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Henry Anglade

Henry Anglade
Anefo 911-3770 Tour de France.jpg
Henry Anglade in 1960
Personal information
Full name Henry Anglade
Nickname Napoléon
Born (1933-07-06) 6 July 1933 (age 83)
Thionville, France
Team information
Current team Retired
Discipline Road
Role Rider
Rider type Allround
Amateur team(s)
Vélo Club du Griffon
Professional team(s)
1956 Alcyon
1957–1959 Libéria-Hutchinson
1960–1962 Libéria-Grammont
1963–1966 Pelforth-Sauvage-Lejeune
1967 Mercier-BP-Hutchinson
Managerial team(s)
1976–1978 Lejeune-BP
Major wins
French National Road Race Champion (2x)
Dauphiné Libéré
Second place Tour 1959

Henry Anglade (born Thionville, France, 6 July 1933) is a former French cyclist. In 1959 he was closest to winning the Tour de France, when he finished second, 4:01 behind Federico Bahamontes. In 1960 he wore the yellow jersey for two days.

Henry Anglade was born in Thionville, in the Lorraine region of France close to the German border, the son of a soldier. His family moved south to Lyon at the start of the second world war. There he went to school with a boy called André Camus who went cycling on Sundays and on Thursday afternoons. Anglade turned down his invitation to join him. It was his father who suggested that he should go, offering him the heavy family bicycle "that weighed at least 25kg". He joined Camus and his friends and found they couldn't keep up. One suggested he should try racing and he joined the Vélo Club du Griffon, the oldest club in Lyon. That was when he bought himself a Longoni sports bike and tried racing.

He worked with an engineering company until he could support himself from racing.

Henry Anglade turned professional in 1957. In 1959, he won the Dauphiné Libéré, a mountainous stage race over a week; then the national road championship. He came second in the Tour de Suisse and then in the Tour de France, behind Federico Bahamontes but in front of Jacques Anquetil and Roger Rivière. In that Tour, Anglade – riding for the regional Centre-Midi team – was the victim of the tactics of Anquetil, Rivière and others in the French national team. They preferred to see Bahamontes take the Tour de France rather than Anglade, who was unpopular among French riders and, had he won the Tour de France, would have earned more than Anquetil and Rivière in the post-Tour criteriums that were then an important part of riders' incomes. Bahamontes was both Spanish and a poor rider in round-the-houses races and so of little threat. On top of that, Anquetil, Rivière and many other French stars were represented by Daniel Dousset, one of the two agents who divided French cycling, whereas Anglade was represented by the other, Roger Piel. That was why Anglade had been left out of the national team to ride for a regional one.


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