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From the pen of J B Wadley, ed Adrian Bell (2002)
Mousehold Press 1 874739 22 6 £12.95 206pp
A collection of articles about competitive cycling by one of Britain's
most celebrated cycle journalists

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Jock Wadley was a towering presence in British cycle journalism in the
middle years of the twentieth century. True, you might say, with few practitioners
in this particular corner of reporting during that period, even one of
short stature might appear as a giant. But Wadley's qualities as an observer
and recorder of bicycle sport would have shone out, whatever the competition.
Born in 1914, Wadley reported on the domestic and continental scene
from 1933, pretty nearly until he died in 1981, writing for Cycling and
The Bicycle, as well as editing Coureur and International Cycle Sport.
That this publication was issued over 20 years after his demise shows
the regard in which he was held by his readers.
The pieces here cover topics as diverse as the intense competition to
take the 'Bath and Back' record (from London - of course); Frederico Bahamontes
assault on the 1959 Tour and a Randonneur in the Alps. His tone is almost
conversational - he frequently explains the difficulties of following
a race from a press car. "When the journalist is equipped with a
helicopter he might be able to cover all four races at once" he laments
at one stage - speaking of an age before most commentators watched the
race on the box.
Here he is on Shay Elliot's progress in 1958's edition of Ghent-Wevelgem:
"What I dared to hope was the Elliot was still strong enough not
only to win the Messines prime, but to get away on his own to keep clear
of the other chasers all the way to Wevelgem. But although he was still
strong, one man was stronger. He was Noel Fore, and Fore flung himself
into a powerful sprint on a modest hill".
He is partisan, but when the English-speaking riders do not triumph,
he is quick to applaud the winners.
Often the style is more that of a letter to a friend than what we would
today recognise as journalism. But what a correspondent to have! These
dispatches from the past are so full of colour, incident and detail that
they transcend their style.
PS July 08
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