Difference between revisions of "Paris-Roubaix"

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<table border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="right" width="300">
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{{X}}
<tr><th colspan="2" bgcolor=lawngreen><big>Paris-Roubaix</big></th></tr>
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{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:right; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:230px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
<tr><td>Local name:</td><td>Paris-Roubaix</td></tr>
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|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
<tr><td>Region:</td><td>Northern [[France]]</td></tr>
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| colspan=2 style="padding:0; background:#333333; color:#fff; border-bottom:1px solid #999;" |[[Image:Paris-Roubaix logo.png|230px]]
<tr><td>Date:</td><td>Early April</td></tr>
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|- style="color:#fff; background:darkred; font-size:larger;"
<tr><td>Type:</td><td>One-day race</td></tr>
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! colspan=2 |'''Paris-Roubaix'''
<tr><th colspan="2" bgcolor=lawngreen>History</th></tr>
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|-
<tr><td>First Edition:</td><td valign="top">1896</td></tr>
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| Current event  ||  2009 Paris-Roubaix
<tr><td>Number of Editions:</td><td valign="top">103</td></tr>
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|-
<tr><td>First Winner:</td><td valign="top">[[Josef Fischer]], ({{GER}})</td></tr>
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| Date            ||  Early-April
<tr><td>Most Recent:</td><td valign="top">[[Tom Boonen]] ({{BEL}})</td></tr>
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|-
<tr><td>Most Wins:</td><td valign="top">[[Roger De Vlaeminck]] ({{BEL}}), 4 times</td></tr>
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| Region         ||  Northern France
</table>
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|-
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| English        ||  Paris-Roubaix
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|-
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| Local names      ||  {{flagiconFrance}} Paris-Roubaix
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|-
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| Nickname        ||  The Hell of the North<br>Queen of the Classics<br>The Easter race<br>A Sunday in Hell
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|-
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| Discipline      ||  Road
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|-
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| Type           ||  Monument one-day race
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|-
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| Organiser      ||  Amaury Sport Organisation
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|-
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| Director        || 
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|-
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| First           ||  1896
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|-
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| Number         ||  106 (as of 2008)
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|-
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| Last            || 
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|-
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| First winner    ||  {{flagiconGER|empire}} Josef Fischer
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|-
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| Most wins        ||  {{flagiconBEL}} Roger De Vlaeminck<br>(4 wins)
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|-
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| Most recent      ||  {{flagiconBEL}} Tom Boonen
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|}
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[[Image:Paris-Roubaix.jpg|thumb|200px|Uwe Raab at Paris-Roubaix 1995]]
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Begun in [[1896]], '''[[Paris]]-[[Roubaix]]''', formerly third of the ten [[Union Cycliste Internationale|UCI]] [[UCI World Cup|World Cup]] races and currently part of the [[UCI ProTour]], has become the most famous single-day professional [[Road bicycle racing|bicycle road race]]. Paris-Roubaix is regarded as one of the '[[Classic cycle races|Monuments]]' or Classics of the European professional cycling calendar and carries the nickname ''Queen of Classics'' or ''La Pascale'': the ''Easter race''.
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'''Paris-Roubaix''' is a one-day professional [[Road bicycle racing|bicycle road race]] in northern [[France]] from [[Compiègne]] to [[Roubaix]], near the Belgian frontier. Famous for rough terrain and cobblestones, it is one of the '[[Classic cycle races|Monuments]]' or Classics of the European calendar. It has been called the ''The Hell of the North'', ''A Sunday in Hell'', ''Queen of the Classics'' or ''La Pascale'': the ''Easter race''. The race is organised by the media group [[Amaury Sport Organisation]] annually in mid-April.  
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
[[Image:De Vlaeminck 1.jpg|thumb|left|[[Belgium|Belgian]] [[cyclist]] [[Roger De Vlaeminck]] riding in the Paris-Roubaix race. De Vlaeminck won the race 4 times. ]]
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[[image:Goldcobble.JPG|thumb|200px|right|Winners since 1977 have received a mounted cobble; the organisers keep a gold-plated cobble for themselves]]
Organised by the [[Amaury Sport Organisation]] and held annually in the mid-April rainy season, over the cobblestoned roads and hard rutted tracks of northern France's coal-mining region, ''La Pascale'' leaves riders caked from head to toe in mud and grit. However, this is not how this race earned the nickname ''l'enfer du Nord'', or the ''Hell of the North''. The term was first used to describe the race when it was run immediately following the end of the Great War, or [[World War I]].  The race course closely followed the front lines of the war, and hence passed through many of the ruins, craters, and destruction along the way, earning it the name ''l'enfer du Nord'', or the ''Hell of the North'' bestowed by the journalists.
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[[image:Theo Vienne, Founder of Paris-Roubaix, circa 1896.jpg|thumb|150px|left|[[Théodore Vienne]]<br>Roubaix entrepreneur.]]
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Paris-Roubaix is one of the oldest races of professional [[Road bicycle racing|road cycling]]. It was run first in [[1896]] and has stopped only for two world wars. It was created by two Roubaix textile manufacturers, [[Theo Vienne|Théodore Vienne]] (born 28 July 1864) and Maurice Perez. They had been behind the building of a [[velodrome]] on 46,000 square metres at the corner of the rue Verte and the route d'Hempempont. It opened on 9 June 1895.
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Vienne and Perez held several meetings on the track, one including the first appearance in France by the American sprinter [[Major Taylor]], then looked for further ideas. In February 1896 they hit on holding a race from Paris to their track. It gave them two problems. The first was that the biggest races started or ended in Paris and that Roubaix would be seen as too provincial a destination. The second was that they could organise the start or the finish but not both.
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They spoke to Louis Minart, the editor of ''Le Vélo'', the only daily sports paper. Minart was enthusiastic but said the decision of whether the paper would run the start and provide publicity belonged to the director, Paul Rousseau. Minart may also have suggested an indirect approach because the mill owners recommended their race not on its own merits but as preparation for another. They wrote:
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<blockquote>Dear M. Rousseau, [[Bordeaux-Paris]] is approaching and this great annual event which has done so much to promote cycling has given us an idea. What would you think of a training race which preceded Bordeaux-Paris by four weeks? The distance between Paris and Roubaix is roughly 280km, so it would be child's play for the future participants of Bordeaux-Paris. The finish would take place at the Roubaix vélodrome after several laps of the track. Everyone would be assured of an enthusiastic welcome as most of our citizens have never had the privilege of seeing the spectacle of a major road race and we count on enough friends to believe that Roubaix is truly a hospitable town. As prizes we already have subscribed to a first prize of 1,000 francs in the name of the Roubaix velodrome and we will be busy establishing a generous prize list which will be to the satisfaction of all. But for the moment, can we count on the patronage of ''Le Vélo'' and on your support for organising the start?</blockquote>
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The first prize represented seven months' wages for a miner at the time.
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Rousseau was enthusiastic and sent his cycling editor, Victor Breyer, to find a route. Breyer travelled to [[Amiens]] in a [[Panhard]] driven by his colleague, Paul Meyan. The following morning Breyer - later deputy organiser of the [[Tour de France]] and a leading official of the [[Union Cycliste Internationale]] - continued by bike. The wind blew, the rain fell and the temperature dropped. Breyer reached Roubaix filthy and exhausted after a day of riding in disjointed cobbles. He swore he would send a telegram to Minart urging him to drop the idea, saying it was dangerous to send a race the way he had just ridden. But that evening a meal and drinks with the team from Roubaix changed his mind.
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[[Image:Pavé, 100ème Paris-Roubaix.001.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Pavé Emblem of Paris-Roubaix,<br>Donated on the 100th anniversary<br>by 'Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix'<br>and 'La Ville de Roubaix']]
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===Easter mystery===
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Vienne and Perez scheduled their race for [[Easter]] Sunday. The Church objected. Riders would not have time to attend [[mass]] and spectators might not bother to try. Tracts were distributed in Roubaix decrying the venture. What happened next is uncertain. Legend says that Vienne and Perez promised the church that a mass would be said for the riders in a chapel 200m from the start, in the boulevard Maillot. The story is repeated by Pascal Sergent, the historian of the race, and by [[Pierre Chany]], historian of the sport in general. Sergent goes as far as saying that Victor Breyer, whom he says was there, said the service was cancelled because 4am was too early. Neither mentions if the date of the race was subsequently changed.
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However, the first Paris-Roubaix, Sergent says, was on 19 April 1896. But Easter Sunday in 1896 was two weeks earlier. The first Paris-Roubaix on Easter Sunday was the following year, [[1897]].
 +
 
