Chasing Legends

Columbia’s ’09 Tour

Chasing Legends is a chronicle of Team Columbia HTC’s ’09 Tour de France, with the history of the Tour intermingled via archival footage and sepia toned recreations. Phil Liggett serves as both narrator and talking head, along with Eddy Merckx and Paul Sherwen. Columbia riders and staff move the story along in interviews, and Jens Voigt is thrown in to add his special brand of suffer-talk that makes bike nerds’ hearts go all aflutter.

The footage is breathtaking, with the race seen from the usual perspectives as well as other angles like team car cam, soigneur cam and photographer cam. One gets the sense of the grand sweep of the Tour in the mountains on one hand, and the sheer claustrophobia of a TTT on a bike path on the other.

Much of the film follows the familiar narrative of so many cycling films: the Tour is really hard, riders suffer immensely, descents are terrifying, soigneurs work all day, mechanics work even longer days, and everything is epic epic epic. I found the lighter side more illuminating: the humor in team meetings, the Frick and Frack interplay of DS Brian Holm and manager Rolf Aldag, Zabel happily washing a bike, Menchov crashing and crashing.

As this is Columbia’s story, it’s told from their perspective, with Garmin cast as faceless villains. ‘Chasegate’ is (probably rightfully) related as Garmin spitefully keeping Hincapie out of yellow, but with no mention made of the taunting team owner Bob Stapleton delivered that might’ve motivated it. Cavendish’s relegation on the same stage is blamed on Hushovd taking a bad line. Liggett and Sherwen, ever the yes men, hew faithfully to the Columbia party line.

Oddly enough, while Contador and Schleck are barely in evidence, Armstrong gets plenty of screen time. Armstrong bridging to Contador and Schleck on stage 16 gets the full Liggett and Sherwen breathless commentary and heroic soundtrack treatment, as if he had won the Tour instead of merely rejoining a group up the road. It’s unfortunate that a film on Columbia still needs to pay lip service to Armstrong, especially considering that Columbia kicked so much ass there was no shortage of material.

Columbia had a terrific race in ’09, with Cavendish winning 6 stages and Tony Martin doing a stint in the white jersey. The film is at its best when it documents the team’s successes. We get the inside story of the crosswind split on stage 3, Holm ordering the riders to ‘eat shit’ during a leadout, Hincapie sweating out and ultimately denying a broken collarbone, and Renshaw’s masterful swamping of Garmin on the Champs. These insider moments will appeal most to the racer crowd.

So is the movie a ‘must see’? You’re an compulsive participant in a fringe sport. Of course you’re going to see it. You can order the DVD, and there’ll be a screening at Symphony Space on 9/30. Check back here for some ticket giveaways to the screening.

29 Comments

Wheelsucker 2000

Do you really think somebody with the resources and ambition to use EPO would just do it once? as the stakes go up, could you put down the needle? i would fully expect that the national title came with the help of biomedicine.

Sacha Locknut

No. I think it’s ridiculous to think he took EPO the same year he was a cat 3 and not when he started riding for bigger teams over the next couple of years.

Sacha Locknut

No. I think it’s ridiculous to think he took EPO the same year he was a cat 3 and not when he started riding for bigger teams over the next couple of years.

Svein Rucker

You can bet he was doping when riding for empire.

Ridiculous yes. Doping at any level is sad. I feel sorry for this jerk off. All his successes are the result of his cheating.

Anyone can make mistakes. This is no mistake. This is a cheater.

What a fucking jerk off.

Kylian Limit Screw

his posts, although few, have magically disappeared from peloton east.

can’t wait to see the rest of the local names.

have i gotten stronger (doubtful) or have the local 123 races gotten slower- i always knew some people in the local races (like papp) were doping, i never realized it was so pervasive.

cheater never win

Joe Papp(cyclist)Tour of China Caught
Kenny Williams(masters cyclist)Master Nationals Caught
Melito Heredia (cyclist) Univest Caught
Floyd Landis (cyclist dummy)Tour de France Caught
Lance Armstrong(?)Almost Caught
J Bunde(cyclist) Master Nationals Caught
J Chodroff(cyclist)told on his self (smart)
lets add to the list of Cheaters

Tegghiaio Skidmark

armstrong (?) you make an exception to satisfy your transparent pathological dislike for the guy. how about every single pro racer (?) with the possible exception of cadel. poor bugger

heart attack man

why not cadel?

getting caught and not fighting is hardly being “honest and responsible.” it’s called cutting your losses.

Andy

Well, that was quick. First DVD won in one minute. We’ll do another DVD giveaway soon, plus 2 sets of 2 tickets for the screening.

Andy

Contest time! Respond with real name or you won’t be able to claim the prize.

According to Cav, what store did Greipel open up in downtown Amsterdam? (know your Toto)

Razzante Gel

I used to follow nyvelocity quite regularly but I have to say you guys have seemed to drop the chain lately – where is some comment/opinion on what is happening with the Spanish riders right now? And I don’t mean in posts to the ‘arguments’ or to Toto. Please try to maintain your relevance – I speak as a fan and someone who has really benefitted from your interviews and other content. Get in the game please…

Andy

This is a bit of a grey area. We don’t aspire to be a be-all cycling news source, so we don’t want to put up a post regurgitating others’ reporting just so people have a place to comment. So if all the comments gravitate to a certain page, that’s fine with us. Plus, we’re lazy.

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