Tour de France 2020: Go Richie, you good thing!

By Ben Pitman / Roar Rookie

Generations of Australian sports fans have had this fierce desire to win, no matter the size or stature of opponent we’re facing.

It borders on irrational, when a nation of 25 million takes on teams and squads of far bigger countries, and has this fighting, winning-at-all-costs attitude.

But if you dig deeper, you would find that even above winning, Australians admire their sporting heroes when, even if they don’t succeed, they give their all in the face of overwhelming opposition – the give their best – average results can be expected and accepted sometimes, but a lack of fight and effort is pilloried and despised.

To the average Australian, watching cycling on television might seem a tad dry, lacking the explosive action of typical ball sports we have grown up on. But to this Melbourne schoolteacher, in the sixth month working full time from home while parenting two young children, the 2020 Tour de France is the most beautiful of escapes.

And in the midst of the beauty of the chateaus and alpine wonderlands, the Couch Peloton are watching an Aussie fighter give his all in the face of rising opposition.

Cycling is this beautiful mix of egotism and selflessness, as you watch highly trained professional athletes willingly sacrifice their own desire to win, for the betterment of their chosen star of the team.

Australia has seen Cadel Evans, who towers above all in our cycling pantheon, feted as the star who won it all in 2011 after years of fighting and toughing it out.

Richie Porte might not be the most well known Australian sports figure, but he’s been the selfless lieutenant – sacrificing himself physically to watch his teammates sweep past and take the glory.

A hugely gifted and personable athlete, who seems from afar to be a quiet but fiercely determined character who is hugely respected in the sport. Then after years of paying his dues, he makes the courageous leap into being the star of a team, only to be beset with horrific luck and heartbreaking injuries.

But as Australian cycling fans, we do love winning but we love trying and battling more – and we are loving seeing Richie break the shackles of past hurt and defeat, and give it hell.

The Tour de France in 2020. (Photo by Tim de Waele/Getty Images)

He’s not the most fancied cyclist at Le Tour, but he’s there battling and giving his all – missing the birth of his daughter in the process, and putting the race into perspective – the sooner it’s over, the sooner he can meet his beautiful baby.

And while we would love to see Porte rise against the odds and win it all, you can feel the pride of Aussie cycling fans overflow when we watch him give his all, no matter what the result.

Stage 15 of the Tour was the moment where Porte stepped out of the shadows of his more fancied rivals and started swinging, jumping ahead in the last 200 metres of an 18-kilometre climb in search of a stage victory.

All of us watching in the middle of the night rose with him out of his saddle and started believing that he could give his all, and maybe end up on the podium of the toughest cycling race, possibly the toughest annual sporting event in the world.

And in a sport where luck can change in a single moment, through human or mechanical failure, everything from here, in the third brutal week of Le Tour with thousands of lung-busting metres of climbing in the French Alps ahead, is a bonus.

We’ve watched Richie battle and scrap and counter attack and give it his everything. And maybe, just maybe there’s greatness at the end of this journey for him.

And in the end, this is the Aussie way. And we love him for it. Chapeau!

The Crowd Says:

2020-09-21T13:11:54+00:00

Graham Robinson

Guest


Awesome result Richie, i am so happy for you. Man you are a legend,,thank you for for making this years TDF so, very enjoyable. All the best to you and your family, graham - Mackay QLD

2020-09-20T02:38:20+00:00

The Late News

Roar Rookie


How seriously good! Does he have a distant relative named Henri Porte? The French rugby referee.

2020-09-19T22:56:09+00:00

Monorchid

Roar Rookie


Looks like Porte will be number 3 on the podium in Paris Ben. Good result for him and his team.

AUTHOR

2020-09-15T12:07:45+00:00

Ben Pitman

Roar Rookie


That's an amazing effort Albo, well done! You're more of an expert than me, but I just love watching it so much - I've loved learning more about the intricacies of the tactics as I've watched it over the years - and they're just so tough! I don't think people appreciate how tough they actually are - actual gladiators that go so hard and push their limits like very few athletes would... hope you enjoy the final week! Vive le Tour!

AUTHOR

2020-09-15T12:04:58+00:00

Ben Pitman

Roar Rookie


Thanks Monorchid - appreciate the encouragement! You're totally correct about big this is in Europe - we have no idea! I've never been across to Belgium, Italy or France during cycling season, but I'm so keen to make it across, just to soak in the spectacle of the event, and hopefully catch some action on Alpe d'Huez :) I don't want to pin all my expectations on Richie, but come on now! He's looking better than ever - this is his shot before he goes back to Ineos next year! Vive le Tour!

2020-09-15T07:40:27+00:00

Monorchid

Roar Rookie


Ben, this article is overdue. Congratulations. I don't think too many residents of Oz realise just how big cycling is in Europe. And I'm a 3rd generation Aussie. But Australia has had its famous riders at home too in the past. I'm thinking of Opperman. In fact, there used to be a brand of bike named after him. I'm an older bloke, and I can recall even older film footage of Tour cyclists carrying their own tyres across their shoulders in case of a puncture. I watch it every year and, in my advanced years, I even download the Skoda app. The coverage is very good, even without Leggett. The Tour is a great spectacle on several levels. What sporting event can go for hours over 150km to 200 km and still come down to an edge of the seat finish. You've just got to watch until the end of the stage. And then there's the travelogue that shows off various parts of France and a bit of other countries too. And the finish around the Arc de Triomphe is fantastic. I've stood at the Arc and imagined the whirring sound of the bicycles going around that circle. Maybe I'll be there one day. In the meantime, let's get behind Porte. Vive le Tour!

2020-09-15T04:28:05+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Spot on Ben ! I ignored Le Tour for most of my sports watching life, until one night when I couldn’t sleep back in 2005, when I sat up late during a Alps Stage in Cadel Evans’ first Tour with Lotto team where he finished 8th. From that night I have been hooked on Le Tour and I don’t think I have missed a stage since ! I have wondered just how Lance Armstrong could be so good ? I have cheered Robbie McEwan as he appeared from nowhere so many times in sprint finishes in his quest for the Green jersey. Now I do the same for Caleb Ewan. I have cheered on Cadel to his 2011 Tour victory and I have followed Richie’s progress now for some tours , hoping he finally has a clear run of good luck rather than the all bad he has had in recent years. He is definitely a chance this year, though I wish he had a better team to support him. He will be doing it on his own as Cadel did with an average BMC team in 2011. The Alps will again be the key, and he will need at least one big Stage to overhaul the 2 minutes handicap he copped from that cross wind disaster stage.

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