 +
===The first race===
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[[Image:1896Josef Fischer.jpg|thumb|right|[[Josef Fischer (cyclist)|Josef Fischer]] won the first edition of Paris-Roubaix.]]
 +
News of Breyer's ride to Roubaix may have spread. Half those who entered did not turn up at the Brassérie de l'Espérance, the race headquarters. Those who dropped out included [[Henri Desgrange]], a prominent track rider who went on to organise the Tour de France. The starters did include [[Maurice Garin]], winner of Desgrange's first Tour, who was the local hope in Roubaix because he and two brothers had opened a cycle shop in the boulevard de Paris the previous year.
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Garin came third, 15 minutes behind [[Josef Fischer (cyclist)|Josef Fischer]], the only German to have won. Only four finished within an hour. Garin would have come second had he not been knocked over by a crash between two tandems, one of them ridden by his pacers. Garin "finished exhausted and Dr Butrille was obliged to attend the man who had been run over by two machines," said Sergent. He won the following year, beating the Dutchman Mathieu Cordang in the last two kilometres of the [[velodrome]] at [[Roubaix]]. In 2004 Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix marked Garin's victories in the Paris-Roubaix event by placing a cobblestone - traditional trophy for winners of the race, on his grave.  Sergent said:
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 +
<blockquote>As the two champions appeared they were greeted by a frenzy of excitement and everyone was on their feet to acclaim the two heroes. It was difficult to recognise them. Garin was first, followed by the mud-soaked figure of Cordang. Suddenly, to the stupefaction of everyone, Cordang slipped and fell on the velodrome's cement surface. Garin could not believe his luck. By the time Cordang was back on his bike, he had lost 100 metres. There remained six laps to cover. Two miserable kilometres in which to catch Garin. The crowd held its breath as they watched the incredible pursuit match. The bell rang out. One lap, there remained one lap. 333 metres for Garin, who had a lead of 30 metres on the Batave.</blockquote>
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<blockquote>A classic victory was within his grasp but he could almost feel his adversary's breath on his neck. Somehow Garin held on to his lead of two metres, two little metres for a legendary victory. The stands exploded and the ovation united the two men. Garin exulted under the cheers of the crowd. Cordang cried bitter tears of disappointment.</blockquote>
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===Hell of the North===
 +
The race usually leaves riders caked in mud and grit, from the cobbled roads and rutted tracks of northern France's former coal-mining region. However, this is not how this race earned the name ''l'enfer du Nord'', or ''Hell of the North''. The term was used to describe the route of the race after [[World War I]]. Organisers and journalists set off from Paris in [[1919]] to see how much of the route had survived four years of shelling and trench warfare. ''[[Procycling]]''
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 +
<blockquote>They knew little of the permanent effects of the war. Nine million had died and France lost more than any. But, as elsewhere, news was scant. Who even knew if there was still a road to Roubaix? If Roubaix was still there? The car of organisers and journalists made its way along the route those first riders had gone. And at first all looked well. There was destruction and there was poverty and there was a strange shortage of men. But France had survived. But then, as they neared the north, the air began to reek of broken drains, raw sewage and the stench of rotting cattle. Trees which had begun to look forward to spring became instead blackened, ragged stumps, their twisted branches pushed to the sky like the crippled arms of a dying man. Everywhere was mud. Nobody knows who first described it as 'hell', but there was no better word. And that's how it appeared next day in the papers: that little party had seen 'the hell of the north.'</blockquote>
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 +
The words in ''L'Auto'' were:
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<blockquote>We enter into the centre of the battlefield. There's not a tree, everything is flattened! Not a square metre that has not been hurled upside down. There's one shell hole after another. The only things that stand out in this churned earth are the crosses with their ribbons in blue, white and red. '''It is hell!'''
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"This wasn't a race. It was a pilgrimage.|[[Henri Pélissier]], speaking of his 1919 victory.
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===History of the cobbles===
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[[Image:Alain bernard.JPG|thumb|right|Alain Bernard, President of 'Les Amis de Paris Roubaix': "These days the mayors come to me with cobbles."]]
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Seeking cobbles is relatively recent. It began at the same time in Paris-Roubaix and the [[Ronde van Vlaanderen]], when widespread improvements to roads after the second world war brought realisation that the character of both races were changing. Until then the race had been over cobbles not because they were bad but because that was how roads were made. [[André Mahé]], who won in [[1948]] (''see below'' [[Paris-Roubaix#Controversies|Controversies]]), said:
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<blockquote>After the war, of course, the roads were all bad. There were cobbles from the moment you left Paris, or [[Senlis, Oise|Senlis]] where we started in those days. There'd be stretches of surfaced roads and often there'd be a cycle path or a pavement [sidewalk] and sometimes a thin stretch of something smoother. But you never knew where was best to ride and you were for ever switching about. You could jump your bike up on to a pavement but that got harder the more tired you got. Then you'd get your front wheel up but not your back wheel. That happened to me. And then you'd go sprawling, of course, and you could bring other riders down. Or they'd fall off and bring you down with them. And the cycle paths were often just compressed cinders, which got soft in the rain and got churned up by so many riders using them and then you got stuck and you lost your balance. And come what may, you got covered in coal dust and other muck. No, it's all changed and you can't compare then and now.</blockquote>
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The coming of live television prompted mayors along the route to surface their cobbled roads for fear the rest of France would see them as backward and not invest in the region. [[Albert Bouvet]], the organiser, said: "If things don't change, we'll soon be calling it Paris-Valenciennes," reference to a flat race on good roads that often ends in a mass sprint. ''L'Équipe'' said: "The riders don't deserve that." Its editor, Jacques Goddet, called Paris-Roubaix "the last great madness of cycling." Bouvet and Jean-Claude Vallaeys formed Les Amis de Paris Roubaix (''see below''). Its president, Alain Bernard, led enthusiasts to look for and sometimes maintain obscure cobbled paths. He said:
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"Until the war, Paris-Roubaix was all on ''routes nationales''. But many of those were cobbled, which was the spirit of the race, and the riders used to try to ride the cycle paths, if there were any. So Paris-Roubaix has always been on ''pavé'', because ''pavé'' was what the roads were made of. Then in 1967 things began to change. There was less ''pavé'' than there had been. And so from 1967 the course started moving to the east to use the cobbles that remained there. And then those cobbles began to disappear as well and we feared that Bouvet's predictions were going to come true. That's when we started going out looking for old tracks and abandoned roads that didn't show up on our maps.
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In the 1970s, the race only had to go through a village for the mayor to order the road to be surfaced. Pierre Mauroy, when he was mayor of [[Lille]] [Roubaix is virtually a suburb of Lille], said he wanted nothing to do with the race and that he'd do nothing to help it. A few years ago, there was barely a village or an area that wanted anything to do with us. If Paris-Roubaix came their way, they felt they were shamed because we were exposing their bad roads. They went out and surfaced them, did all they could to obstruct us. Now they can't get enough of us. I have mayors ringing me to say they've found another stretch of cobbles and would we like to use them.|Alain Bernard, President of 'Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix', 2007.
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[[Image:Panneau pavé de Luchin.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Commemorative marker-post for the Pavé de Luchin at the Carrefour de l'Arbre]]
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[[Image:1ère partie carefour de l'arbre.jpg|thumb|left||200px|The first section of pavé at the Carrefour de l'Arbre]]
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It was Alain Bernard who found one of the race's most significant cobbled stretches, the Carrefour de l'Arbre. He was out on a Sunday ride, turned off the main road to see what was there and found the last bad cobbles before the finish. It is a bleak area with just a bar by the crossroads. Bernard said:
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"Until then, it [the bar ('Cafe de l'Arbre')] was open only one day a year. In France, a bar has to open one day a year to keep its licence. That's all it did, because it's out in the middle of nowhere and nobody went there to drink any more. With the fame that the race brought it, it's now open all year and a busy restaurant as well."|Alain Bernard, President of 'Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix', 2007.
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The Amis de Paris-Roubaix spend €10-15,000 a year on restoring and rebuilding cobbles. The Amis supply the sand and other material and the repairs are made as training by  students from horticulture schools at [[Dunkirk]], [[Lomme]], [[Raismes]] and [[Douai]]. Each section costs €4-6,000, paid for equally by the Amis, the organisers and the local commune. Bernard said:
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"The trouble is that the Belgians then come out to see the race and they pull up a cobble stone each and take it home as a souvenir. They've even gone off with the milestones. It's a real headache. But I'm confident now that Paris-Roubaix is safe, that it will always be the race it has always been."|Alain Bernard, President of 'Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix', 2007.
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===Strategic places of historic races===
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The strategic places where earlier races could be won or lost include [[Doullens|Doullens Hill]], [[Arras]], [[Carvin]] and the [[Wattignies|Wattignies bend]]. Some sections of cobbles have deteriorated beyond the point of safety and repair or have been resurfaced and lost their significance. Other sections are excluded because the route of the race has moved east.
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===Pacers===
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Early races were run behind pacers, as were many competitions of the era. The first were other cyclists, on bicycles or [[tandem]]s. Cars and motorcycles were allowed to pace from 1898. The historian Fer Schroeders says:
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<blockquote>In 1898, even cars and motorcycles were allowed to open the road for the competitors. In 1900, the race was within a hair's breadth of disappearing, with only 19 riders at the start. The following year, the organisation therefore decided to allow help only from pacers on bicycles. And in 1910, help from pacers were stopped for good. An option which lifted Paris-Roubaix out of the background and pushed it, in terms of interest, ahead of the prestigious Bordeaux-Paris.</blockquote>
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==Course==
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[[Image:Route pavée crt 2002.jpg|thumb|right|Cobblestone in northern France, near Lille.]]
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Originally, the race was from Paris to Roubaix, but in 1966 the start moved to [[Chantilly, Oise|Chantilly]], 50km north, then in 1977 to [[Compiègne]], 80km north.
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From Compiègne it now follows a 260km winding route north to Roubaix, hitting the first cobbles after 100 km. During the last 150km the cobbles extend more than 50 km. The race culminates with 750m on the smooth concrete of the large outdoor [[velodrome]] in [[Roubaix]]. The route is adjusted from year to year as older roads are resurfaced and the organisers seek more cobbles to maintain the character of the race - in [[Paris-Roubaix 2005|2005]], for example, the race included 54.7km of cobbles.
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===The start===
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The race has started at numerous places:
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{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:center; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:300px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
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|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
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|valign="top"|
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* 1896-1897 Porte Maillot, Paris
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* 1898-1899: Chatou
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* 1900: Saint-Germain
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* 1901: Porte Maillot, Paris
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* 1902-1913: Chatou
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* 1914: Suresnes
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|valign="top"|
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* 1919-1928: Suresnes
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* 1929-1937: Porte Maillot, Paris
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* 1938: Argenteuil
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* 1939: Porte Maillot, Paris
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* 1943-1965: Saint-Denis
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* 1966-1976: Chantilly 
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* 1977-present Compiègne 
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|}
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The opening kilometres (the ''départ fictif'') have often been a rolling procession. Racing has started further into the ride (''départ réel''). The start of open racing has been at:
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{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:center; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:300px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
 +
|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
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|valign="top"|
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* 1896-1897: Porte Maillot
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* 1898-1899: Chatou
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* 1900: Saint-Germain
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* 1901: Porte Maillot
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* 1902-1913: Chatou
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|valign="top"|
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* 1914: Suresnes
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* 1919: Suresnes
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* 1920-1922: Chatou
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* 1923-1929: Le Vésinet
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* 1930-1938: Argenteuil
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* 1939:  Le Vésinet
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|}
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===28 cobbled sectors===
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The organiser, Jean-François Pescheux, grades the cobbles by length, irregularity, the general condition and their position in the race.
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In 2008, there were 28 cobbled sections, three considered maximum difficulty. As well as the Trouée d'Arenberg, difficult sections include the 3000m Mons-en-Pévèle (213km) and the 2100&nbsp;m Carrefour de l'Arbre (244km) &mdash; often decisive in the final kilometres.
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{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:center; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:800px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
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|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
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|- tr BGCOLOR=darkred
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!Section<br />Number
 +
!Name
 +
!Kilometer
 +
!Length<br>(in m)
 +
!Category
 +
|-
 +
| 28 || align="left" | [[Troisvilles]] to [[Inchy]]|| 98 || 2200 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
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|-
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| 27 || align="left" | [[Viesly]] to [[Quiévy]] || 104 || 1800 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
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|-
 +
| 26 || align="left" | Quievy to Saint Python|| 106,5 || 3700 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
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|-
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| 25 || align="left" | [[Saint-Python]] || 111,5 || 1500 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
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|-
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| 24 || align="left" | [[Vertain]] to [[Saint-Martin-sur-Écaillon]] || 119 || 2000 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
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|-
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| 23 || align="left" | [[Capelle-sur-Ecaillon]] - Le Buat || 126 || 1700 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
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|-
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| 22 || align="left" | [[Verchain-Maugré]] - [[Quérénaing]] || 138 || 1600 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
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|-
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| 21 || align="left" | Quérénaing - [[Maing]] || 141 || 2500 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
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|-
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| 20 || align="left" | Maing - [[Monchaux-sur-Écaillon]] || 144 || 1600 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
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|-
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| 19 || align="left" | [[Haveluy]] || 155,5 || 2500 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
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|-
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| 18 || align="left" | Trouée d'Arenberg || 163,5 || 2400 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
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|-
 +
| 17 || align="left" | [[Wallers]] - [[Hélesmes]] || 170 || 1600 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
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|-
 +
| 16 || align="left" | [[Hornaing]] - [[Wandignies-Hamage]] || 176,5 || 3700 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
|-
 +
| 15 || align="left" | [[Warlaing]] - [[Brillon]] || 184 || 2400 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
|-
 +
| 14 || align="left" | [[Tilloy-lez-Marchiennes]] - [[Sars-et-Rosières]] || 187,5 || 2400 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:center; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:800px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
 +
|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
 +
|- tr BGCOLOR=darkred
 +
!Section<br />Number
 +
!Name
 +
!Kilometer
 +
!Length<br>(in m)
 +
!Category
 +
|-
 +
| 13 || align="left" | [[Beuvry-la-Forêt]] - Orchies || 194 || 1400 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
|-
 +
| 12 || align="left" | [[Orchies]] || 199 || 1700 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
|-
 +
| 11 || align="left" | [[Auchy-lez-Orchies]] - [[Bersée]] || 205 || 1200 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
|-
 +
| 10 || align="left" | [[Mons-en-Pévèle]] || 210,5 || 3000 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
|-
 +
| 9 || align="left" | [[Mérignies]] – Pont-à-Marcq || 216,5 || 700 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
|-
 +
| 8 || align="left" | [[Pont Thibaut]] to [[Ennevelin]] || 219,5 || 1400 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
|-
 +
| 7 || align="left" | [[Templeuve|Templeuve l'Epinette]]<br>[[Templeuve#Le Moulin de Vertain|Templeuve Le Moulin de Vertain]] || 225<br />225,5 || 200<br />500 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]<br />[[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
|-
 +
| 6 || align="left" | [[Cysoing]] - [[Bourghelles]]<br>Bourghelles - [[Wannehain]] || 232<br />234,5 || 1300<br />1100 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]<br />[[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
|-
 +
| 5 || align="left" | [[Camphin-en-Pévèle]] || 239 || 1800 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
|-
 +
| 4 || align="left" | Le Carrefour de l'Arbre || 242 || 2100 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
|-
 +
| 3 || align="left" | [[Gruson]] || 244 || 1100 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
|-
 +
| 2 || align="left" | [[Hem]] || 251 || 1400 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
|-
 +
| 1 || align="left" | Roubaix 'Espace Charles Crupelandt' || 257,5 || 300 || [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
 
