Read How I Won the Yellow Jumper Online
Authors: Ned Boulting
I don't know what it was that Phil and Paul said in their commentary that day, but they would have been âdigging deep into their suitcases of imagery' to convey the drama of that one. So as we stood in the glow, watching the water splash and listening to the German profanities, Paul's ears must still have been singing with the words and feelings the narrative of the day had forced out of him. He must have been buzzing at Landis's success.
No commentator likes to impart bad news. They like to be able to fulfil the dreams and wishes of their audience, imagined or not.
But a germ, a kernel of a thought had already wheedled its way into my thinking. As yet undefined, but gathering shape and form as I replayed the day's events. The problem was, back in 2006, I had no previous experience of doping on the Tour. Sure, I'd heard Gary and Matt and Steve, as well as a host of others, tut-tutting over certain individuals about whom they had their doubts. But nothing I had seen or heard first hand had ever looked or sounded or tasted like cheating.
I didn't really know what to look for, but I was fairly sure that when I did see it I would know.
What I had just witnessed seemed too gauche to be true. Its very obviousness implied that it couldn't possibly have been achieved by doping. Surely if you cheat, you cheat within the margins of credibility, you don't stretch a point by asking Getafix to sling you a gourd of magic potion under the counter and then stroll through the village gates and start bashing Roman centurions together. That would be ridiculous. It would be to invite scrutiny, to implore detection. Yet, everything I had observed from Landis that day both on and off the bike struck me as unnatural. Not knowing then whether I would be shot down in flames for even suggesting it, I went out on a limb.
âPaul, was that, you know . . . should we take that at face value?' My vocabulary was failing me. âOr was it, um, bent?'
He looked genuinely affronted. At once I wished I hadn't spoken; I'd clearly misjudged the moment.
âIt was just a great ride, you know. Sometimes that's all there is. Just a brilliant ride.' He looked serious enough.
âFucking brilliant,' he added for extra fucking emphasis.
Paul, of course, has ridden the Tour. He understands the dynamics of the race, is alive to the nuances of the professional peloton, and, most importantly perhaps, was still very closely in touch with a good number of the riders, notably the American contingent. I was just a football hack winging it in a world beyond my ken. So I bowed to his greater knowledge. Nothing that Paul had told me wasn't spoken from the heart. He loved the sport, and I felt bad for having besmirched it.
On 25 July 2006, within a day of our return to England, I received a beautifully hand-written cheque for the sterling equivalent of my winnings. I was amused to discover that Steve writes out cheques in the same orderly fashion that he composes shot-lists or running orders. My name was underlined in red. Being busy with other things, I smiled at my good judgement, dropped it in my in-tray and forgot to cash it.
Two days later, on 27 July, within minutes of the breaking news of Landis's positive âA' sample, I got a phone call. Literally within minutes.
âHave you cashed it?' The unmistakable tone of a man reprieved. Steve's voice. âRip it up. Don't cash it. I'm not paying. He's a bloody cheat. Floyd Bloody Landis.'
For the record, this case is still hugely contentious. Not the Landis one, that's clear-cut. I mean the dispute over the cheque; the foundation of our disagreement still quite unresolved. I maintain that I struck the bet on the basis of âfirst past the
post', regardless of any retrospective rulings. At some point it may get litigious. And at that point I will be fancying my chances, given that I have Sir Gary Imlach and Chris Boardman MBE as my witnesses for the prosecution.
Suffice it to say, though as I write this, I still haven't had my money.
Even though I won the bet*.
They'd already tried a different question, but it had proved to be useless.
âWhich member of the Royal Family has just got married?'
Charles? Andrew? The other one? Princess Michael? Before my eyes a procession of generic Windsors swam, some tethering horses and dressed in Barbours and headscarves, some galumphing around in helicopter pilot gear, maps visible in see-through pouches over the knees. Bald spots, ears and grins. Harry, Marry, Wills and Testaments. No idea.
âNo idea.' I shook my head. More to confirm to myself than anyone else that I had no idea . . . feeling that a visual cue like a shake of the head would help my sliding cognitive powers understand that I could no longer understand what was being asked of me or why it might be being asked.
âI'm sorry', I said. I was.
My hands kept moving to my bike helmet. Flat-spotted at the front, and split. Grazed through to the polystyrene all along the left-hand side. It lay upturned like a condemned turtle on the trolley next to me.
My hands knew too where the Piece of Paper was kept. It lay on the counter, alongside the jug of water with the flip-top
lid. They picked it up and held it before my eyes.
The Piece of Paper was read to me. Not for the first time, but for the hundredth, I absorbed its drifting hymn, aware that this was no longer news, but stuff that I did know, but now no longer knew and will need to know again.
âThat doesn't mean anything to him. He wouldn't know the answer anyway. Ask him something else.'
âWhen did you get married?'
On the face of it, this should have been an easy one, too. The trouble is that even now I can't say confidently that I would be able to answer it. Kath and I did indeed get married, after a good decade or so together and with two kids already to show for it. But we'd sloped off to the register office early one autumn afternoon, grilled some sausages back at home for lunch with our witnesses, and then taken off our twenty-pounds-the-pair matching H. Samuel rings, never to be worn again. It wasn't romantic, it was tax-efficient. But it wasn't memorable.
I squinted at my interrogator. A young doctor â Specsaver glasses, striped shirt, white coat, and the inevitable stethoscope draped round her shoulders. Like an extra in
Holby City
, I was beginning to become aware that I was conforming to an increasingly daft litany of hackneyed one-liners. I closed my eyes, scrunched them shut, as if to summon up more thinking power.
