- Brian Robinson
Infobox Cyclist
ridername = Brian Robinson
fullname = Brian Robinson
nickname =
dateofbirth = birth date and age|df=yes|1930|11|3
country = GBR
height =
weight =
currentteam =
discipline = Road
role = Rider
ridertype =
amateurteams =
amateuryears =
proyears = 1952
1953
1954
1954-1955
1956
1956
1956
1957-1958
1959
1959
1960–1961
1962
1963
proteams = BSA
Individual
Ellis Briggs
Hercules
Meulenberg
La Perle - Coupry
Cilo-St-Raphaël
St-Raphaël-Géminiani
Elswick Hopper
St-Raphaël-Géminiani
Rapha-Gitane-Dunlop
St-Raphaël-Helyett
Peugeot-BP
majorwins = 2 stages Tour de France Dauphiné Libéré (1961)
updated = 8 July 2008Brian Robinson (born 3 November 1930 [http://criterium.ledauphine.com/criterium08/fiche-coureur,robinson-brian,249.html Criterium Du Dauphine Libere - Database - Brian Robinson] ]
Huddersfield ,Yorkshire [ [http://www.velo-club.net/article.php?sid=28274 Velo Club - Database record for Brian Robinson] ] ) is an English formerroad bicycle racer of the 1950s and early 1960s.He was the first Briton to finish the
Tour de France and the first to win a Tour stage. His success as a professional cyclist in mainland Europe paved the way for other Britons such asTom Simpson andBarry Hoban .Background
Robinson's teen years came in the
second world war , which began in1939 when he was eight. His family lived inRavensthorpe and moved to Mirfield in1943 Both his parents worked at a factory producing parts forHalifax bomber s, Henry at night and Milly by day. The family had a small area of land, known as an allotment, where they kept rabbits and two pigs.Fotheringham, William (2005), Roule Britannia, Yellow Jersey, UK] . Robinson had a brother, Des, and a sister, Jean.Career
Early cycling career
Robinson rode with the
Huddersfield Road Club at 13 and joined when he reached the club's minimum age the following year. His elder brother, Des, and his father were already members. His father, however, would not let Robinson start racing until he was 18.Cycling, UK, 25 April 1992] His first race was a hilly 25-mile time-trial in March, which he completed in 1h 14m 50s. His ambition was not to ride against the clock but in massed road races. Opportunities were limited. Views on British road racing were polarised between theBritish League of Racing Cyclists which wanted road racing open roads and theNational Cyclists' Union which feared police and public reaction and confined racing to closed circuits.Robinson was an NCU member [For more details of the civil war, see
British League of Racing Cyclists ] . He worked for the family building business, trained before and after work and frequently raced on roads in the park at Sutton Park,Birmingham , where races had to end by 9.30am so the public could use it. In1948 he went toWindsor to watch theOlympic Games road race inWindsor Great Park "little realising that four years later I would make the next Olympics inHelsinki ".He was fifth in the NCU massed-start championship and third in the Road Time Trials Council (RTTC) hill-climb championship in 1950. The following year, he was equal 7th in the Isle of Man International, 10th in the NCU massed-start championship, and second in the RTTC hill-climb championship. In 1952 he was fourth in the NCU title race, won the hill-climb championship, and was fifth in the Isle of Man International.
International experience
In spring 1952 Robinson rode the Route de France, amateur version of the
Tour de France , in a joint NCU/Army team. Robinson was at this time doing hisNational Service . He rode well and was fifth with three days to go, but poor days in thePyrenees saw him slip to 40th. "I had never seen mountains like that before," he said.The following August, he represented
Great Britain atHelsinki in theOlympic Games road race. Robinson finished 27th, one place behind his brother, to André Noyelle ofBelgium . The future Tour de France winner,Jacques Anquetil , was 12th, and Robinson raced against him again in theworld cycling championship inItaly in September 1952 where they tied for eighth.The new professional
In 1953, Robinson left the
King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry and joined the Ellis-Briggs team as an independent, or semi-professional. He rode theTour of Britain in 1952, wearing the leader’s yellow jersey before finishing fourth. He said: cquote|I came back from the army to turn independent, but it didn't happen until halfway through the season. I really had asabbatical in the army and I was in effect, a pro. I didn't do anything but just ride a bike. It got me disciplined, which was of benefit later.The following year, 1954, he improved to second, and second in the mountains competition.
