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Tales from the Muddy PelotonCross My HeartTim Maloney/European Editor The first World Cyclocross champ was crowned in 1950 in Paris. Jean Robic, nicknamed "Tete de Verre" (skull of glass) almost always used a leather helmet after he fractured his skull in the 1944 Paris-Roubaix. Delicate noggined Robic, winner of the 1947 Tour De France took the title ahead of Roger Rondeaux, who went on to dominate the next three editions of the 'Cross Worlds until his fellow Frenchman Andre Dufraisse swept the next five titles. Cyclocross began as a way for road riders to have an early form of cross-training in the winter and evolved into a popular spectator sport for cycling fans. Legendary 'Cross riders like Belgians Eric De Vlaeminck, Roland Liboton and Robert Vermiere, Italians Renato Longo and Daniele Pontoni, Germans Rolf Wolfshohl, Klaus-Peter Thaler and Mike Kluge and Swiss rider Albert Zweifel have all excelled at this curious discipline. Top roadmen such as Roger De Vlaeminck, Pascal Richard and Adri Van derPoel have all won World 'Cyclocross championships, too. Perhaps cyclocross is "a sport that (only) has a hard core of fans in eight Western European countries... therefore we must not want to make it a worldwide spectacle," according to UCI boss Hein Verbruggen. So what? It is still a spectacle and a hell of a lot of fun and in the meantime, cyclocross will continue to be the best-kept secret in the sport of cycling, unless you are a Belgian with a pair of gumboots, a Karcher pressure cleaner and a case of Jupiler beer. To follow are some recent images that this reporter (and 'cross fan) shot on a recent trek to Monopoli in southern Italy, perhaps the most unlikely place for a world cyclocross championship ever. Bikes at the 2003 'Cross Worlds PhotosImages by Tim Maloney/Cyclingnews
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