 +
{{clear}}
 +
 
 +
===28 - Troisvilles to Inchy===
 +
Length - 2,200m
 +
 
 +
First used 1987. The highest of all the cobbles at 136m. Jean Stablinski memorial on the right. The section drops 900m at two per cent. Students of the Lycée Professionnel Horticole de Raismes planted a hedge in November 2007 to prevent flowing mud. The section climbs gently for the next 900m on to the plateau at 121m. This section is often difficult because of mud. The right-angled left bend towards Inchy is made difficult by mud. The road then drops at 3.2 per cent for 400m.
 +
 
 +
Cobbles rated [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. The cobbles are in fairly good condition except at the end. The second part, after the main road, is always muddy.
 +
 
 +
===27 - Viesly (rue de la chapelle) to Quievy===
 +
Length - 1,800m.
 +
 
 +
First used 1973. This section is slightly descending, dropping evenly from 120m to 100m. It is almost entirely straight, although muddy in parts.
 +
 
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. In fairly good condition.
 +
 
 +
[[Image:Paris-Roubaix 2006.png|thumb|200px|right]]
 +
===26 - Quievy to Saint Python===
 +
Length - 3,700m
 +
 
 +
First used 1973. This section crosses two regional roads,  D113b and D134. This and the section from Hornaing to  Wandignies-Hamage is the longest. It rises from 95 to 117m. It begins with a gentle drop, continues with a gentle rise over 600m, then a section almost entirely flat. After being straight, there is then a difficult 90-degree right bend that leads to a 2km uphill drag that riders find exhausting.
 +
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. Fairly good condition. The regional council relaid the cobbles at the end of the section in 2007. The beautiful farm of Fontaine au Tertre is on the left at the end of the cobbles.
 +
 
 +
===25 - Saint-Python===
 +
Length - 1,500m
 +
 
 +
First used 1973. The start is at 104m, the end at 82m. The road is almost straight, starting with 500 flat metres then a 1km descent to Saint-Python.
 +
 
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. In good condition but muddy at first.
 +
 
 +
===24 - Vertain to Saint-Martin-sur-Écaillon===
 +
Length - 1,900m plus 100m from which the tar has been removed.
 +
 
 +
First used 1985. It drops from 105m to 89m in almost a straight line apart from a small bend to the left in the middle.
 +
 
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
[[Image:Paris-Roubaix, Secteur pavé de Capelle – Buat.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Paris-Roubaix, Secteur pavé de Capelle – Buat.jpg]]
 +
 
 +
===23 - Capelle sur Ecaillon to Buat===
 +
Length - 1,700m.
 +
 
 +
First used 2005. Rises from 91m to 102m in almost a straight line. It starts with a four per cent drop over 700m, then rises from 66m to 400m at seven per cent, followed by a slow rise of two per cent for 7 500m. The steepest part of the course, ridden by specialists on a 46-tooth ring.
 +
 
 +
Cobbles rated [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. Fairly good state but with strip of tar on the right during the descent.
 +
 
 +
===22 - Verchain-Maugré to Quérénaing===
 +
Length - 1,600m.
 +
 
 +
First used possibly 1974 . Virtually level - 80m to 78m, virtually straight, rising a little and then descending more gently for longer.
 +
 
 +
Cobbles rated [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. In good condition apart from some holes.
 +
 
 +
===21 - Quérénaing to Maing===
 +
Length - 2,500m
 +
 
 +
First used 1996 and used thereafter and always in the same direction. The road is the D59, falling from 85m to 40m in a straight line. It starts with a gentle decline to 72m over 400m, then a slight ride 400m. Then comes a flat stretch followed by a long descent of between 2.5 and 3.8 per cent.
 +
 
 +
Cobbles rated [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. In good condition with a muddy part.
 +
 
 +
[[Image:Paris-Roubaix Secteur pavé de Maing à Monchaux.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Paris-Roubaix Secteur pavé de Maing à Monchaux sur Ecaillon.]]
 +
===20 - Maing to Monchaux sur Ecaillon===
 +
Length - 1,600m.
 +
 
 +
First used 2001. The road is the D88, rising from 47 to 50m in an almost straight line. It begins with a slight ride of 1,000m, then a slow descent of  600m.
 +
 
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. Hard at first, with deep holes, then in excellent condition.
 +
 
 +
===19 - Wallers Haveluy===
 +
Length - 2,500m.
 +
 
 +
First used 2001 and ever since. This is Bernard Hinault section, named in his presence on 28 March 2005 by the municipality. This section is sometimes used by the Quatre Jours de Dunkerque. It starts at 31m and finishes at 34m. It starts with a gentle rise, finishes with a gentle fall.
 +
 
 +
Cobbles rated [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. They are described as average condition but with a lot of mud. The second half is more difficult.
 +
 
 +
===18 - Trouée d'Arenberg===
 +
[[Image:Trouee dArenberg - Paris-Roubaix 2008.jpg|thumb|Trouee d'Arenberg - [[2008 Paris-Roubaix]].]]
 +
The ''Trouée d'Arenberg'', ''Tranchée d'Arenberg'', (Trench of Arenberg), ''Trouee de Wallers Arenberg'', has become the symbol of Paris-Roubaix. Officially 'La Drève des Boules d'Herin', the 2400m of cobbles were laid in the time of [[Napoleon]] through the Raismes Forest-Saint-Amand-Wallers, close to [[Wallers]] and [[Valenciennes]]. The road was proposed for Paris-Roubaix by former professional [[Jean Stablinski]], who had worked in the mine under the woods of Arenberg. The mine closed in 1990 and the passage is now preserved. Although almost 100km from Roubaix, the sector usually proves decisive and as Stablinski said,
 +
{{cquote|Paris-Roubaix is not won in Arenberg, but from there the group with the winners is selected. A memorial to him stands at one end of the road.
 +
 
 +
Introduced in 1968, the passage was closed from 1974 to 1983 by the Office National des Fôrets. Until 1998 the entry to the Arenberg pavé was slightly downhill, leading to a sprint for best position. The route was reversed in 1999 to reduce the speed. This was as a result of [[Johan Museeuw]]'s crash in 1998 as [[UCI Road World Cup|World Cup]] leader, which nearly cost his leg to [[gangrene]]. In 2005 the Trouée d'Arenberg was left out, organisers saying conditions had deteriorated beyond safety limits. Abandoned mines had caused sections to subside. The regional and local councils spent €250,000 on adding 50cm to restore the original width of three metres and the race continued using it. The Italian rider [[Filippo Pozzato]] said after trying the road after its repairs:
 +
 
 +
<blockquote>It's the true definition of hell. It's very dangerous, especially in the first kilometre when we enter it at more than 60kh. It's unbelievable. The bike goes in all directions. It will be a real spectacle but I don't know if it's really necessary to impose it on us.</blockquote>
 +
 
 +
In [[2001]] a French rider, [[Philippe Gaumont]], broke his [[femur]] after falling at the start of the Trouée when leading the [[peloton]]. He said:
 +
 
 +
<blockquote>What I went through, only I will ever know. My knee cap completely turned to the right, a ball of blood forming on my leg and the bone that broke, without being able to move my body. And the pain, a pain that I wouldn't wish on anyone. The surgeon placed a big support [''un gros matériel''] in my leg, because the bone had moved so much. Breaking a femur is always serious in itself but an open break in an athlete of high level going flat out, that tears the muscles. At 180 beats [a minute of the heart], there was a a colossal amount of blood being pumped, which meant my leg was full of blood. I'm just grateful that the artery was untouched.</blockquote>
 +
 
