Authors: Ned Boulting
He had a fastidious nature that earned him respect and affectionate mockery in equal measure; beautifully turned out, manicured almost. A âsofty' as a noisy incoming generation of road racers, like John Herety, would have described him. In fact that's exactly how John affectionately describes him when I ask him what Mick was like. He had an easy-going nature, and took things with good heart.
One day that all changed. It was the day he stopped racing forever.
In 1984 at the age of thirty-five, Mick and his fiancée Mandy had bought an old house together, which they were renovating. Financially, it was a bottomless pit, and they were permanently flirting with solvency issues. Mandy was fretting about money, and Mick had just finished riding in the now defunct French race, the Etoile des Espoirs. But, as she delighted in telling Mick over the phone to the South of France, they'd had a little windfall.
The BBC had finally paid up for his appearance on
Superteams
, an offshoot of the now legendary
Superstars
. They had money in their account, for a change.
âI said, “Why don't you fly out? We'll have a holiday afterwards,”' Mick tells me.
And so she did. They embarked on a week's driving holiday. They were just near to Châteauroux, where they were going to meet up with his new teammate John Herety, and his future wife, Margaret, when their sponsored Peugeot car was hit, side-on by a French couple on a motorbike.
âMandy was killed, and I was the only one left alive in the accident.'
âDid he tell you that?'
John Herety is surprised, when I speak to him later by telephone. âI don't think we've ever spoken about it since. I don't remember ever speaking about it.'
John is a stocky, warm, amiable and completely bald Mancunian from Cheadle. A trained chef (just like Mick Bennett, curiously) he rode in the 1980 Olympic Road Race, and had a long career which yielded a National Road Race title. After his racing career, he went into coaching, at one time as British Cycling's race director. He resigned from that post in 2005 after allegations that two of Britain's representatives in the World Championships, Tom Southam and Charly Wegelius, sold their loyalty to the Italian national team. Since then, John has managed the über-cool Rapha Condor team. For some time now, he has been operating right at the heart of the British domestic scene.
My phone call has just taken him back almost thirty years in time. And I can hear from his voice, that it's caught him slightly off guard.
But he remembers clearly. âThey went off on a week-long trip. About sixty kilometres from where they were going to meet me and Margaret, they changed driving positions. Mandy started driving. On the way from Châteauroux to Tours, they saw one last chateau. As she was turning round in the road, a motorbike came speeding over the brow of a hill. It went straight into the car door and killed her instantly. Mick was admitted straight to hospital.
âMandy loved France. She wanted to visit all the chateaux.'
Mick Bennett spent a week in Châteauroux hospital, recovering from wounds that instantly ended his racing career. Then he returned to Britain, and slowly started a new life. He has since married, and has a family.
Châteauroux. Why does that place name keep recurring?
There is an affectation, which was briefly fashionable among the chattering classes, for a âscience' called psychogeography. It's all about psychological ley lines, the meaning in maps, the spiritual meta-text of places, and their mysterious alignment to history. I used to think it was nonsense. And it probably is.
But then, Châteauroux would suggest otherwise. And, having visited it often in the course of my duties, I am strangely affected to hear its beautifully wrought name crop up again in the life story of another British cyclist.
Bradley Wiggins in 2011, arm in a sling, swaying slightly and woozy with morphine, talking to me in the car park of Châteauroux hospital, his Tour ended by a broken collarbone. Mark Cavendish, on the very same day, winning for the seventeenth time. Back home, Mick Bennett would have been watching on TV.
Three years previously, Mark Cavendish, in the dark blue of Columbia's 2008 kit, fists clenched in wonderment, crossing the line in Châteauroux to take his first ever stage win on the Tour de France.
Once again, Mick Bennett was at home, watching. And, without a shadow of doubt, cheering.
It's the flip side of Mick Bennett. The one that, for all his occasional bluster, is too rarely glimpsed. But I've seen him taking time out in the middle of the most hectic part of the day to return a free sponsor's flag that some kid has dropped on the road. Then he'll spend more time than you might think talking to the youngster, until, with a ruffle of their hair, he's off to make the race work. When he looks at the future, he has one eye on the past.
