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Authors: John Deering

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He’s going to do it.

On the TV, Hugh Porter is watching Tony Martin close in on Taylor Phinney as they hammer down the long drive that leads through Bushy Park to the palace. But his colleague Chris Boardman, bronze
medallist in this event in Atlanta in 1996, has noticed a more pertinent fact: Wiggins has entered the park and has both of them in his sights. Only a disaster can stop him now.

The 2012 Bradley Wiggins doesn’t do disasters.

As he hits the line, the roar in the Prince of Wales is matched in the street, across the bridge at Hampton Court, across the host city of London, across the nation. Great Britain is singing.
Walking along, singing a song, walking in a Wiggo wonderland. We all need heroes, and this summer has given Britain a new favourite.

BRADLEY WIGGINS
:
Palmarès

1998

1st, Individual Pursuit, Junior World Track Championships, Havana

2nd, Team Pursuit, Commonwealth Games, Kuala Lumpur

2000

2nd, Team Pursuit, World Track Championships, Manchester

3rd, Team Pursuit, Olympic Games, Sydney

2002

2nd, Individual Pursuit, Commonwealth Games, Manchester

2nd, Team Pursuit, Commonwealth Games, Manchester

2nd, Ghent Six Day

2003

1st, Individual Pursuit, World Track Championships, Stuttgart

2nd, Team Pursuit, World Track Championships, Stuttgart

2004

1st, Individual Pursuit, Olympic Games, Athens

2nd, Team Pursuit, Olympic Games, Athens

3rd, Madison, Olympic Games, Athens

2005

1st, Stage 8, Tour de l’Avenir

2007

1st, Individual Pursuit, World Track Championships, Mallorca

1st, Team Pursuit, World Track Championships, Mallorca

1st, Stage 1, Four Days of Dunkirk

1st, Stage 4, Tour du Poitou-Charentes et de la Vienne

1st, Prologue, Critérium du Dauphiné

1st, Duo Normand

Combativity Award, Stage 6, Tour de France

2008

1st, Individual Pursuit, World Track Championships, Manchester

1st, Team Pursuit, World Track Championships, Manchester

1st, Madison, World Track Championships, Manchester

1st, Individual Pursuit, Olympic Games, Beijing

1st, Team Pursuit, Olympic Games, Beijing

2009

1st, Stage 1, Tour of Qatar

1st, Stage 3b, Three Days of De Panne

1st, National Time Trial Championships

1st, Stage 5, Herald Sun Tour

1st, Overall, Herald Sun Tour

4th, Overall, Tour de France

2010

1st, Stage 1, Tour of Qatar

1st, Stage 1, Giro d’Italia

1st, National Time Trial Championships

2011

1st, Stage 4, Bayern Rundfahrt

1st, Overall, Critérium du Dauphiné

1st, National Road Race Championships

2nd, Time Trial, World Road Championships

3rd, Overall, Paris–Nice

3rd, Overall, Vuelta a España

2012

1st, Stage 5, Volta ao Algarve

3rd, Overall, Volta ao Algarve

1st, Stage 8, Paris–Nice

1st, Overall, Paris–Nice

1st, Stage 1, Tour de Romandie

1st, Stage 5, Tour de Romandie

1st, Overall, Tour de Romandie

1st, Stage 4, Critérium du Dauphiné

1st, Overall, Critérium du Dauphiné

1st, Stage 9, Tour de France

1st, Stage 19, Tour de France

1st, Overall, Tour de France

1st, Time Trial, Olympic Games, London

Afterword

Paul McCartney had to wait until he was 54. Mick Jagger was 60. Winston Churchill was an MP at 25, but he had to get to the ripe old age of 78 to get his.

