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Hippolyte Aucouturier (b. La Celle, Allier, France, 17 October 1876–d. Paris, France 22 April 1944)[2] was a French professional road bicycle racer. Aucouturier, a professional between 1900 and 1908, won two stages at the first Tour de France in 1903 and won three stages and finished second in the 1905 Tour de France. He also won Paris-Roubaix twice, in 1903 and 1904. His elder brother Francois was also a racing cyclist. Aucouturier was an outspoken man[3] whom the Tour organiser, Henri Desgrange, referred to in L'Auto as Le Terrible.[3]
[edit] 1903 Paris-RoubaixThe 1903 Paris-Roubaix, on 11 April, was decided when Aucouturier organised a chase to bring back a group which had escaped on the côte de St-Germain. Aucouturier took up the pursuit on the way to Pontoise, taking with him Louis Trousselier and others. They caught the fugitives and a new group formed on the côte d'Ennery. Aucouturier, recovered from typhoid the previous year[4], tested the group repeatedly before Doullens. He entered the velodrome at Roubaix alongside Claude Chapperon, 50 metres ahead of the others. Tradition had it that riders changed bikes at the entrance to the stadium, taking specialist track bikes to ride the three laps of the velodrome to the finish. Bikes waited for all the remaining riders and Chapperon mistakenly took Trousselier's machine. In the time it took him to realise his error and change to his own bicycle, Aucouturier passed him and took a 100m lead to win.[4] [edit] 1903 Tour de FranceAucouturier came to the Tour de France having won Paris-Roubaix. Speculation was that he and another prominent rider, Maurice Garin, would fight out the race between them.[5] The paper published their picture and that of the German, Joseph Fischer on its front page on 1 July 1903.[5] But Aucouturier abandoned after La Palisse, 320km into the first stage, with stomach cramp said to be brought on by drinking too much. Nobody now knows if this means what it says, perhaps from unclean water, or if referred to drinking wine and sniffing ether, both aimed at numbing the pain of long days riding on bad roads with little food. The previous year he had had typhoid fever and he may not have recovered.[6] The historian Pierre Chany, wrote[7]:
Géo Lefèvre insisted the cause was food poisoning.
The rules allowed a rider who dropped out to start again next morning, but to compete for daily victories and not for the overall result. Aucouturier won the second stage, 374km from Lyon to Marseille in 14h 28m, and the following stage from Marseille to Toulouse, 423km in 13h 19m. He left the race for good the following day, racing to Bordeaux, when he crashed in Moissac.[10][3] Aucouturier reached Paris, but not by bike. Lefèvre met him there:
[edit] 1904 Paris-RoubaixThe Paris-Roubaix of 1904 was the first to be run without pacers. Until then, riders had been sheltered by tandems of two and three riders.[4] Aucouturier, rider number 15, was in the leading group when the race reached the first signing-in point at Pontoise. The second check was at Beauvais, 49km later. Race historian Pascal Sergent said:
Aucouturier was alone in the lead by early afternoon. Behind him in the rain, César Garin was catching him little by little until at Lens there was less than a minute between them. The two came together with 45km to go. Garin fell when a car carrying journalists from La Vie au Grand Air ran into him. But the two were still together at Roubaix and raced on to the track to the cheers of a scant crowd[4]. They had ridden so fast that only 20 people had arrived in time and judges from L'Auto arrived only just before the finish. Until their arrival, there had been no judge at the finish line[4]. Aucouturier and Garin slowed to a tactical crawl, each watching the other. Then Aucouturier sprinted away to win by two lengths. [edit] 1904 Tour de FranceAucouturier was one of the four leading riders disqualified at the end in a race so chaotic that Henri Desgrange swore he would never run another. The Tour had been bedevilled by protesters, some of who attacked riders, and by trees felled across the road. So frequent were accusations of cheating among riders, including claims that some had taken a train, that on 30 November 1904 the Union Vélocipédique de France disqualified Maurice Garin, Lucien Pothier, César Garin and Aucouturier, who had taken the first four places. Victory went to Henri Cornet, the youngest rider to win.[13] [14] [edit] 1905 Tour de FranceIn 1905 he won the stage from Nancy to Besançon (299km in 10h 11m), from Grenoble to Toulon (348km in 13h 19m), and Bordeaux to La Rochelle (247km in 8h 25m). He came second overall.[3] [edit] Palmarès
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