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The Closing Descent, by Michael Thompson

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Title: The Closing Descent – The Untold Story of the First Rider to Die within the Tour de France
Writer: Michael Thompson
Writer: Thompson
12 months: 2023
Pages: 213
Order: Thompson
What it’s: A biography of Francisco ‘Paco’ Cepeda, who died whereas collaborating within the 1935 Tour de France
Strengths: Thompson’s dogged analysis has scraped away the layer of fantasy and lies which have grow to be hooked up to Cepeda’s story, permitting him to get to the reality beneath and provide a becoming tribute to the primary rider to die in the course of the Tour as a consequence of a racing accident
Weaknesses: As with a number of biking books, just a few extra photos can be appreciated

The Final Descent – The Untold Story of the First Rider to Die in the Tour de France, by Michael Thompson

The Closing Descent – The Untold Story of the First Rider to Die within the Tour de France, by Michael Thompson
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Rising within the north of the Massif des Écrins and fed by the meltwater of the Plate des Agneux glacier, the Romanche river flows down by the valley that bears its identify, passing Bourg-d’Oisans and Vizille earlier than emptying into the Drac close to Grenoble, after simply 78 kilometres. Within the early a part of the 20th century the river fed native industries, its water producing electrical energy which powered paper mills and metal works within the villages alongside its size.

Rioupéroux is one such village, about midway between Bourg-d’Oisans and Vizille. Little distinguishes it from different villages within the Romanche valley. However in 1935, towards the top of the seventh stage of the twenty-ninth Tour de France, Rioupéroux’s identify was written into the historical past books. It was there, on Thursday July eleventh, on an innocuous stretch of street on the outskirts of the village, that the Spanish rider Francisco ‘Paco’ Cepeda fell and fractured his cranium. His unconscious physique was rushed to a hospital in Grenoble the place, three days later, he succumbed to his accidents and died. He was the Tour’s first racing fatality, and solely the second rider to die in the course of the race, after Adolphe Hélière’s rest-day dying in 1910 whereas swimming.

Besides … the historical past books don’t keep in mind Rioupéroux. Cepeda’s dying, they virtually all let you know, occurred on the descent off the Galibier. Most preserve it that straightforward, he died descending Henri Desgrange’s favorite mountain. A few of the extra creative add garish color by having Cepeda plunge off the street right into a ravine.

Tour de France, 1935

Tour de France, 1935
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Cepeda’s accident occurred on the seventh stage of the 1935 Tour.

Cepeda’s accident occurred on the seventh stage of the 1935 Tour. Despite the fact that it occurred greater than 60 kilometres after the summit of the Galibier, you possibly can – on a technicality – argue it was on the descent off the Galibier, in the event you take the view that the entire of the second half of the stage was one lengthy descent right down to Grenoble.
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Even Rioupéroux itself doesn’t keep in mind its function within the Spaniard’s dying: not even a plaque recollects the occasions of that fateful day. Tom Simpson has his altar on the slopes of the Ventoux, Fabio Casartelli his shrine on the Portet d’Aspet, however Cepeda – like Hélière – is with out memorial on the Tour’s route.

Have we grow to be extra mawkish in recent times in the way in which that we have a good time the deaths of riders, or is there one thing about Cepeda’s dying that makes it tough for the Tour and its mythographers to mark correctly?

Michael Thompson’s The Closing Descent – The Untold Story of the First Rider to Die within the Tour de France doesn’t deal with the primary a part of that query (the reply, in case you’re in any doubt, is sure, we’ve grow to be extra mawkish) but it surely does go deep into why the second half will also be answered within the affirmative.

Cepeda’s dying wasn’t merely a racing accident. It was an emblem of the informal cruelty with which the Tour handled riders because the race grew to become an increasing number of commercialised. Within the decade since Albert Londres had not referred to the riders of the 1924 Tour as forçats de la route a lot had modified, for the higher. The Tour was exiting the Heroic Age of the vagabonds of the street and gearing up for the Golden Age of stars like Coppi, Koblet, and Bobet. However on the identical time most of the criticisms levelled on the Tour in 1924 had been nonetheless legitimate within the ‘30s. You wouldn’t deal with a mule the way in which the Tour handled its riders in these years.