The British cycle industry, fighting in a dwindling market, competed for sales by sponsoring riders.
Hercules andBSA had supported long-distance record-breakers when there was no other professional racing on the road and now wanted to have road-racing teams.Robinson said: cquote|"Hercules was good. They paid a good wage. It was about twice the average wage a manual worker would get. And of course, they paid all the expenses, so the wage went into the bank. It was solid and good. It was a really good year." [Bill McGann, US, interview 2007]
Tour de France
Hercules planned a team that would be the first from Britain to ride the Tour de France, then based on national teams. The riders in its colours grew season by season until in 1955 it had Robinson, Bernard Pusey, Dennis Talbot, Freddy Krebs, Clive Parker, Ken Joy, Arthur Ilsley, Derek Buttle (the founder of the team) and
Dave Bedwell . The team raced in France, the Netherlands and Belgium in preparation. Robinson was 8th inParis-Nice , fourth inLa Flèche Wallonne and led the Tour of the Six Provinces to the sixth stage. The eventual Tour team was a mixture of Hercules riders and those from other sponsors.The Tour de France proved tough and only Robinson and Tony Hoar finished, Robinson 29th and Hoar
lanterne rouge or last. They were the first Britons to finish the Tour, 18 years after Charles Holland and Bill Burl were the first Britons in the race in 1937. Robinson said:Robinson told
Jock Wadley ofSporting Cyclist that it was easy for an English professional to get into the Tour de France in 1955. "Indeed, when it came to selection time there were hardly enough riders available to fill the places." Hercules and other British sponsors dropped their sponsorship at the end of 1955. Robinson, who had married the previous October, set up at the start of1956 at Les Issambres, the area of theFrench Riviera that Hercules had used for its training the previous year and which was close to the spring criteriums. He and another professional, Bernard Pusey, suffered because the first races were cancelled because of snow. Robinson said:In 1956, the Tour allowed mixed teams. Robinson joined a squad which included
Charly Gaul . He took third on the first stage, and by the end of the Tour was 14th, Gaul 13th. He also rode theVuelta a España inHugo Koblet 's Swiss-British team, and was second after the fourth stage. He punctured on a climb on the 10th stage when in a break with Italy'sAngelo Conterno , the race winner, but managed to recover from 11th to eighth.Milan-Sanremo
In 1957 he scored his first professional win, in the GP de la Ville de Nice, beating
Louison Bobet by 50 seconds. Then he finished third inMilan-Sanremo toSpain 'sMiguel Poblet , whose 29th birthday it was.Cycling, UK, 28 March 1957, p239] Cycling magazine called it "by far the greatest achievement by a British roadman in a single-day race since the halcyon 19th-century days ofGeorge Pilkington Mills and theBordeaux-Paris , writing:Then into the picture came Robinson. On Capo Berta, with 18 miles to go, he attacked. He failed. He attacked again and failed again. Anyone but a Yorkshire Robinson would probably have called it quits. But he had the strength, and yet again he attacked. This time only two men could go with him, the Belgians
Fred De Bruyne andJoseph Planckaert ... In thepeloton behind only two men saw the danger - or at least could do something about it - Poblet and the young BelgianJulien Schepens ... Every observer who knew of Poblet's presence at the head of affairs would have written his name against No. 1 after the descent. But there may have been some erasing power lower down the list, because it was Robinson whose great lack up to now has been a last dash who beat Schepens (a powerful sprinter who beatLouison Bobet in the third stage ofParis-Nice to take a magnificent third place behind De Bruyne.There was commercial intrigue behind the result, however. Robinson said:
Robinson crashed on wet cobbles early in the 1957 Tour de France, injuring his left wrist. He recovered to finish 15th in the world championship won by
Rik van Steenbergen .First Tour stage win
In 1958, Robinson won stage seven of the Tour de France, to Brest.
