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Push Yourself Just A Little Bit More, Johnny Green (2005)
Orion 0752867520 Quarto 243pp £14.99
A gonzo account of the 2003 Tour recounted in rock n' roll patois
in which the race and results take a back seat to a rollercoaster
back-stage view of the event

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For most of the 1970s Tony Benyon wrote a cartoon for the music weekly
NME called Th'
Lone Groover. Its protagonist - a masked rock n' roll desperado -
spoke a transatlantic lingo in which apostrophes generally took the place
of vowels and th' beat o' th' street coursed thru his veins.
I had thought that so searing was Benyon's satire of blues talk that
he had killed it stone dead. Apparently not.
Green's modest fame might rest on his time as The Clash's road manager,
but his outlook predates punk. He is pure mid-70s rock hanger on. Gene
Hunt is anodyne by comparison. Saxondale a pale imitation of this road-crew
geezer persona.
Here he is having discovered that some men working on the road had given
him a bum steer, despite his press pass.
"Teeth bared 'n' gritted, except for a stream of obscenities shouted.
I was gonna kill those fuckin' workmen. I'd give 'em 'Only havin' a laugh.'
I had blood 'n' violence in my soul. I retraced the road. There they were.
Still grinning. I'd teach the cunts to cast me down into the despond of
punterdom.'
Rarely in this book does the word 'and', appear - it's all abbreviation
'n' apostrophes - particularly when 'gs' come at the endin' of a word.
Green and his compadres somehow obtain press accreditation for the Tour,
an event and a sport for which he has a fairly recent enthusiasm. This
memoir is of the spectacle he encountered - the traffic jams, the characters
responsible for the race's organisation, the low-grade hotels and the
hours on the road. By the time he gets to Paris, he has driven more than
double kilometres covered by the riders.
It's a novel approach - at least in writing about cycling - and one
that does bare some fresh fruit - even if you have read dozens of books
about the event. The journalists' media pack, rich in historical information
and literary quotations about stage towns, was new to me, for example.
And Green's account of the logistic challenges that the event overcomes,
sheds a new light on the unique hell of mountain-top finishes, after stage
is over.
He has an abrasive turn in nick-names - Virenque is a 'Weasel-Faced
Rent Boy', Ullrich merely 'a wanker'. And he sprinkles his narrative with
entertaining digressions from the Tour annals, French history and rock
'n' roll mythology. It is a high-speed, stream-of-consciousness that had
enough for me to enjoy getting to the end.
At heart, though, there are curiosities about Green's standpoint. He
is insanely pro drugs, for recreation and performance enhancement - despite
suggesting that he has been an alcoholic and heroin addict in the past.
But his greatest thrill, it seems, is to see a pulsating alpha-male athlete
doing something at which he is exceptional.
Here he is with Mario Cipollini, to whom he takes a particular fancy.
"Le Beau Mario seemed huge, perfectly in proportion. I looked down
at his muscular thighs, bronzed and smooth. I wanted to stretch out my
hand and stroke his bare flesh down to the knee with my palm. I knew that
action would give me a lifetime's good ju ju."
It is seeing things, in the flesh that gives Green his greatest thrill.
"To be at a gig is to be a molecule in the body of the crowd. To
lock on to the band. The band plugs into the crowd. It only happens in
person." The thrill he experiences watching riders finish a stage
is the equal to that kind of rock 'n' roll moment, he suggests.
The thought does not seem to occur to him that it might be more thrilling
still to ride over the Cols himself. Perhaps that is because, at the end
of the day, despite punk's DIY ethic, his role in The Clash entourage
was carrying the equipment and watching from the sidelines, rather than
strutting his own stuff on stage.
Tim Dawson February 10
Johnny Green appeared on the Bike
Show around the time of publication. In the flesh, he sounds more
Cockney Geezer, than Lone Groover.
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