From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Daniel Mangeas is a talking cycling encyclopedia, never using
notes, working entirely through improvisation.
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Daniel Mangeas, (born 10 April 1949) is a
former baker who has been the commentator of the Tour de France
and other important cycle races in France and Belgium since 1974. He commentates on 200
events a year,[1]
but tries to never speak for the rest of the day after races, to
preserve his voice.[2]
Origins
Mangeas is from Saint-Martin-de-Landelles in
Normandy, he was born in
Mortain (Manche). He comes
from a cycling family. He saw the Tour de France for the first time
at four years old. He also watched his cousin ride. He worked as a
baker for 10 years in Saint-Hilaire-du-Harcouët[3] before
being discovered by Albert Bouvet, the deputy director of the
Tour de France.[4] Mangeas
recounted in an interview with Vélo 101 that he had commentated on
table-football games among friends when he was a child, and
commented on his first bike race when he was 15 years old.[5]
Tour de
France
He continued commentating after finishing his national
service at 21, was heard by Albert Bouvet and recruited for the
1974
Tour de France as deputy speaker. He rode ahead of the
race in an air-conditioned Chevrolet ("which were pretty rare at the
time") to stand in for the main speaker, Pierre Shori. Shori's car
broke down on the Saint-Lary-Soulan stage and Mangeas
had to take over at the finish. Until then he had spoken only at
the starts and at time
trials.[6] He
said:
|
“ |
Raymond
Poulidor won and my heart was beating at 180 a minute, but it
remains one of my best memories.[7] |
” |
He became the main speaker two years later, presenting riders at
the start of each day's race for two hours, then driving the length
of the race and commentating the last 50km at the finish.
Mangeas' commentating has been praised for its energy and his
knowledge of details about each rider.[8] On the
other hand, he is criticised for presenting an over-optimistic view
of the sport of cycling.[9]
References
- ^ a
b
de Wee, Nico (24 July 2004). "Interview de Daniel
Mangeas : « La Voix » parle" (in French). Velo 101. http://www.velo101.com/actualite/default.asp?Id=6876&Section=elites1. Retrieved 8 November
2008.
- ^
"Interview exclusive de Daniel
Mangeas - La voix du Tour" (in French). 23 June 2007. http://www.velo-club.net/article.php?sid=39111. Retrieved 8 November
2008.
- ^
Drucker, Michel. "Summary of Vivement le
Tour". Solar. http://www.solar.fr/solar/vivement_le_tour_&141&6&4&9782263044854.html?1,1,9. Retrieved 8 November
2008.
- ^
Daniel Mangeas, des vélos dans la voix, Reflets n°62,
June-July 2007, Conseil Régional de Basse-Normandie
- ^ de Wee, Nico (24 July 2004). "Interview de Daniel
Mangeas : « La Voix » parle" (in French). Velo 101. http://www.velo101.com/actualite/default.asp?Id=6876&Section=elites1. Retrieved 8 November 2008.
"When I was small, there were bike races in our village with my
friends and I always had to commentate even though I was a shy
child. Then, in the only bar in the village there was a
table-football game and I used to commentate on games between my
friends. The man who ran the café, Henri Pigeon, was president of
the comité des fêtes and he was looking for a commentator
for a race in the village. I was 15 and he asked me to do it one
Sunday and that was my first official race."
- ^
Journal du Dimanche, France, 27 July 2003
- ^
"Daniel Mangeas, la voix du
Tour depuis 34 ans" (in French). Agence
France-Presse. 9 July 2007. http://www.avmaroc.com/dossiers/daniel-mangeas-voix-a4795.html. Retrieved 8 November
2008.
- ^
Libération, France; July 1999. Retrieved on 8 November 2008.
"The microphone-man dances almost on one foot, crying the records
of the 177 riders without ever forgetting to say that is one rider
is so strong it's because he eats only black radish. Finally he
shuts up, still ringing in your head... He's like a gong that rings
on and on without stopping."
- ^
Libération, France; July 1999. Retrieved on 8 November 2008.
"He evokes a dream world of cycling without cheats, where all the
riders are good boys. And where all the team doctors are like
family doctors in the countryside, in corduroy trousers, with a
pipe in their mouth. You can't count on Mangeas to empty the
gutters of cycling... The smoke of doping doesn't inconvenience
him. For the 28 years that he has held the job, he has seen riders
climbing on to his podium. Little guys, big guys, even guys stuffed
with corticoids."