In December 2012 Great Britain recognised the impact of Bradley Wiggins’s incredible sporting feats by handing him a knighthood at the remarkably young age of 32. Already a CBE thanks to
his earlier Herculean Olympic efforts, the powers that be clearly felt there was nowhere else he should go but right up to the top of the honours tree. The New Year’s honours list proclaimed
our hero a Knight Bachelor. Arise, Sir Bradley. And while we’re at it, arise Sir Dave Brailsford, 30 years younger than Churchill when Her Madge laid the sword on their respective shoulders.
Mystifyingly to his legions of fans, the directeur sportif who guided Brad to his achievements in 2012 still remains Mr S. Yates with no letters after his name despite his many personal triumphs,
but now is not the time to quibble. Now is the time to bask in the reflective glory of a golden year.

And never mind the powers that be, what about the man in the street? The man on the Clapham omnibus? Well, he seems to agree with that lot upstairs, as he voted Brad BBC Sports Personality of
the Year 2012. Now, there has been a groundswell of interest in cycling in recent years, with both Sir Chris Hoy (also knighted at 32, good effort) and Mark Cavendish MBE scooping the title, but
2012 was a golden year for British sporting achievement. Lest we forget, this was the year that Andy Murray won the US Open, Rory McIlroy became world number one and won the US PGA by eight shots,
Ian Poulter inspired Europe to the greatest turnaround in Ryder Cup history, Alastair Cook became the scorer of more England centuries than anybody else ever, and Chelsea won the European Cup . . .
And we haven’t even mentioned the Olympics.

Poor Mo Farah must curse the moment that Bradley crashed out of the 2011 Tour. ‘Why couldn’t he have won it last year?’ he must have whispered to his wife at the star-studded
ceremony at ExCel. In how many other years would the British winner of a 5,000 and 10,000 metres Olympic double miss out on the SPOTY award?

In sport, career retrospectives are usually reserved until retirement. In team sport, it often doesn’t even happen then: a player retires, but the team rolls on from one generation to
another, always looking forward. It is against this uniquely challenging backdrop of acclaim and applause that Brad has to attempt to remain at the pinnacle of his sport. Preparation for 2013 must
have been exceedingly difficult in the circumstances, despite having the experience of his post-Athens 2004 bender under his belt.

And who would begrudge Bradley his fun? Turning up on stage with a cherry red Gibson 335 to play alongside Paul Weller at Hammersmith Odeon at Christmas, knocking out the Modfather’s
classic ‘That’s Entertainment’. This was still his moment, and the 2013 season seemed a long way off.

Brad revealed in an interview with Alasdair Fotheringham about his taste in music for
Cycle Sport –
expect race reports from the Giro d’Italia in the
NME
this year
– that his true musical hero is actually John Entwistle, The Who’s late bass player. The tall, skinny, reserved cool-guy look is certainly much more Entwistle than Weller, and so are
the sideburns. Weller’s never really been one for the big boards; he grows his hair long and combs it in front of his ears, another Bradley style favourite, but John Entwistle wore luxuriant
face furniture to inspire a generation.

The fascinating Sky dichotomy between Brad and Chris Froome is yet to play out. With the 2013 Tour de France set to be more mountainous than the defending champion would like, Brad threw his
weight behind the notion that he would concentrate his personal efforts on gaining a Giro d’Italia pink winner’s jersey to go with his French yellow, before going to the Tour as
Froome’s helper. Within weeks of that Sky-sponsored point of view, Sir Bradley was mischievously suggesting to the
Guardian
that he would ‘love to win a second Tour de
France’.

Chris Froome opened 2013 in surprisingly strong form for one who is not expected to be at his peak until July. His storming performance to take February’s Tour of Oman was, astonishingly,
his first stage race victory, and came at the expense of renowned mountain experts like Joaquim Rodríguez and Alberto Contador. Bradley, in contrast, finished last on the first stage of
Oman, having been caught up in a crash, but recovered to end the week in the middle of the pack.

Froome went on to Italy and took the lead in a superbly hard-fought Tirreno–Adriatico, but was forced out of the winner’s jersey by his Tour de France rival Vincenzo Nibali. Their
Sky teammates were preparing for spring at the now tried-and-trusted training camp, hoping once again to get the jump on their rivals once the real racing began. Nibali versus Wiggins is the
sub-text for the 2013 Giro d’Italia. Bradley’s defence of – or decision not to defend – the Tour de France that follows on the heels of that Giro will be shaped by events in
Italy.

