden Ventoux before. It is up to the others to try to take the jersey from her shoulders. Cooke can just monitor everybody else, save her energy, react if need be. That’s all she needs to do. But this is Ventoux and that 12-year-old is there, watching her every pedal stroke.
Power and glory
Denne historien er fra August 2023 - 142-utgaven av Cyclist UK.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra August 2023 - 142-utgaven av Cyclist UK.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
Best of both worlds
The new Trek Madone blends the speed of the brand's quickest superbike with the lightness of its mountain-crushing Émonda to become the ultimate race bike
Eddy Merckx Pévèle Carbon
A versatile design that shows the pros and cons of flexible build options
Gravel ride: Girona Welcome to Cycling Central
Girona in Catalonia has become one of Europe's most popular cycling venues thanks to its weather, roads and culture. But it's still possible to leave the hordes behind by going off-tarmac
Revolutions and evolutions
The wheel may be a 5,000-year-old invention but designers are still finding ways to make it lighter, faster, safer and more stable.
Kitzbüheler Horn
The Austrian climb that dishes out pain
Cycling history in six items
In the first of a series on cyling's historical artefacts, Cyclist visits the KOERS Museum in Belgium to discover the pick of the exhibits.
Different times
What was the cycling world like 75 years ago? Now in his midnineties, Scottish former champion Ramsay Mackay remembers those times like they were yesterday
Big Ride: Alpe d'Huez - Climb and a half
No climb is as emblematic of the Tour de France as Alpe d'Huez. Ahead of its first appearance at the women's Tour, Cyclist takes a ride around it and up it. And then up it again
This Olympic Road Race might actually be worth watching
A punchy finale around Paris's Butte de Montmartre will bring the excitement usually missing from the Olympic Road Race, says Felix Lowe
Beryl Burton wins her first road Worlds
Beryl Burton claimed the first of two World Championships Road Race titles in 1960, becoming the first rider to win pursuit and road world titles in the same year