Jan_Janssen

Jan Janssen

Jan Janssen

Dutch cyclist (born 1940)


Johannes Adrianus "Jan" Janssen[lower-alpha 1] (born 19 May 1940) is a Dutch former professional cyclist (1962–1972). He was world champion and winner of the Tour de France and the Vuelta a España, the first Dutch rider to win either. He rode the Tour de France eight times and finished all but the first time. He won seven stages and wore the yellow jersey for two days (after stage 16 in 1966 and after stage 22B in 1968). He was easily spotted in the peloton because of his blond hair and his glasses. As of the death of Federico Bahamontes in August 2023, he is, after Lucien Aimar, who won in 1966, the oldest surviving winner of the Tour de France.

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Early life

Janssen was born at Nootdorp, a small town near The Hague and Delft, just five days after the Netherlands surrendered to the Nazis. He later moved to Putte, a village on the Belgian border between Roosendaal and Antwerp. He worked with his parents as a youth, digging the heavy ground of the western Netherlands to excavate foundations for the buildings the family firm erected. He joined the cycling club at Delft when he was 16 and as a novice won 25 races in two years.[1]

Career

Janssen turned professional after an amateur career in which he won several Dutch classics and rode for the Netherlands in the Tour de l'Avenir, which was then open to amateurs and to independents, or semi-professionals. Janssen rode for French teams and is especially associated with Pelforth-BP, sponsored by a brewer and an oil company. His talent, authority, and command of French quickly established him as the team leader. At first he had a reputation as a sprinter[citation needed] but he quickly developed into a rider of multi-day races.

He competed in the individual road race at the 1960 Summer Olympics.[2]

He rode his first Tour de France in 1963, when he won a stage, but a crash forced him to retire. In 1964 he won Paris–Nice, then two stages and the green jersey of points leader in the Tour. Later that year he became world champion at Sallanches, in France. He wore the green jersey again in the Tour of 1965 and in 1966 came close to winning overall. But it was finally in 1968 that he became the first Dutchman to win the Tour de France, beating the Belgian, Herman Van Springel, by 38 seconds. That remained the smallest winning margin until 1989, when Greg LeMond won by only eight seconds ahead of Laurent Fignon. Janssen had not worn the yellow jersey as leader of the general classification in 1968 until he reached Paris at the end of the final stage, an individual time-trial.

The Tour in 1968 was, like the previous year, for national teams rather than trade teams. The organisers resolved to "experiment" with national teams in a measure widely interpreted[citation needed] as revenge by the organiser, Félix Lévitan, on sponsors he thought had provoked a strike against drug tests the previous year. Putting into one team riders who the rest of the year rode for rival sponsors proved a problem and internal rivalries were said[citation needed] to divide the Dutch team more than most. Janssen had to overcome these internal problems to win. His victory in the orange jersey of the Netherlands rather than the blue, yellow and white of the Pelforth team made his first win for the Netherlands all the more popular at home.[citation needed]

Retirement

Janssen with his wife and daughter Karin during his retirement ceremony on 23 September 1972

He retired from racing, he says, after being left behind in the Tour of Luxembourg and being ashamed to hear his name listed on the race radio service among other also-rans.[3]

"I knew then that I was Jan Janssen, winner of the Tour de France and the championship of the world and that it was time for me to stop", he says.

He left the peloton to run a bicycle frame-building business in the south-western village of Putte, which is divided by the border with Belgium. That company still bears his name today.[4] His neighbours there included another world champion, Hennie Kuiper. Janssen continued to ride his bike in retirement as a member of the Zuid-West Hoek club. He continues to make personal appearances along with other Dutch riders of his era. He said he enjoyed being recognised while on training rides.[3]

Personality

The Dutch race organiser Charles Ruys, who called Janssen a businesslike, honest and straightforward man, said:

Anybody who tries to do something unpleasant to Jan, may it be in a race or a matter of money, has a very tough opponent. Like most successful bikies, Jan knows the value of money. So much so that he gives the impression that he is our Minister of Finance.[1]

A bit of insight into his personality, showing the respect and compassion he showed for his fellow riders, can be gathered from a 2007 interview regarding the feisty British rider Tom Simpson (see the Death of Tom Simpson):