Francisco Cepeda is just not in contrast to Théo Beeckman, the ostensible topic of Ned Boulting’s current ebook about the 1923 Tour. Like Beeckman’s, his identify seems in all of the blow-by-blow Tour histories however – once more like Beeckman – he doesn’t actually function anyplace. Within the huge image of the Tour, he was one other who was by no means actually all that vital. Which is true of 99% of those that have contributed to the Tour’s historical past. (And the ghost of Homer whispered…)

In contrast to Boulting’s plague diary, which in the end had little to say about Beeckman and favoured as an alternative the creator’s manic, Covid-fed obsessions, Michael Thompson’s The Closing Descent has rather a lot to inform us about Cepeda and his rise by the ranks of the game, in addition to portray a useful portrait of the Tour within the Thirties.

Thompson’s curiosity in Cepeda was first piqued after he and his spouse purchased a small house close to Valloire, the ski resort sandwiched between the Col du Télégraphe and the Col du Galibier. Understanding just a little Tour historical past Thompson knew – or thought he knew – that Cepeda had died descending the Galibier and so, in 2014, he set about discovering out the place.

He additionally set about discovering out extra in regards to the man himself, in 2015 visiting the Basque village of Sopuerta the place Cepeda was born in 1906. He devoured books in regards to the Tour and, in addition to the French journals obtainable on Gallica, he trawled Spanish archives, from ABC to Excelsius, La Gaceta del Norte to El Mundo Deportivo.

In 2017 Thompson’s analysis led him to Cepeda’s grand nephew, Alvaro Rey Cepeda, who was additionally searching for solutions to questions on Cepeda. This led to a treasure trove of analysis materials: “The household had saved nearly each Spanish press chopping the place Cepeda’s identify was talked about,” Thompson advised me not too long ago, “and each journal article proper as much as the current day, so I had a wealth of fabric from Spain.”

Taken with the outcomes of his personal analysis, Thompson started to really feel he had sufficient info obtainable to him to inform Cepeda’s story. His first victories in 1925. His rise by the ranks of Basque biking after which the broader realm of Spanish biking. His debut on the worldwide stage when, as a member of the Spanish staff within the 1930 Tour, he was to the fore when the race crossed the Galibier. The frustration of the 1931 Tour. His slide into semi-retirement. His return to racing when he was invited to journey the primary Vuelta a España in 1935. His return to the Tour later that very same yr and his dying ten days into that race.

In 1931 the French newspaper Excelsior anointed Cepeda – bottom right – one of the favourites for victory in that year’s Tour.

In 1931 the French newspaper Excelsior anointed Cepeda – backside proper – one of many favourites for victory in that yr’s Tour.
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Buried inside all the knowledge obtainable to him, Thompson shortly realised, was a number of misinformation. “I got here throughout a number of inaccuracies once I was writing the story,” Thompson advised me. “One was from the Tour de France: Official one hundredth Race Anniversary Version and was fairly unhealthy. Beneath the chapter 1935 it exhibits an image of Cepeda main Vicente Trueba up the Galibier with a caption saying, ‘Quickly after this picture was taken, Cepeda suffered a deadly crash’. The image is from Cepeda’s debut Tour, in 1930, once they climbed the Galibier from the southern aspect. In 1935, they climbed it from Valloire on the opposite aspect. This ebook was by the famend Tour historian, Serge Laget. Are you able to describe 5 years as being quickly?”

From Serge Laget et al’s Tour de France: The Official 100th Race Anniversary Edition

From Serge Laget et al’s Tour de France: The Official one hundredth Race Anniversary Version, displaying Cepeda and Trueba crossing the Col du Galibier within the 1930 Tour, however miscaptioned as being from the 1935 Tour and having been taken shortly earlier than Cepeda’s crash greater than 60 kilometres and 5 years later.
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The errors lengthen past badly captioned photos, as Thompson defined to me: “In among the historical past books I’ve learn the household is described as bourgeois and rich. They are saying Cepeda didn’t must journey for the cash. That’s not true both. He actually didn’t go into biking for the cash however when he did begin to earn cash it actually helped the household. All of them labored arduous. With the cash he earned from biking Cepeda rented a automotive for the household however then labored as a taxi driver to assist pay for the working of it. The household ran a really small normal retailer from their home within the village however there have been many mouths to feed.”