Arigo Padovan crossed the line first but was relegated to second for his tactics in a hot sprint. Robinson said:Robinson showed his victory was no fluke by winning the 20th stage (from
Annecy toChalon-sur-Saône ) of the 1959 Tour by 20 minutes. Next day paid the price. He trailed far behind the field with his Irish team-mate,Seamus Elliott , beside him.William Fotheringham wrote:In hot weather, these are some of the toughest roads in France, constantly rising and falling. Elliott remained with Robinson, chivvying him, pacing him, pouring water on his head as the Tour's doctor,
Pierre Dumas administered glucose tablets. It was the kind of heroic spectacle the Tour reporters loved. "Robinson en perdition" ran the next day's headline inL'Équipe , which described Elliott's efforts as "attentions de mère poule" - the solicitousness of a mother hen.Both finished outside the time limit and expected to be sent home. But the team's manager,
Sauveur Ducazeaux , insisted the judges apply a rule that no rider in the first ten could be eliminated. [The rule was created in 1926 when a single rider,Lucien Buysse , eliminated the entire field. He finished so far ahead that everyone else was outside the limit. The organiser,Henri Desgrange , extended the day's limit to 40 per cent of the winner's time and ruled that nobody in the first 10 could be eliminated.] Robinson had started the day ninth: it was Elliott who was sent home. "The mother hen was cooked; the chick avoided the pot", Fotheringham said.Robinson finished the Tour 19th, having at one time been ninth. That year he helped get his professional Rapha Geminiani team to sign
Tom Simpson . Within weeks, he was watching Simpson win two stages of the Tour de l'Ouest.Robinson finished 26th and 53rd in the Tours of 1960 and 1961. In between he won the 1961 Critérium de Dauphiné Libéré, winning two stages. He was part of the winning team in the team time-trial, then third in the individual time trial at Romans. He won the following day's stage at
Villefranche . He kept control of the race as it passed through the mountains and won the race.Retirement
Robinson retired when he was 33, not having made much money from cycling despite his successes. He said:
Assessment and later years
The magazine "Cycling" placed Robinson ninth best British rider of the 20th century. The cycle-parts importer and patron of the sport, Ron Kitching, said:
Brian was a quiet lad, what you might call gentlemanly. He never seemed to be aggressive in any way. He was politeness itself. One might have got the impression that he would never be aggressive enough to be a success, but the potential was obviously there and he did extremely well when he went to race on the Continent. But even so, I don't think the aggression was there to the same extent as with Tiny Thomas, for instance. There was ability without doubt, but not the temperament to be a winner. I think Brian did well on the Continent because, over there, ability shows itself better in the style of riding than in this country [Britain] which is probably more cut and thrust. Some people said that Brian's older brother, Des, was actually the better of the two. I think that Des was more aggressive but the fact remains that it was Brian who went to France and became a major player in races like the Tour de France and, of course, the Dauphiné Libéré, which he won, probably his greatest victory. I believe that given the right set of circumstances, Brian could have won the Tour de France. [Breckon, Michael (ed) (1993), A Wheel in Two Worlds, privately published, UK]
Robinson, at 74, helped organise a dinner in August 2005 to mark the 50th anniversary of the first British competitors in the Tour de France. The event aimed to attract all British riders who have raced in the Tour since 1955.
Palmarès
;1954:Stage win, Tour d'Europe.;1955:1st Tour of Pennines;1957:1st Grand Prix de Nice, La Forteresse ;1958:Tour de France:::Winner stage 7:stage win Tour du Sud-Est:1st pursuit and omnium, de Guecho, with
Jacques Anquetil ;1959:Tour de France:::Winner stage 20;1960:Stage wins Tour de l'Aude and Midi Libre;1961:1stCritérium du Dauphiné Libéré :Stage win Circuit d'AuvergneReferences
External links
*cyclingwebsite|4549
* [http://www.letour.fr/HISTO/TDF/riders/us/3383.html Official Tour de France results for Brian Robinson]Persondata
NAME=Robinson, Brian
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION=Road bicycle racer
DATE OF BIRTH=1930-11-3
PLACE OF BIRTH=Mirfield
DATE OF DEATH=
PLACE OF DEATH=
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