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Cycling legend Bahamontes, Spain's first Tour de France winner, dies

AFP
AFP - [email protected]
Cycling legend Bahamontes, Spain's first Tour de France winner, dies
Bahamontes put down his extraordinary ability in the mountains to his first job working in the market in Toledo. (Photo by AFP)

Federico Bahamontes, who in 1959 became the first Spanish cyclist to win the Tour de France, has died aged 95, the mayor of Toledo announced on Tuesday.

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"It is with deep sadness that we announce the loss of Federico Martín Bahamontes, the Eagle of Toledo, a reference point for sport who raised the name of our city to the heights," wrote Carlos Velázquez on Twitter, recently rebranded X.

"The first Spaniard to have won the Tour de France is part of the history of the sport in our country, with more than 74 victories to his credit," he added.

Velñazquez said the city would pay homage to Bahamontes with two days of mourning.

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Spanish caretaker Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez thanked Bahamontes for "inspiring us to pedal beyond our limits."

"His legacy will endure on the roads and in our hearts," Sánchez wrote on X.

The Spanish cycling federation also paid Bahamontes -- who won another of the Grands Tours the Vuelta a España twice (1954, 1957)-- a handsome tribute.

"A legend of our sport, he was the first Spaniard to win the Tour de France, a race in which he is also remembered as one of the best climbers in history," the federation said on Twitter.

Bahamontes earned his nom de guerre the 'Eagle of Toledo' -- given to him by a French journalist it stuck -- being crowned six times the King of the Mountains in the Tour de France.

In all he won 11 mountain stages on the Grands Tours (seven in the Tour, three in the Vuelta and one in the Giro d'Italia) and as others flagged he revelled in searing temperatures.

Bahamontes put down his extraordinary ability in the mountains to his first job working in the market in Toledo.

"To deliver to clients I had a small cart which I filled with 120 kilogrammes of fruit and vegetables," he recounted.

"I did this pushing it for four years in the streets.

"It is at that time that I gained the heart and body of a climber. On the slopes, I pushed the cart on the tips of my toes like I then did on the pedals."

Although he twice more featured in the Tour de France podium (second in 1963, third in 1964) he was let down by his lack of ability in the descents from the mountain tops -- in the days when stage finishes on the summits were rare.

In retirement he stayed in the world of the sport he adorned, being a director of a team, and he also had a bicycle shop.

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