âNow it seems the heart's almost gone out of it.'
Mick squints at me from behind his desk. It is obvious where this conversation is heading. The march on progress has stolen the joy. The spirit is in danger of being bludgeoned out of the sport. Mick Bennett, despite his reputation, is capable of disarming sentimentality, an affliction that I suffer from too.
âAs a kid, I just had this passion and this yearning to get out on my bike because it was a release. It was independence. I could go twenty or thirty miles on this bike and get away from it. I suddenly realised, and it was like a bolt of lightning: my God, I'm thirty miles from home in this countryside and it's incredible. It's amazing. I am in complete control of my destiny. It was the start of a journey that I'm still on.'
Mark Cavendish is a favoured son of Mick Bennett. Mick's eyes light up when he talks about him. Every year, regardless of which team Cavendish is riding for, Mick goes out of his way to cajole, persuade and ensure the Manxman's participation in his race.
âCavendish is fantastic. That's what I call a professional bike rider. Because it's in here.' He thumps his heart. âHe genuinely can attach himself to the other side of the barrier. He's a bit old school.
âHe's the best in the world at what he does. But that was how he started. He felt that independence and that freedom. And I wonder how many kids have got that. And that's why he's pissed off and he's passionate, because it's from here.' He points, again, demonstratively at his heart.
âIt's almost as if that bit has gone somewhere. And I don't seem to see it anywhere else now.'
On the last day of the 2012 Tour of Britain, Mark Cavendish, who had suffered like a dog for a week through wet and wild hills and a terrain that punished him every day, rode up the cobbled high street of Guildford for the last time in his cherished Rainbow Jersey. With two hundred metres left to race, he'd torn an unbridgeable gap in the bunch, and had time to look over his shoulder, sit up and coast into a wall of jubilant noise.
The crowd had stood ten deep all day waiting for just this moment. It placed a perfect full stop at the end of an extraordinary summer.
No longer was the Tour of Britain an oddity, a quirky secret, an irritation to the flow of traffic and a financial basket case. The mainstream, for better or worse, had washed in.
âWe're on a tidal wave of support for cycling. We are pushing on open doors.'
I put it to Mick that he's sometimes not as hard-nosed as people think he is. âYou're quite sentimental,' I tell him.
âI am.'
Then I make a confession. I admit that, driving past the dozens of primary schools on the route of the Tour of Britain, whose children have been lined up to watch the race go past, all cheering, I sometimes start welling up.
âI do! I do, too, Ned!' And his eyes, now I look, are watery. We both sit there in his office, surprised by each other and surprised by ourselves.
There came a moment on the 2012 Tour of Britain, when I knew that I had finally, perhaps definitively, been accepted into the bosom of the British cycling family. Interestingly, it happened standing on the top of a truck in Stoke-on-Trent, which is not the place you normally would start when you are trying to track down rites of passage.
I was standing (on the truck's roof) in front of a camera, a microphone in one hand, and touching an earpiece with the other. To my right, bolt upright, and deferring to me, stood one of British cycling's most grizzly hard men, Rob Hayles, a rough geezer, by outward appearance, with the slow heart rate of a Buddhist monk. The recently retired former World Champion and Olympic bronze medallist was as popular on the roads of this country as any man who has ridden a bike in anger over recent years. I was somewhat in awe of him. We were both concentrating hard, as the voice in the truck below counted down to our âon air' time.
âOne minute left on the break.'
Rob momentarily broke his pose. I could see from the corner of my eye, that something had caught his attention. He was staring intently at me, or more specifically, at my nose.
âWhat?'
âThirty seconds to on air.'
With great care, Rob reached out towards my face and gently, almost lovingly, stroked the end of my nose with the back of his hand. I watched on, wide-eyed.
He withdrew his hand. âThere. That's better.'
âWhat, Rob?'