In 1985, the last truly great French cyclist Bernard Hinault won his fifth Tour de France, benefiting in no small way from the assistance of a dazzlingly talented young American teammate, Greg
LeMond. ‘The Badger’ paid tribute to LeMond by saying that he would be at his side to help him take his own victory the next year. When 1986 came round, the temptation of becoming a
record-breaking six-time Tour winner proved too much for Hinault, and he attacked his bewildered lieutenant-cum-leader through the Pyrénées, shaping one of the greatest ever Tours.
The duo eventually finished first and second, begging the question: was that really so bad for the team?

An unprecedented successive one-two in Paris in 2013 may well be a Sky dream scenario, and one not beyond the realms of possibility. The identity of the man on the top step, however, can only
remain a matter for speculation.

One thing is certain; the giddy car-top Champs-Élysées celebrations of July 2012 will never be repeated in quite the same manner. Only once can a man say: today I became the first
ever British winner of the Tour de France.

Acknowledgements

My sincere thanks to all those who accommodated my key-tapping: Dr Weiss, The Blue Groove, The Rock, The Manor, Crumbs Too, Marine Girl, and, of course, Mum and Dad. Thank you
Buddy and Daisy for constant inspiration. Thank you Kt, Knobby, Gary and Mungo for wisely standing by me. And thank you Bob, E, Geddy, Alex and Neil for keeping me awake.

 

John Deering

List of Illustrations

Bradley Wiggins aged two-and-a-half – with stabilisers.
John Taylor

Having watched her son create history in the Tour de France, Linda embraces Brad before his Olympic road race in 2012.

With his father, Garry.
John Taylor

Brad’s inspiration, Chris Boardman.
Getty Images

Racing, aged thirteen.
John Taylor

Brad in action in the Individual Pursuit at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens.
Getty Images

Brad and Australian Bradley McGee congratulate each other after the Men’s Individual Pursuit finals at the Athens velodrome during the
2004 Olympic Games, with Brad claiming the gold.
Getty Images

With his OBE in 2005.
Getty Images

Brad celebrates becoming World Champion after winning the Men’s Individual Pursuit at the UCI Track Cycling World Championship in
Mallorca in 2007.
Getty Images

Brad races past Big Ben in the Prologue of the Tour de France in 2007, the first time the Tour had started in London.
Getty
Images

Ed Clancy, Paul Manning, Geraint Thomas and Bradley Wiggins in action in the Men’s Team Pursuit at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
Getty Images

Gold medallists at Beijing
(from left to right)
– Paul Manning, Ed Clancy, Geraint Thomas and Bradley Wiggins.
Getty
Images

Brad sets a new Olympic record while qualifying for the Men’s Individual Pursuit at the Beijing Olympics in 2008.
Getty
Images

Leading the way against seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong during the seventeenth stage of the 2009 Tour.
Getty
Images

Sporting the leader jersey, Brad is in relaxed mood before the fifth stage of the 2011 Critérium du Dauphiné.
Getty
Images

Brad celebrates winning the 2011 National Elite Road Race Championships.
Getty Images
.

Brad celebrates with teammates and members of Team Sky during his parade in front of the Arc de Triomphe at the end of the 2012 Tour de
France.
Getty Images

Focus of a champion: preparing for the Men’s Individual Time Trial road cycling event at London 2012.
Getty Images

On his way to another Olympic gold, Brad races through Surbiton during the Time Trial at the London 2012 Games.
Amy-Jane
Cahalane

With Cath at the 2012 GQ Men of the Year Awards at the Royal Opera House, London, where Brad picked up a Lifetime Achievement award.
Getty Images

With Paul Weller at the secret Stone Roses Adidas Underground gig in London on 6 August 2012.
Getty Images

Like father, like son. Brad is joined by Ben on the Champs-Élysées after his historic win in the Tour de France 2012.
Getty Images

Brad picks up the 2012 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award, before being knighted in the New Year Honours list.

BOOK: Bradley Wiggins
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