 +
Gaumont spent a month and a half in bed, unable to move, and was fitted with a 40mm section fixed just above the knee and, to the head of the femur, with a 12mm screw.
 +
 
 +
Length - 2,400m.
 +
 
 +
First used 1968. A straight road through the forêt domaniale de Raismes/Saint-Amand/Wallers, dropping slightly at first, then rising. The road is at 25m at the start and 19m at the end.
 +
 
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. The cobbles are extremely difficult to ride because of their irregularity. So many fans have taken away cobbles as souvenirs that the Amis de Paris-Roubaix have had to replace them.
 +
 
 +
[[Image:Paris-Roubaix-61.jpg|thumb|200px|Joost Posthuma (Paris-Roubaix 2008)]]
 +
 
 +
===17 - Wallers pont Gibus to Hélesmes===
 +
-1,600m.
 +
- First used 1974 as a replacement for the Trouée. It is straight and level. The start is difficult, the road having partly collapsed, and the stones are irregular.
 +
 
 +
Cobbles rated [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
 
 +
===16 - Hornaing to Wandignies-Hamage===
 +
Length - 3,700m.
 +
 
 +
First used 1983. First used over its entire length 1988. The last
 +
2,900m were used by the Tour de France in 2004. The road is the D130. It falls from 23 to 17m in the shape of an L. It is flat, starting with 800m in a straight line, followed by a turn to the right near two châteaux, then a straight line of 2,900m towards Wandignies-Hamage.
  
In [[1968]], on the guidance of [[Jean Stablinski]], the starting location was changed from [[Paris]] to [[Compi&egrave;gne]], approximately 80 km to the north. Famous for rough terrain, the route of Paris-Roubaix is adjusted slightly from year to year as the older roads are resurfaced and the race organisers seek to replace them with other challenging cobbles, to maintain the character of the race - in [[2005]], for example, the race included 54.7km of cobbled sections. The race culminates with 1km on the Roubaix [[velodrome]].
+
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. In good condition.
  
[[Image:PR2005Crash.jpg|thumb|right|A big crash in Cobble Section 20 in the 2005 [[Paris-Roubaix]] race. Some riders hit the muddy patch at high speed and the crash propagated throughout the peloton.]]
+
[[Image:Paris-Roubaix Secteur pavé de Warlaing à Brillon.jpg|left|thumb|200px|Paris-Roubaix Secteur pavé de Warlaing à Brillon]]
Since [[1964]], the record average speed of 45.129 km/hour has been held by [[The Netherlands|Dutch]] cyclist [[Peter Post]].  The record for the most victories in the race is held by the [[Belgium|Belgian]] cycling legend [[Roger De Vlaeminck]], who between [[1972]] and [[1977]] took first place four times (for which he was awarded a trophy in the form of a paving-stone).  [[Octave Lapize]] (France), [[Gaston Rebry]] (Belgium), [[Rik Van Looy]] (Belgium), [[Eddy Merckx]] (Belgium), [[Francesco Moser]] (Italy), and [[Johan Museeuw]] (Belgium) each have won three times.  [[Italy|Italian]] legends [[Jules Rossi]] and [[Fausto Coppi]] won in [[1937]] and [[1950]] respectively.  The only [[Germany|German]] winner of Paris-Roubaix was [[Josef Fischer]], who won the first year the race was held, [[1896]].  Belgian cyclists have won 47 times, [[France|French]] cyclists 30.
+
===15 - Warlaing to Brillon===
 +
Length - 2,400m.
  
==Cobbled races==
+
First used 1983. The road is the D81, at 17m at each end, formed in an L. First 400m straight, then a right bend followed by a 2km straight.  
Paris-Roubaix is often compared to the other famous cobbled road race, the [[Ronde van Vlaanderen]] held in Belgium. The two courses differ as Paris-Roubaix' course is more flat, and has more technical cobbled sections. Hence the race is often followed by the reverse numbering of the cobble sections. Ronde van Vlaanderen by comparison contains a series of hills, many of which are on cobbles. Hence the race is often followed according to the names of these hills.
 
  
Riders who win both races in the same year are guaranteed eternal fame:
+
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. In a good condition at first but then with sunken sections.
# [[1923]] [[Heiri Suter]] {{SUI}}
 
# [[1932]] [[Romain Gijssels]] {{BEL}}
 
# [[1934]] [[Gaston Rebry]] {{BEL}}
 
# [[1954]] [[Raymond Impanis]] {{BEL}}
 
# [[1957]] [[Fred De Bruyne]] {{BEL}}
 
# [[1962]] [[Rik Van Looy]] {{BEL}}
 
# [[1977]] [[Roger De Vlaeminck]] {{BEL}}
 
# [[2003]] [[Peter van Petegem]] {{BEL}}
 
# [[2005]] [[Tom Boonen]] {{BEL}}
 
  
==Course description==
+
===14 - Tilloy-lez-Marchiennes to Sars-et-Rosières===
The 260km race starts in Compiègne and follows a winding route northwards towards Roubaix, hitting the first cobbled sections after about 100km. From [[1977]] to [[2004]], the course was routed through the challenging [[Wallers-Arenberg]] Forest, situated after approximately 166km. Until [[1998]] the entry to the Arenberg ''pave'' section was slightly downhill, leading to a sprint to get to the front of the pack to gain the best position. However, in [[1999]], to reduce the speed of the [[peloton]] as it entered the Arenberg, the route was reversed. In 2005 the ''Trouée d'Arenberg'' (Arenberg Trench) section was left out altogether, with the organisers saying that conditions in this section has deteriorated beyond safety limits.  The Arenberg area was formerly a coal mining region, and the abandoned mines had caused many sections of the road to subside.
+
Length - 2,400m.
  
As well as the Arenberg Trench, other difficult sections include the 3000m ''Mons-en-Pévèle'' (after 213km) and the 2100m ''Le Carrefour de l’Arbre'' (at 244km) - often decisive in the final kilometres of the race, which ends - ironically - on the smooth concrete expanses of the large outdoor velodrome in Roubaix.
+
First used 1980 but only for the first 1,400m. Used over its entire length from
 +
1982. An L-shaped section of the D158b with two 90-degree right turns and one 90-degree to the left. Starts at 18m and finishes at 19m.
  
