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Gianni Motta's Tours de France

Gianni Motta's Tours de France

Gianni Motta at the Tour de France 1965 (photo Getty Images)

Touring

At the first Grande Boucle he was immediately third. "In that 1965 I built the victory at the 1966 Giro. The lessons continued immediately after Paris. While Gimondi celebrated the victory with meetings and races in Italy, I did it with circuits and kermesses in Belgium". In 1971 he had to retire due to a broken scaphoid.

Tour de France 1965, Gianni Motta : “Before the Romandie I was hit by a press car, it broke my knee and ran over my leg. I was in a cast for a month, I even missed the Giro d'Italia. I started again. In about twenty days I accumulated a thousand kilometers, four days of racing at the Midi Libre in France winning a stage, another race that didn't even finish, and I showed up at the start of the Tour in a mixed team, half Molteni and half Ignis, where each half did its own race. I went without pretensions, without hopes, without illusions. It was Giorgio Albani, my sports director at Molteni, who insisted. We were young and strong, carefree. And I liked the idea of ​​racing the Tour”.

Dorsal number 115: “The first stage was divided into two half-stages, the first in a line, from Cologne to Liège, seventh, the second in a team time trial, in Liège, and here in 22 kilometers we lost almost 7 minutes. Tour already over? No way, the Tour had just begun. Stage after stage, I regained confidence. I collected placings: third in the individual time trial in Chateaulin, third in the Pyrenean stage in Bagnères-des-Bigorre with Aubisque and Tourmalet , second in the Alpine stage in Briançon with Vars and Izoard, second in the final time trial in Paris. I had regained my form, I finished on a high and climbed onto the podium , third behind Felice Gimondi and Raymond Poulidor ”.

He was 22 years old: “And up until that day I had only taken part in two major stage races, the 1963 Giro del Valle d'Aosta as an amateur and the 1964 Giro d'Italia as a neo-professional. I knew little or nothing, in fact, nothing. But it was at that Tour that I began to learn. The hard way. On the day of the Ventoux I insisted on following Julio Jimenez, a formidable Spanish climber. I responded to his every move, while the others climbed at their own pace, letting him vent. Until I blew up. The Ventoux terrifies with its volcanic and desert-like appearance, the heat that doubles and bounces off the stones. Instead I ended up in the first part, the one in the woods. I was short of breath, among the exhaust pipes of cars and motorbikes, among swarms of horseflies and clouds of midges. And the feeling that everyone was running against me. A two-man breakaway with Poulidor. We had a couple of minutes' advantage. A good opportunity, excellent, for both of us. But he didn't shoot. I invited him, I urged him, I begged him, I grabbed him by the shirt. In the end I told him: now I understand why you are the eternal second. But he said nothing. And we were caught again”.

The Tour is a squeeze of life: “We had fun, we were content. We took what the convent gave: stages, transfers, hotels. I looked younger than I was, they considered me a child, my companions – it was better to have them cheerful than sulky – protected me. Giacomo Fornoni, the Maestro, was a pushy madman, Giuseppe Fezzardi, the Pepp, a more moderate madman, Pietro Scandelli, who wasn't at that Tour, a normal madman. Real riders were all a bit mad, otherwise they wouldn't have become riders . And Ernesto Colnago wasn't just the team's mechanic , but the factotum , capable of solving problems of any kind. Every evening at the table was a cinema. Only when racing did things get serious. And even the old men of the Italian group considered me a child, from Baldini to Nencini, from Carlesi to Ciampi: I felt that they loved me”.

Third place gave Motta the awareness of his own qualities: “In that 1965 Tour I built the victory at the 1966 Giro . The lessons continued immediately after Paris. While Gimondi celebrated the victory with meetings and races in Italy, I did it with circuits and kermesses - often on the cobblestones - in Belgium. Day or night, short but intense, we raced with a knife under the saddle and we wrung our necks as if they were all world championships”.

Motta would return to the Tour de France in 1971: “I was riding for Salvarani, Gimondi’s team, but Gimondi wasn’t there. I started well, I won the leader’s jersey in the mountains classification, I was sixth in the general classification, in the Grenoble stage I fell, I got back on my bike, I finished the stage with difficulty, 150 kilometers of extraordinary pain, excruciating on the descents when I had to brake, in the hospital an X-ray showed nothing, but my hand was swollen, it hurt just to rest it on the handlebars, I withdrew amidst some criticism, in Italy another hospital and another X-ray, broken scaphoid, another month in a cast”.

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