André Darrigade (born 24 April 1929 in
Narrosse)[1] is a retired French professional
road bicycle racer between 1951 and 1966.[1] Darrigade, a road
sprinter won the 1959
World Championship and 22 stages of the Tour de France. Five of those Tour victories were on opening days,[2] a record tied by
Fabian Cancellara in 2012 (who won 4 prologues and an individual time trial in 2009).[3]
Early life and amateur career
André Darrigade was born at
Narrosse, near
Dax in the forested
Landes region. He came to attention at the other end of the country and on the track by beating the future world sprint champion,
Antonio Maspes[4] in a meeting at the
Vélodrome d'Hiver the night before the
Six Days of Paris race there.
His name immediately appealed to northern crowds.
René de Latour said: "It is a very 'musical' name to [northern] French ears, especially when pronounced by a southerner who rolls his Rs like a
Scotsman to make it sound like Darrrrrigade.[5] De Latour said:
André Darrigade is heavily built and would have made a good
footballcentre forward. He has blond hair, clear eyes, rosy cheeks, and is a bit on the shy side. When we first saw him in Paris soon after the war finished he was a novice, not a roadman at all. He had come to the big city to ride in the final of the famous Médaille race at the Vélodrome d'Hiver. When he arrived at the Vélodrome d'Hiver, he had no
soigneur, no dressing gown,[6] nobody to hold him up at the start, pump his tyres or adjust his position to suit the high, frightening bankings. He was lonely — but courageous. And guess who was his principal victim — Antonio Maspes![5]
Darrigade stayed in Paris and joined one of its leading clubs, the Vélo-Club d'Asnières-Courbevoie, at the invitation of
Francis Pélissier, the former professional who was one of its officials. Darrigade rode again on the track at the Vél' d'Hiv, winning
madisons and sprints, and won four races on the road. He turned professional in 1951 for a salary that barely covered his rent.
Professional career
Raphaël Géminiani said: "Darrigade was the greatest French sprinter of all time and he'll stay that way for a long time. The mould has been broken. But he wasn't just a sprinter. He was an animateur who could start decisive breaks; he destroyed the image of sprinters who just sit on wheels."[7] He began his sprints from a long distance from the line, challenging others to pass him. It endeared him to the French public, said de Latour.
Darrigade wore 19 yellow jerseys and won 22 stages. He won the opening stage of the
Tour de France in 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959 and 1961. Darrigade lost time in the mountains and his best final positions were 16th in 1956, 1959 and 1960.
In single-day races, he won the national championship in 1955 on the famous
Boucles de l'Aulne in
Châteaulin, beating a
Louison Bobet at the top of his career (reigning world champion and winner of the Tour de France 1953, 1954 and 1955).
He won the 1956
Giro di Lombardia, beating the Campionissimo
Fausto Coppi in front of his home crowd at the Milan velodrome. A fortnight later he beat Coppi again to win the
Trofeo Baracchi with
Rolf Graf.
He won the world championship in
Zandvoort on 16 August 1959, dominating a breakaway of eight riders, ahead of the Italian
Michele Gismondi and the Belgian
Noël Foré.
Darrigade was at his best in the middle of the season and the spring races were too early and those in autumn too late. He did, however, come fourth in the 1957
Paris–Roubaix, third in the 1958
Milan–San Remo and second in
Paris–Brussels in 1960.
He said: "I was always considered a team man. I never had any pretensions to be anything else. In the days when the Tour had national teams,
Marcel Bidot [the manager] always saw me as just that. Those wins never became dull or routine. Each one was an immense pleasure. What's more, I had the chance to race alongside such great champions as
Louison Bobet and
Jacques Anquetil." He was close to Anquetil, whom he called "bizarrely calm." He said: "Quite often, I had to say to him, 'If you don't get going, you'll lose the Tour."[3]
On 19 July 1958 the Tour finished at the
Parc des Princes in western Paris. The 70-year-old sécrétaire-général[8] of the stadium, Constant Wouters[9] ran across the grass in the centre of the ground to prevent photographers encroaching on the track.[10] The journalists hid the riders and Wouters from each other and Darrigade rode into Wouters as he stepped onto the track. Darrigade was lifted from his bike and turned round and Wouters thrown into the air.[11] Both fell heavily and were taken to hospital. Wouters was treated at the nearby Boucicaut medical centre but died on 31 July.[12] Darrigade cracked his skull and broke ribs.[3] He was able to return before the end of the meeting to take a lap of honour.[13][14][15]
Honours and personal life
When Darrigade retired from cycle racing he ran a newspaper shop in
Biarritz. On retiring for good, André became an ardent fan of
Biarritz Olympique, the town's
rugby team, with his friend
Albaladejo. A stadium (Stade Omnisports André Darrigade) in
Dax is named after Darrigade .[16]
On 12 July 2017, a 6 metre tall statue, designed by "Meilleur Ouvrier de France" Guy Pendanx, was unveiled in Darrigade's honour in
Narrosse . Darrigade's brother, Roger, six years younger, also rode as a professional. In 1955, both brothers were French national champions, André as a professional and Roger as an amateur. André Darrigade has two sons and two grandson and is an officer of the
Légion d'honneur.