==Various comments on Paris-Roubaix==
+
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. In good condition and regularly maintained. Sometimes muddy because of tractors.
* ''"Let me tell you, though - there’s a huge difference between Flanders and Paris-Roubaix. They’re not even close to the same. In one, the cobbles are used every day by the cars, and kept up, and stuff like that. The other one - it’s completely different . . . The best I could do would be to describe it like this - they plowed a dirt road, flew over it with a helicopter, and then just dropped a bunch of rocks out of the helicopter! That’s Paris-Roubaix. It’s that bad - it’s ridiculous."'' - [[Chris Horner]] [http://193.195.96.172/displayarticle.asp?pk=7385].
 
* ''"This is the one race that I dream of all year long, and look forward to all year long."'' - [[George Hincapie]] in various interviews.
 
* ''"When you attack in Paris-Roubaix, you don't have to think. It doesn't take five minutes to work it all out.  You just do what feels right at the moment."'' - [[Johan Museeuw]] in an interview with Cycle Sports Magazine.
 
  
 +
[[Image:Michail Ignatiev Paris-Roubaix.jpg|thumb|200px|Michail Ignatiev, Paris-Roubaix, 2008]]
 +
 +
===13 - Beuvry-la-Forêt to Orchies===
 +
Length - 1,400m.
 +
 +
First used 2007. The section was laid for the race, 700m of cobbles being added to 700 already there. The section was named after Marc Madiot in 2007. It rises slightly for the first half and is then flat.
 +
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. In a correct condition, although the surface is described as "chaotic" in the first part.
 +
 +
[[Image:Paris-Roubaix - Secteur pavé de Orchies - chemin des prières - (mars 2008).jpg|thumb|200px|left|Secteur pavé de Orchies, chemin des prières]]
 +
===12 - Orchies, chemin des Prières, and chemin des Abattoirs===
 +
Length - 1700m.
 +
 +
First used 1980. The 600 last metres were used in the opposite direction for the first time in 1977. The section is L-shaped, the first 1,100m flat and the last 600 slightly uphill.
 +
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. In a correct state, fairly muddy at first, disjointed in the last 600m.
 +
 +
===11 - Auchy-lez-Orchies to Bersee===
 +
Length - 1,200m.
 +
 +
First used 1980. The second section, Nouveau Monde, has deteriorated too much to be raced on. The sector rises from 40 to 54m. It is almost flat in the form of a semi-circle.
 +
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. In correct state, although irregular and difficult in the second half.
 +
 +
[[Image:Paris-Roubaix - Secteur pavé de Mons-en-Pévèle (mars 2008).jpg|thumb|200px|'Les Amis' clean and repair the Secteur pavé de Mons-en-Pévèle]]
 +
===10 - Mons-en-Pévèle===
 +
Mons-en-Pévèle, cobblestone sector 10, is the 10th section of pavé before the finish. Its 3,000m are rated the hardest level of difficulty, five stars. It is in the municipality of [[Mons-en-Pévèle]]. It is one of the key sectors, one of the toughest and within 50km of the finish. It has been used every year since 1978, 2001 excepted. In 1997, 2000, 2002 and 2003, only the first 1,100m were used.       
 +
 +
In 2008, [[Stijn Devolder]]'s attack on this sector was a contribution to the victory of [[Tom Boonen]], his [[Quick Step]] team-mate.
 +
 +
Overall the 3,000m rise from 53m at the start to 63m at the end. It begins with a 300m drop of two per cent down to the Ruisseau La Petite Marque at 47m. This is followed by 800m that rise 3m. A 90 degree right-turn to the rue du Blocus introduces a 800m straight that falls 2m and leads to a difficult, muddy, 90-degree left turn to the ruelle Flamande. The final 1,100m of the ruelle Flamande and Chemin de Randonnée Pédèstre rise 16m to [[Mérignies]].
 +
 +
Length - 3,000m
 +
 +
First used 1978. It starts at 53m and finishes at 63m. The first 300m descend at two per cent. Then a right turn at 90 degrees, 800m of flat road, a muddy and difficult left turn at 90 degres and 1,100m of slight rise.
 +
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. Correct condition for the first 1,100m, then worse, followed by 1,100m on which mud runs down from fields.
 +
 +
===9 - Mérignies to Pont à Marcq===
 +
Length - 700m.
 +
 +
First used 1981. The road is the rue de la Rosée. It rises from 35 to 37m, almost straight.
 +
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. Good condition.
 +
 +
===8 - Pont Thibaut to Ennevelin===
 +
Length - 1,400m.
 +
 +
First used 1978. A flat double L with two 90-degree left turns.
 +
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. Good condition but muddy for the first 1,000m, then difficult at the end, although work is scheduled to improve it.
 +
 +
===7 - Templeuve - Le Moulin de Vertain ===
 +
*7 (part one) [[Templeuve]] "L"
 +
Length - 200m.
 +
 +
First used 1992. A straight line rising two metres.
 +
 +
Cobbles rated [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. Bad at first, then good.
 +
 +
* 7 (part two) [[Templeuve#c|Templeuve Le Moulin de Vertain]] :
 +
Length - 500m.
 +
 +
First used 2002. This section, covered by earth, was dug out for the 100th race. It drops from 38m to 33m in a straight line.
 +
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. A short section but with cobbles hard to negotiate.
 +
 +
[[Image:Paris-Roubaix 4 - Secteur pavé de Bourghelles.jpg|left|thumb|200px|Secteur pavé de Bourghelles, le calvaire (March 2008)]]
 +
[[Image:Imanol Erviti Paris-Roubaix.jpg|thumb|200px|Imanol Erviti, 2008]]
 +
=== 6 - Cysoing to Bourghelles to Wannehain===
 +
* (part one) - [[Cysoing]] to [[Bourghelles]]
 +
Length - 1,400m.
 +
 +
First used 1981. Since 2006 it has included the 300m leading to Bourghelles. Known as the Duclos-Lassalle section, it is level and L-shaped, rising fractionally, descending, rising and then descending again to finish at its original height: 44m.
 +
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. In good condition for the first 700m, appalling for 300m to the right-hand corner, and good again for the last 300m.
 +
 +
* 6 (part two) Bourghelles to [[Wannehain]]
 +
Length - 1,100m.
 +
 +
First used 1992. A slight rise followed by a slight descent.
 +
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. Fairly good condition at first and then hard to ride in the second half because of the irregular surface. Partly repaved with cobbles from the old road at Péronne-en-Mélantois taken by Paris-Roubaix in the 1950s.