"Occasionally Tommy could be annoying. When it was rolling along at 30kmh and - paf!… he’d attack. Oh leave us alone! There's still 150km to go pipe down. But often, he wanted war.” Janssen went on to say, “Even in the feed zones. It's not the law, but it's not polite. Musettes (lunch bags) were up in the air there was panic and crashes. It was Simpson acting like a jerk. It didn't happen often. Occasionally I was angry at him. I’d say to him in his native English: You fucking cunt... There were often many teams, five or six, in the same hotel together every evening. Each had their own table. And at a certain moment, Tommy walked into the restaurant like a gentleman, with a cane, bowler hat and in costume… He was like a Lord in England and the rest of us were in tracksuits. Everyone saw that, laughed, and the things he had done during the race were forgotten.”[5]

Views of modern racing

Janssen spent most of his career with a French sponsor, profiting from the higher rate that the French franc enjoyed then against the guilder. But since then things have changed, he said.

We had to be good all the time, from the first of February until the end of October. Because it was my duty to make the most of my sponsor's name, to get publicity. And if you had an off-day, well, you were letting your sponsors down. Now the whole sponsorship of sport has taken off. It has become so interesting to a company, because a company that wants to get its name known, you can buy a good team, with good management, good public relations, and you can get all the big names. I think, too, that the motivation has changed with the professionals as well. You get riders like Steven Rooks and Gert-Jan Theunisse saying that after the Tour they are stopping at home because they can't be bothered with criteriums, and that's not attractive for the public.[6]

Career achievements

Major results

1961
1st Stage 13 Tour de l'Avenir
1962
1st Züri-Metzgete
3rd Overall Tour de l'Avenir
1st Stage 1, 4 & 7
3rd Overall Olympia's Tour
1st Stage 4
1963
1st Stage 2b (TTT) Tour de France
1st Stage 7 Tour de France
2nd Overall Grand Prix du Midi Libre
1st Stage 3 & 5
1964
1st UCI World Road Race Championships
Tour de France
1st Points classification
1st Stage 7 & 10a
1st Overall Paris–Nice
1965
1st Points classification Tour de France
1st Stage 12
1st Overall Ronde van Nederland
1st Stage 3
1st Stage 7a Critérium du Dauphiné
1st Stage 1 Grand Prix du Midi Libre
1st Stage 4a Tour du Sud-Est
1st Grand Prix du Parisien
1966
1st Bordeaux–Paris
1st Brabantse Pijl
1967
1st Overall Super Prestige Pernod
1st Overall Vuelta a España
1st Points classification
1st Stage 1b
5th Overall Tour de France
1st Points classification
1st Stage 13
1st Paris–Roubaix
1968
1st Overall Tour de France
1st Stage 14 & 22b
6th Overall Vuelta a España
1st Points classification
1st Stage 1a & 1b
1st Stage 5 Paris–Nice
1st Stage 5 Vuelta a Mallorca
1969
1st Overall Vuelta a Mallorca
1st Stage 2
1st Stage 2 Critérium du Dauphiné
1st Stage 5 Paris–Nice
1st Grand Prix d'Isbergues
1970
1st Stage 6 Paris–Nice
1st Stage 3a Vuelta Ciclista al País Vasco
1st Stage 2 Grand Prix du Midi Libre
1972
1st Stage 2 Tour de Luxembourg

Grand Tour results timeline

More information Tour de France, Giro d'Italia ...
Legend
1Winner
2–3Top three-finish
4–10Top ten-finish
11–Other finish
DNEDid not enter
DNF-xDid not finish (retired on stage x)
DNS-xDid not start (not started on stage x)
HDFinished outside time limit (occurred on stage x)
DSQDisqualified
N/ARace/classification not held
NRNot ranked in this classification

See also

Notes

  1. The phrase Johannes Adrianus "Jan" Janssen is pronounced [joːˈɦɑnəs ɑdriˈjaːnʏ ˈʃɑ ˈɲɑnsə(n)]. In isolation, the words are pronounced [joːˈɦɑnəs], [ɑdriˈjaːnʏs], [ˈjɑn] and [ˈjɑnsə(n)].

References

  1. "The world pro champion remembers Bill and Ben", Sporting Cyclist, 1964
  2. "Jan Janssen Olympic Results". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 5 November 2014. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  3. "There are no more hungry riders – says Janssen", Cycling, 8 February 1990
  4. "History: 1972". Jan Janssen Cycling. Retrieved 22 July 2013.
  5. "There are no more hungry riders" – says Janssen, Cycling, 8 February 1990
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