Personal information | |
---|---|
Full name | Robert John Maitland |
Born |
Birmingham, England |
31 March 1924
Died | 26 August 2010 Metz, France |
(aged 86)
Height | 5 ft 7 1⁄2 in (171 cm) |
Weight | 154 lb (70 kg) |
Team information | |
Discipline | Road |
Role | Rider |
Amateur team(s) | |
- | Solihull CC, Concorde RCC |
Professional team(s) | |
1953 | B.S.A. Cycles |
1954–1955 | Hercules Cycles |
1956–1957 | Individual (Unknown) |
1958 | Maitland Cycles |
Major wins | |
1948, 1953 national road championships; 1945, 1949 national hill-climb championshipUK national tandem record for 50 miles (80km) |
|
Medal record
|
1948, 1953 national road championships;
Robert "Bob" John Maitland (31 March 1924 – 26 August 2010) was a British racing cyclist. He won national championships in Britain, tackled long-distance records, was the best-placed British rider in the 1948 Olympic road race, and rode for Britain in the Tour de France. His career coincided with a civil war within British cycling as two organisations, the National Cyclists Union and the British League of Racing Cyclists, fought for the future of road racing.
Maitland was born in Birmingham and developed an interest in cycle-racing in his teens. He collected autographs from pre-war riders such as Eddie Larkin and Charles Holland and sometimes cycled out to watch them ride time-trials, which were then the only cycle races held on the road. Spectating persuaded him to race. His first race was the Birmingham Time Trial Association 25-mile event. He finished in 1h 13m 22s, 10 minutes slower than the winner. He won a junior race in Warwickshire, near Birmingham in 1939 and the following year joined the Solihull Cycling Club.He started racing seriously in 1941.
His first road race was over 30 miles near Nottingham in 1943, on a hilly course and in the rain. He gained 40 seconds on the field but another rider caught him with two of the 28 laps to go and he finished second.
Maitland was an engineer, a reserved occupation in Britain during the second world war. That meant he could continue racing, although with a reduced calendar of competitions and restrictions on travel. He rode club events but also set a national tandem record for 50 miles (80 km) with Dick Bowes. He rode his first massed-start event in 1943, finishing sixth after 30 miles (50 km).
In 1944 and 1946 he came third in the NCU's national road championship, then won in 1948. That same year, Maitland won a silver medal as a member of the British road race team at the 1948 Summer Olympics. Other members were Ian Scott and Gordon Thomas. Maitland finished third in the NCU's national road championship once more in 1949.