The concept Cepeda was bourgeois, that comes from the pages of L’Auto, the place the playwright Robert Dieudonné, eulogising Cepeda, described him in these phrases:

“Poor little Cepeda! He was not, like Trueba, just a little peasant who hoped to make his fortune on the roads of France. He was the son of a bourgeois household: his father is on the head of a enterprise the place his son was employed. I can see the daddy shrugging his shoulders when the son left to compete but once more within the Tour de France: ‘As in the event you wanted it!’”

Whether or not it was his intent or not, in inserting Cepeda as a member of the bourgeoisie, Dieudonné was suggesting that Cepeda was not a correct, skilled bicycle owner, only a dilettante. Whether or not it was his intent or not, Dieudonné was saying Cepeda was complicit in his personal dying, a devoted skilled wouldn’t have fallen the way in which Cepeda did.

Few in the present day blame Cepeda for what occurred to him, it usually being agreed in the present day that Cepeda’s accident was brought on by the Duralumin – a light-weight aluminium-copper alloy – rims Tour bikes got here geared up with in 1935, changing the picket rims favoured as much as then. All through the early a part of the 1935 Tour, some journalists had been blaming the steel rims for what they felt was an extreme variety of punctures and crashes, the argument being that steel rims carried out warmth badly and this induced the glue binding the tyres to them to soften and the tubulars to then roll off.

“I’ve had the expertise of a tubular rolling off the rear rim in a street race again within the late 70,” Thompson advised me. “I’d punctured warming up and didn’t have a spare wheel so I put a brand new tub on for the race. A lot of the adhesive comes off with the punctured tyre once you rip it off and the brand new tyre is barely caught on with what’s left on the rim. Forty miles into the race on a nook it rolled off. It was the again wheel so I fortunately simply went right into a slide and obtained the standard street rash.

“In 1935 they had been puncturing a number of occasions so I’m unsure how a lot adhesive can be left on the edges or how good the adhesive was within the first place. I’ve additionally ridden from the Galibier all the way in which to Grenoble and there’s a lot of braking and the route they took down the south aspect was rather a lot steeper than the current route.

“The part of street the place Cepeda crashed isn’t that steep and the bend is extra of a gradual curve so I feel it’s unlikely that the autumn will be put solely right down to an unlucky error of judgement by the rider however the absolute fact won’t ever be recognized.”

This picture appeared in Le Miroir des Sports shortly after Cepeda’s death

This image appeared in Le Miroir des Sports activities shortly after Cepeda’s dying and was captioned as displaying the Spanish rider fixing a puncture in St-Jean-de-Maurienne, about 50 kilometres earlier than the summit of the Galibier. Whereas Cepeda did puncture close to St-Jean-de-Maurienne, this image is just not him, his jersey was gray with a single band of color, purple, from the Spanish flag.
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Thompson doesn’t go into the story of the Duralumin rims in any nice element. “Within the ebook I write about what I do know to be true and keep away from something which I’ve doubts about or haven’t any proof for,” he defined to me, and in terms of the Duralumin rims, a lot is unknown. That mentioned, I personally would have most popular a bit extra on this side of the story. Incidents like Annemiek van Vleuten’s crash within the 2022 World Championships or Thomas de Gendt’s within the 2024 UAE Tour have demonstrated we will be fairly crap at correctly figuring out the reason for some crashes. We shouldn’t simply settle for unquestioningly the claims made in regards to the function of the Duralumin rims in Cepeda’s fall.

To call Duralumin untested – as some do – would not be true.

