ah - the man who sold me my first posh bike frame!I raced against Colin Lewis - once
Did he offer you a brandy?
ah - the man who sold me my first posh bike frame!I raced against Colin Lewis - once
@TMN to me.Hubert Oppermann, a genuine legend (and Australian, too).
Oppy won Paris-Brest-Paris when it was still a race and was AUK's first patron. He would send regular letters to AUK's Arrivée magazine.Hubert Oppermann, a genuine legend (and Australian, too).
Both of them.Tommy Godwin.
Jack Lauterwasser if you're into time trials - but he deserves legendary status IMO partly because he was selected for the Amsterdam Olympics and rode there from London and partly because he was involved in the project to make folding bikes for parachutists, used at the ill-fated Operation Market Garden. Like Major Taylor, his name lives on as a handlebar shape which is now sold as a useful MTB-diameter drop-ish bar.Kudos to whoever said Ned Overend. I'll also add John Tomac from the same era and raise the stakes further by suggesting Major Taylor.
I remember him. There seemed to be a spate of very short hair cuts about that time. Roy Cromack, Jon Burnham etc.@TMN to me.
Ant Taylor, hard riding and controversial skinhead who won a few BBARs in the early seventies.
A great short distance TT rival of Engers at one time Was Derick Cottington of the Charlotteville CC, although they rarely rode the same event. Cottingham maintained he never went out training - he didn't need to, his commute was 40 miles each way Monday to Friday.wow. Alf Engers. I remember reading an article in the 1987 Ron Kitching "Everything Cycling" catalogue .
was a brilliant rider and the article was brilliant. Wish I had kept the catalogue now !
Phil Bayton aka (the Staffordshire engine) always on the attack,could mix it with the best .