In Defense of La Fleche Wallonne

April 22, 2020



 
We’re all a little bit hard pressed for entertainment this year – not only is there no cycling, there is no anything in the world of sports. We try to find other entertainment: we play our races in a computer game, ride online group rides with our favourite pro’s or have them race actual digital races. Us cycling fanatics are often traditionalists, so we find entertainment in our sports vast historical library more than anywhere else. But despite the despair, the Fleche Wallonne is a race that even hashtag #ClassicClassics won’t touch. 

I know the arguments: the final climb, the Mur to end all Murs is so steep, so daunting and yet so well known by now that every edition is a play-by-play repeat of the previous one. A thinned out yet significant peloton reaches the foot of the final ascent, boom, explosion, done.  And yet, I feel compelled to come to the defence of the middle child of the Ardennes classics.


I’m particularly fond of the La Fleche Feminine, the women’s edition. Without exaggeration it can be said that the steep Mur has been the prime weathervane of who the champion of any given era is. It was in 2007 that record holder Marianne Vos took the first of her five wins and kickstarted her legendary dominance in the sport. Five wins are equalled by Anna van der Breggen since 2015, including as part of an Ardennes triple crown in the first year this was an option – because yes, while la Fleche Feminine has been around since the late 90ies, the other Ardennes did not follow suit until 2017, while for example Paris Roubaix is still lacking a women’s edition. In between Vos and Van der Breggen was the year of Pauline Ferrand Prevot, and her triumph in Huy in 2014 did much to cement the expectation for her to become the successor to Vos’s legacy. Only Annemiek van Vleuten, the most dominant rider of the last two years, has not been able to translate that strength into a victory on top the Mur – indeed, the Mur seems to be the place where “the Alien”, dixit Elisa Longo Borgini, is on her most humanly beatable.

Can the same be said of the men’s field? Perhaps less so. Men’s cycling has been professionalised and specialised to a much farther extend for a far longer time. And yet, one of the race’s earliest and most prolific winners, when the race itself was still mostly a Belgian affair, was Marcel Kint. Kint went on to win six Tour stages, a top 10 overall in the Tour de France, a Liege Bastogne Liege, a Gent Wevelgem, a Paris Roubaix and the World Championships Road Race in 1938.  Seven years after Kint’s first win, the heroic Fausto Coppi became only the second non-Belgian winner of the race. More recently, the Fleche Wallonne became the emblem of the perfectionism of ‘the Unbeatable’ Alejandro Valverde. No-one could time a final punch anywhere as perfectly as Alejandro, and no punch he knew so closely as that specific one in the Ardennes.  For Valverde, perhaps, the Mur de Huy wasn’t as much a weathervane of his rise, but rather one of his demise. When after four consecutive wins he passed the baton to Julian Alaphillipe, it send shockwaves through the cycling world. Age had finally caught up with the undisputable king of the puncheurs. All hail the new king. 


All of the above, however, misses the point still. The main defence of La Fleche has nothing to with its ability to produce champions nor its place in cycling history. The point, above all, is that those who lambast the race on the Mur de Huy fundamentally misunderstand what the race is. See, it’s undeniable that the Fleche Wallonne provides meagre entertainment on the television screen, because that’s not what it’s for. Instead, it is the ultimate race to watch roadside. 

It’s the long trip from home, whether over the Deutsche autobahn, through the gentler northern Ardennes or from the French south, to Wallonia. It’s following the Meuse through alternating idyllic and desolate industrial landscapes, to be suddenly confronted with an imposing nuclear energy station, and then turning again into the beautiful town of Huy itself. It’s coffee on the market square and walking up and down the Mur –which surprises you with its steepness every single time- before another coffee on the market square. It’s crawling up that climb one more time, legs already tired this early in the morning, to find the perfect place.

It’s the perfect amount of crowds: crowded enough for a festive atmosphere, very crowded indeed, but somehow just barely avoiding the suffocating claustrophobia of too crowded. It’s the children (of all ages) cresting the beast of a climb for themselves, while retired pros in anonymous outfits pretend they’re ten years younger again. It’s the police officers gently nudging everyone aside. It’s the anticipation as the women’s peloton is about to crest the climb for the first time, and again, and again. And then the men.

It’s the breakaway visibly struggling going up that hill. It’s hearing the announcers proclaim a compact peloton at the foot, and yet see a completely scattered field by the time they’ve reached your place about three quarters up that hill. It’s even the favourites going by so slow that you can see every grimace on their pained faces. It’s the procession of the defeated, the wounded, for what feels like ages after. Torn shirts and torn flesh, prolonging their suffering because the only rest is on the plateau op that hill. 

It’s the frites in a forlorn snackbar as all visitors slowly stream out of the French town. It’s the long road home. Acclaimed writer John Foote said that in the heroic age of cycling in Italy, the sport was intrinsically linked to the harsh combination of industrialism and relative poverty – if that’s any measure, the beating heart of heroics in Northern Europe has to be Wallonia – with the Mur de Huy smack in the middle of it.

Popular Posts