âA bogey, Ned.' We both looked down, and sure enough, a small offending crust still clung to the back of his non-microphone hand.
â. . . in ten, nine, eight, seven . . .'
âThanks, Rob.'
âPleasure.' And with the merest hint of a frown, we both assumed our on-air smiles.
Just out of shot, and with great subtlety, Rob Hayles, shook his left hand free of its encumbrance.
But as for me? I knew I had arrived on the Tour of Britain.
â. . . . cue Ned.'
âHello, and welcome to Stoke-on-Trent.'
I HOLD MY
hands up. This book is not even slightly comprehensive. Without justification, or remorse, it ignores shamefully large swathes of the country. The heart of my cycling experience resides elsewhere.
My story pays only lip service to the Union-Jack waving melodrama of the velodrome, skirts the Olympics (haven't we heard enough about them?), only occasionally mentions the Tour de France and leaves BMX racing and cyclo-cross entirely alone to entertain those who understand their peculiar appeals. And, just as it also fails to engage with the important and hugely successful women's cycling scene, so it becomes clear that I am writing with only one particular type of bike rider in mind: me.
Not only that, but it is a story generated in a particular place (London) for a particular audience. Me, again.
Cycling connects the dreamer with the expert practitioner. On my bike, I could be, in my own deluded imagination, a little like the champions I had met, and continued to meet. That's why I found myself drawn over and over again to the same sort of men (and they were, exclusively, men).
The more I bored down into what I sought to understand, the narrower the hole became. But it was no less rich a seam for that.
My own personal history with the bicycle is unremarkable, and features a considerable time out, during which Margaret Thatcher stepped down from power, the Eastern bloc collapsed and Take That came and went. I think Mickey Rourke's pre-comeback career fitted neatly into that void, too.
Before that, some indeterminate time after the end of the Second World War, but before
The X Factor
, I clearly remember standing with my dad in a back garden in Bedford frowning at a skinny blue aluminium bike that some bloke was flogging for fifty quid. Dad had read a small ad in the
Bedfordshire on Sunday
. It was to be my birthday present.
âThis bike was used in the Tour de France, you know.' The bloke in the back garden was perspiring in the July heat, or maybe because he was lying through his teeth.
He seemed very authoritative, very knowledgeable, as he hauled it out of his shed and leant it against a wall. Dad and I were impressed, as much with ourselves for knowing that there was a bike race called the Tour de France as with the bike itself.
âReally?' Dad looked at the machine in muted wonder. He pinched the back tyre, testing all-knowingly for pressure. Once again, I was impressed, this time with Dad, for knowing stuff about tyre pressure.
âHow about forty-eight?' Dad said, and the deal was done with an instant handshake. He was good at haggling, too. I noticed how very suddenly the bloke had stopped perspiring.
It was a great bike, though. I rode it for many years. Even after it had grown fractionally too small for me, I still loved it, and went to college with it. Then I promptly got it nicked, swapped it for a pizza or set fire to it as an act of genre-breaking installation art, I forget how it went.
But that was that for me and bikes for a long, long while.
I left college, moved abroad, drifted around, ran up debts, phoned home for help, then came and settled in London, not knowing where else to go, nor what else to do. Eventually, circuitously, fortuitously, miraculously, just as middle age was finding me, I found the bike again. Luckily.
This renewal of acquaintances followed only after I had been introduced to the Tour de France. That was ITV's fault. It's normally the other way round, of course: first comes the passion for cycling, then the interest in the Tour. But with childlike simplicity, having spent a month watching young men ride bicycles unnaturally fast, I decided, on my return to these shores, that I needed a bit of the action, too.
So I went to Harry Perry's in Woolwich and came out with a mountain bike designed, as its genus suggests, for mountains. The fact that Woolwich and its environs presented nothing more challenging than a gentle slope down Thomas Street to the ferry seemed not to cross my mind. I liked the bike's bulk and the proper heft of its chunky tyres. It felt serious, appropriate. Its dead weight was made even more unequivocal by the addition of a day-glo orange child's seat attached to the seat tube.