âHow did I get here?' I asked, aware by now of the absurdity of the question, yet powerless to avoid asking it. There are few things that impart more anxiety than not understanding why you are where you are. And I didn't.
I looked up. The
Holby City
doctor was in deep conversation with Kath, who kept a solicitous hold of my grubby palm as I sat cross-legged, like a bruised Buddha on the trolley.
âIt sounds daft, but he wouldn't know that either. You see, nor would I. The wedding was nothing special, and we don't celebrate anniversaries,' Kath was explaining. She turned to
me. âThis is Lewisham Hospital, Ned. You've had an accident, and you're confused. The doctors are just trying to find out what's going on.'
âWho put these on me?' I looked down at my Lycra shorts.
If
Holby City
was real, then it would have flashed back to the accident. The pelican crossing. The girl in the road. Me approaching. The green light.
As it was, my memory wasn't quite that good. It stuttered back into life every now and again, but flashed back to the wrong bits. Pedalling fast past Dulwich College and turning my head to the left to see someone running up to bowl. Crossing over Tower Bridge, avoiding the strangely corrugated edges of the carriageway where the tarmac has melted and buckled up, its slow-sapping gradient and wind from the west.
A paramedic leaning over me. The white ceiling of the ambulance, and sway of its suspension.
Then nothing more.
âHow did I get here?'
Châteauroux: 9 July 2008. The sun beats hard on the tarmac. A heat haze rises vertically from the Skoda-sponsored finish line. I squint back along the home straight. Black-and-white signs mark the distances left: 50m, 100m, 150m, 200m, at intervals along the strung-out line of straining faces and flag-waving kids. From this piece of asphalt where I stand rooted, the shimmering of the heat curtain looks like the opposite of refreshing rain â a shower of oven-ready air to greet the first across the line.
A fly lands on my ankle, drawn to the drying sweat. I glance down at him. He's waiting too. We are somewhere in the middle of France, and it's time once again to call home
the winner. Only this time, it could be different.
In one hand, I clutch my microphone. I'm breathing a bit like Darth Vader, as the race draws closer. With my thumb I worry the braille-like raised print that spells out the word Sennhiesser. Woody stands next to me, inscrutable behind the summer's latest designer shades, fingers poised above the mixer strapped round his waist in the style of a cinema usherette, sweat pouring off him. My other hand hovers over the radio-talkback control. I tweak the volume higher in a vain effort to hear Phil and Paul's words.
With just 5km left, and the speed tipping 30mph, I am trying to decipher the turn of events. Has the break been caught?
Of course it has. This is HTC-Columbia. Their train hits the front. From this point, as I loosen the elbow on the microphone arm, there is little room left for doubt.
Mark Cavendish was about to unleash his extraordinary talent on the Tour. And we would be right there to see him do it. Heady days.
In the spring of the previous year, I had asked a simple, innocent question: âMark Cavendish, this kid on T-Mobile. Is he actually going to be as good as everyone reckons?'
To the initiated this was an insultingly simple question. But on the radar screen of my understanding, he'd only just shown up. Other great sprinters were there: Tom Boonen and McEwen, with Petacchi and Hushovd, stacked-up slow-moving dots homing in ever closer to their targets. And then suddenly, there was this new blip. A fragment of something greater, perhaps. A UFO that originated from the Isle of Man. To give it an abbreviated name, we called it âCav'.
The signs had been there throughout his development and, to those in the know, Cavendish was a loaded bullet ready to be fired. But I dispute that anyone, except the rider himself (for his self-belief is astounding), knew what the next couple of years would bring. This was before the records and the
stunning serial successes, the petulance, the feuds, the daring and the doing of the man. The day on which I asked about Cavendish for the first time dates back to an altogether different age.
In fact, it was a cloudy Thursday in London, two days before the start of the 2007 Tour. We parked up outside the Ramada Jarvis hotel in London's Excel centre, which is the sort of place that defies description. So I won't try.
Careful negotiations had brought us to the position where we had an appointment with T-Mobile's Mark Cavendish. I remember being surprised that things had been that difficult to set up. Fran Millar (Dave's sister and sometime cycling agent) had assisted us, as well as an army of PR people from T-Mobile whose job seemed to be predicated on the understanding that the media, in all their guises, are an untrustworthy rabble, and should be hindered at every opportunity. In the end, though, we'd been given a time and a place when we could sit down to meet Mark Cavendish, face to face. It would be our first encounter.
We had done the usual thing: arriving at a hotel, we had scoured the echoing lobby area for a suitable nook to set up some lights and conduct the interview with sufficient intimacy, protected as much as possible from the off-white noise of bags being dropped, phones ringing, and music playing.
I went off in search of the relevant PR bloke. I think his name was Michael Wagner, but that may be my version of what he should have been called. He had that generic corporate German look, which is best suited to airport departure lounges and trade fairs: grey-suited, with a mobile in one hand and a BlackBerry in the other, he had a face which was loosely based on Michael Stich, but with less identifiable character. Unsmilingly, he greeted me, and told me that I should wait there, and that he would bring in Mark as and when Mark deemed it appropriate for Mark to appear. And with that he
disappeared back into the main body of the hotel complex without so much as being nice. It was the first of many such encounters with âWagner' that summer. They were uniquely life-sapping experiences, which made me vow never to buy a phone from T-Mobile.
I had a picture of Cavendish in my pocket, which I had printed off the Internet so that I could recognise him when he showed up, but in the end there was no need. It was obvious that the short figure in the regulation Adidas tracksuit coming towards me was the main man. He had a restrained swagger: short-striding and purposeful. As he drew close, he looked shyly at me. I noted his long lashes, plump cheeks and full lips.
This man looks nothing like a racer
, I remember thinking.