At 9:14 AM -0800 11/8/06, Jerome & Elizabeth Moos wrote:
> I would think that, given the demands of traning, a star cyclist
>would find it difficult to find time to run such a business, but
>there may have been instances of a cyclist actually owning such a
>company and putting day-to-day operations in the hands of a family
>member or long-time associate, with the star perhaps devoting more
>time in the offseason.
In most cases, the pros rented out their names, and weren't involved with the bike production, especially in France. Louison Bobet won the Tour in the 1950s on a bike marked with his name.
However, in 1930, the Tour de France was run with national teams, and the organizer provided the famous "anonymous" yellow bikes - see also the article by Leducq (the winner of that year's Tour) in Vintage Bicycle Quarterly Vol. 4, No. 3.
So it seems unlikely that Fontan rode a bike with his name on it, as this would have been counter to the rules.
Regarding Fontan's fate in the Tour, I checked the VBQ article, and Leducq reports that Fontan suffered from saddle sores and abandoned on stage 9. Nothing about a broken bike. Perhaps Leducq had forgotten about it by the time he wrote his memoirs (from which this article was translated) in the 1970s. On the other hand, Mauclair, also a member of the French team, abandoned on the same stage after breaking his collarbone in a crash.
I suspect the bike in question is another of those marketing
efforts... It may be a nice bike - I do look forward to the photos -
but the efforts to identify one's barn find as a famous bike based on
nothing but a vivid imagination do get a bit tiring at times. I once
was contacted by someone who had discovered a bike with a "Star of
David" in the chainrings, and concluded it must have been Alex
Singer's Hurtu from the 1930s technical trials. The reasoning stood
that Singer may have been Jewish... However, the chainrings were a
standard pattern at the time, and the star of david required some
imagination to be seen. Most of all, Singer never rode for Hurtu, nor
did he publicly proclaim his faith, if he had one. Finally, I doubt
he was the only Jew in France in the 1930s.
>The Old Bicycle Co <Tim@theoldbicycle.co.uk> wrote:
>
>As
>for the story of his loss of yellow jersey, it seems to be that French
>artistic licence was liberally used.
Especially since Fontan never even wore the yellow jersey. See the VBQ article or a short history of the Tour at
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/
--
Jan Heine
Editor
Bicycle Quarterly
140 Lakeside Ave #C
Seattle WA 98122
http://www.bikequarterly.com