To name Duralumin rims untested – as some do – wouldn’t be true. Advertisements selling Duralumin had been showing in L’Auto all through 1935. The advert on the left claimed that 75% of Paris-Good’s finishers used the light-weight rims. In an article from Paris-Excursions, Jean Leulliot famous that 125 bikes had been geared up with them. At Paris-Roubaix L’Auto’s readers had been advised that quantity was 141. The edges had clearly been embraced by the commerce groups, they didn’t simply seem out of nowhere on the 1935 Tour.
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The reason for Cepeda’s fall is vital, but it surely isn’t the true challenge right here. The actual challenge right here is how Desgrange and L’Auto responded to Cepeda’s dying. And that is a matter Thompson does go into element on.

The brief model of how Desgrange and L’Auto responded to Cepeda’s dying is that they responded badly. Cepeda’s fall on the Aix-les-Bains — Grenoble stage went unreported in L’Auto and when information of his dying got here by three days later the race have moved on to Good, mockingly the place Hélière had died 25 years earlier. As they did then, and as they’ve completed since, the riders paused a second in silence to recollect their fallen comrade. After which obtained on with issues.

However they weren’t all getting on with issues on Duralumin rims. A report in Le Miroir des Sports activities claimed that even earlier than Cepeda’s accident Desgrange had accepted there was a problem with the edges and referred to as in alternative wheels, with tried-and-tested picket rims. “The truth that Desgrange switched the Duralumin rims for picket rims,” Thompson advised me, “demonstrated that he had doubts about them. However he stopped in need of a full and correct investigation, which I feel amounted to negligence. You wouldn’t get away with that now.”

Throughout the pages of L’Auto, little was written about Cepeda past Dieudonné’s saccharine eulogy. Communist and socialist newspapers took up Cepeda’s trigger and criticised Desgrange and the Tour, however in contrast to in 1924 when L’Auto had addressed criticisms of the race being made by Albert Londres and Henri Pélissier, this time around the critics had been met with silence.

“It appeared that Henri Desgrange went out of his manner to not acknowledge Paco’s dying,” Thompson writes in The Closing Descent. “He was presumably determined to keep away from any unfavourable protection of his race, in addition to accusations of blame. […] Primitivo, Paco’s youthful brother, was offended in regards to the absence of any monetary compensation from the Tour and the truth that Desgrange didn’t attend the funeral or provide his private condolences. He confirmed that the household had written to the Tour asking for the insurance coverage protection however, in return, had solely acquired a duplicate of a clause, by which the organisers said they weren’t chargeable for any accidents acquired by the riders, and, moreover, wouldn’t even be chargeable for any damages induced to 3rd events.”

Francisco ‘Paco’ Cepeda

Francisco ‘Paco’ Cepeda
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Having washed their palms of the issue in 1935, the Tour has continued to have a problematic relationship with Cepeda. Writing in his 1991 memoir L’Équipe Belle Jacques Goddet – Desgrange’s successor, who was on the 1935 Tour – didn’t even point out Cepeda’s dying when he wrote in regards to the 1935 race, preferring as an alternative to recount an anecdote about Georges Speicher almost getting arrested. Within the Tour’s official historical past, even the suggestion that the Duralumin rims might need performed a task in Cepeda’s dying is ignored, Laget and his colleagues as an alternative claiming that “Cepeda suffered a deadly fall on the descent of the Galibier on account of brake failure.”

Cepeda deserves higher than this. His is a crucial story, one as related now because it was then for the way in which it exhibits how little we query the hazards in our sport and the way used we’re to only sweeping accidents away and getting on with it. The followers. The media. The authorities. It doesn’t must be like that.

However The Closing Descent is about extra than simply that. It’s also a few man, an actual individual, a man who shone brightly briefly however whose life and whose dying have largely been missed, grow to be shrouded in lies and half-truths. Cepeda could also be with out memorial on the street the place he fell however Thompson right here has given him a becoming tribute, one price your time studying.


The Final Descent – The Untold Story of the First Rider to Die in the Tour de France, by Michael Thompson

The Closing Descent – The Untold Story of the First Rider to Die within the Tour de France, by Michael Thompson
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