
How the Race Was Won
Cycling's Top Minds Reveal the Road to Victory
Peter Cossins(Author)
VeloPress
Will be published approx. on 27. November 2018
Book
Paperback/Softback
256 pages
978-1-937715-86-1 (ISBN)
Description
Great cyclists are born, but winning cyclists are made by the brains of their managers. The craft of racing requires a non-stop obsession with detail: watching rivals, judging the strength of a break, knowing the course, and picking the right moment to seize a fleeting opportunity and turn it into a big win.
How the Race Was Won investigates the fine details of bicycle racing through extensive interviews with the sport's brightest minds. Author Peter Cossins has interrogated the riders, managers, and directors who have shaped the sport, and reveals how they learned to navigate the invisible undercurrent that sweeps their riders to the finish line.
From the moment when George Pilkington Mills was paced to victory by a wily teammate in the 1891 edition of Bordeaux-Paris to Chris Froome's modern emphasis on marginal gains, How the Race Was Won embraces the full sweep of cycling history, making stops along the way to analyze how tactics first evolved and how today's winning minds continue to build on what came before.
Behind every great cyclist is a race wizard reading the race, watching the rivals, outwitting the competition, and anticipating the one perfect moment to launch a rider to victory. How the Race Was Won is a thrilling and unprecedented look at how victory is won, how rivals are vanquished, and how pure speed can only prevail when supported by deep brainpower.
How the Race Was Won investigates the fine details of bicycle racing through extensive interviews with the sport's brightest minds. Author Peter Cossins has interrogated the riders, managers, and directors who have shaped the sport, and reveals how they learned to navigate the invisible undercurrent that sweeps their riders to the finish line.
From the moment when George Pilkington Mills was paced to victory by a wily teammate in the 1891 edition of Bordeaux-Paris to Chris Froome's modern emphasis on marginal gains, How the Race Was Won embraces the full sweep of cycling history, making stops along the way to analyze how tactics first evolved and how today's winning minds continue to build on what came before.
Behind every great cyclist is a race wizard reading the race, watching the rivals, outwitting the competition, and anticipating the one perfect moment to launch a rider to victory. How the Race Was Won is a thrilling and unprecedented look at how victory is won, how rivals are vanquished, and how pure speed can only prevail when supported by deep brainpower.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 226 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 18 mm
Weight
363 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-937715-86-1 (9781937715861)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Peter Cossins is a veteran sports writer who has covered cycling since 1993.A former editor and contributing editor at Procycling magazine, he has also contributed to the Guardian, The Times, the Sunday Telegraph, the Sunday Express, and the Sunday Herald. Cossins collaborated with Tour de France winner Stephen Roche on his autobiography, Born to Ride. He has also written Le Tour 100, The Monuments, Two Days in Yorkshire, Alpe d'Huez, and Ultimate Etapes.
Content
Prologue
1 What Are Tactics?
2 The Development of Tactics
3 The Making of Modern Tactics
4 Inside the Washing Machine-Riding in the Peloton 5 Dirty Dealing
6 How to Race in the Wind
7 How to Lead Out and Win a Sprint
8 From Control to Chaos-Sprinting's New Order
9 How to Bluff Your Rivals
10 Surviving with the Laughing Group-Life in the Gruppetto
11 How to Win in the Mountains
12 Is Technology Killing Tactics?
13 Going Downhill Fast
14 How to Win a Time Trial
15 The Art of the Breakaway
16 How to Win a Classic
17 Conducting the Chaos-Directeurs Sportifs and Road Captains 18 A Tactical Showcase-The Rise of Women's Cycling
19 Simple, but Extremely Complex
Acknowledgments
Bibliography
About the Author