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Riding the Tour de France
Riding the Tour de France
My love for the sport started in the mid-1990s. The Tour de France would always be my personal start to the summer. I’d get back from school and watch Miguel Indurain in his pomp, climbing through the Alps in the searing heat. I don’t know if it was our TV at the time, perhaps with a built-in yellow filter, but the Tour always looked so ridiculously hot.
World Times
The time trial stage and the individual time trial for the penultimate stage (20) of this year’s Tour are the most challenging for the official timekeeping team. Head of Operations at Tissot Timing, Pascal Rossier and his team are up at the crack of dawn to make sure the stage runs as smoothly as possible. “The team time trial is a very important stage for us on the Tour. Normally we have eight timekeepers per stage but we have 14 today because of the complexity and importance of its timed results,” he says.
Tissot has cameras in place on the finishing line that can dissect a sprint finish into 10,000ths of a second. With riders hitting top speeds over 70km/h, photo finishes are a common factor in deciding stage winners.
Living The Dream
When it was our turn to get out before the pros and ride the course, the temperature had climbed to a roasting 34 degrees Celsius; it was everything I had imagined – the yellow filter was on. We were expertly fitted with our bikes, helmets and, of course, the Tissot T-Race Cycling Tour de France Special Edition watch. Our guide for the ride was former World Champion – and complete gentleman – Maurizio Fondriest. Winner of two World Cups in 1991 and 1993, the Milan-San Remo classic and many other races, it was an absolute pleasure to pick the brain of a man who had been there, seen it and done it all before. He’s one of those guys who knows everybody and everyone always has time for, even in the hectic environment of the team enclosures.
Tissot