 +
 +
=== 5 - Camphin-en-Pévèle===
 +
Length - 1,800m.
 +
 +
First used 1980. L-shaped, falling from 52 to 50m. The right-hand corner in the middle of difficult because of mud.
 +
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]].  Fairly disjointed throughout but appalling in the last 300m.
 +
 +
=== 4 - Camphin-en-Pévèle to Carrefour de l'Arbre===
 +
Length - 2,100m.
 +
 +
First used 1980.An L-shaped section rising from 48 to 51m. Flat for 1,200m, then a difficult left-hand bend leading to a slight ascent.
 +
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. Alternate good and bad sections. The section before the corner leading to the restaurant is particularly bad and hard to ride.
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 +
===3 - Le Carrefour de l'Arbre to Gruson===
 +
[[Image:2ème partie carrefour de l'arbre.jpg|left|thumb|200px|Second half of Sector 4, Le Carrefour de l'Arbre, leading up to the Cafe de l'Arbre]]
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[[Image:Liquigas Paris-Roubaix 2008.jpg|right|200px|thumb|[[Frederik Willems]] and [[Filippo Pozzato]] from Team Liquigas on approach the 'Carrefour de l'Arbre' in 2008]]
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Le Carrefour de l'Arbre (or Pavé de Luchin) is the fourth section of pavé before the finish in Roubaix. Its 2.1 km are rated at the hardest level of difficulty, five stars. The crossroads (''carrefour'') is on open land between [[Gruson]] and [[Camphin-en-Pévèle]]. The route departs westward from Camphin-en-Pévèle along the rue de Cysoing towards Camphin de l'Arbre. The first half is a series of corners, then along irregular pavé towards Luchin. The second half finishes at  the Café de l'Arbre restaurant and  has more even pavé. A sharp turn towards Gruson signals the start of sector 3, although this has sometimes been included in sector 4.
 +
 +
The Carrefour de l'Arbre / Pavé de Luchin sector has often proved decisive. This is due to its proximity to Roubaix (15km) and cumulative difficulty, even it is regarded less challenging than the Trouée d'Arenberg. The leader at the completion of the Cafe has a good chance of leading at the velodrome, as Fabian Cancellara did in 2006 and Stuart O'Grady in 2007. As the last area where an attack could prove decisive, it is popular with spectators.
 +
 +
This 1,100m sector, which was first used 1978, drops from 50m to 45m in a straight line. It was also incorporated into stage 3 of the [[2004 Tour de France]] between [[Waterloo]] and [[Wasquehal]].
 +
 +
Cobbles rated [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]][[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]
 +
 +
=== 2 - Hem===
 +
This 1,400m sector is believed to have been first used 1968 but perhaps as early as the 1950s. A winding section rising from 25m to 30m. Always swept by wind. In 2004, Johann Museeuw suffered a puncture on this stretch, which cost him the chance to contest the sprint for a record equalling fourth victory.
 +
 +
Cobbles rated  [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. Fairly good state, sometimes disjointed, but the riders take two strips of tar, even if they are pitted by holes that cause frequent punctures.
 +
 +
=== 1 - Roubaix, Espace Charles Crupelandt - The final cobbles===
 +
[[image:Togosign.JPG|thumb]]
 +
The final stretch of cobbles before the stadium is named after a local rider, [[Charles Crupelandt]], who won in 1912 and 1914. The organiser of the Tour de France, Henri Desgrange, predicted he would win his race. He then went to war. He returned a hero, with the [[Croix de Guerre]]. Three years into peace, however, he fell foul of the law and was found guilty in court. The Union Vélocipédique banned him for life, possibly at the urging of rivals in cycling.
 +
 +
Crupelandt raced again but registered with an unofficial cycling association, with which he won national championships in 1922 and 1923. He died in 1955, blind and with both legs amputated.
 +
 +
This 300m sector, dropping from 32m to 27m, is unofficially known as the 'Chemin des Géants,' [Road of the Giants]. It was first used 1996, having been created for the centenary by laying a strip of smooth new cobbles down the centre of the wide boulevard of Avenue Alfred Motte. Dotted among the cobbles are plaques to every race winner, the giants.
 +
 +
Cobbles rated [[Image:Star full.png|12px|*]]. Excellent condition.
 +
 +
 +
===The finish===
 +
[[Image:Roubaix, Vélodrome.jpg|thumb|right|The last 750m are in the vélodrome in Roubaix]]
 +
[[Image:Petegemshower.JPG|thumb|Shower cubicles at Roubaix track are named after winners]]
 +
The finish until [[1914]] was on the original track at Croix, where the Parc clinic now stands. There were then various finish points:
 +
{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:center; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:800px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
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|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
 +
|- tr BGCOLOR=darkred
 +
|valign="top"|
 +
* 1896-1914: Rue Verte/route d'Hempempont, Croix, Roubaix
 +
* 1919: avénue de Jussieu, Roubaix, behind the dairy
 +
* 1920-1921: Stadium Jean Dubrulle, Roubaix
 +
* 1922-1928: avénue des Villas (now the avénue Gustave Delory), Roubaix
 +
* 1929: Stade Amédée Prouvost, Wattrelos
 +
* 1930-1934: avénue des Villas, Roubaix
 +
|valign="top"|
 +
* 1935-1936: Flandres horse track, Marcq
 +
* 1937-1939: avénue Gustave Delory (former avénue des Villas), Roubaix
 +
* 1943-1985: Roubaix Velodrome
 +
* 1986-1988: avenue des Nations-Unies
 +
* 1989-2008: Roubaix Velodrome
 +
|}
 +
 +
The race moved to the current stadium in 1943, and there it has stayed with the exceptions of 1986, 1987 and 1988 when the finish was in the avenue des Nations-Unies, outside the offices of La Redoute, the mail-order company which sponsored the race.
 +
 +
The shower room inside the velodrome is distinctive for the open, three-sided, low-walled concrete stalls, each with a brass plaque to commemorate a winner. These include [[Peter van Petegem]], [[Eddy Merckx]], Roger De Vlaeminck, Rik van Looy and Fausto Coppi.
 +
 +
When I stand in the showers in Roubaix, I actually start the preparation for next year. Tom Boonen, 2004.
 +
 +
A commemorative plaque at 37 avenue Gustave Delory honours Émile Masson Jr., the last to win there.
 +
 +
==Bicycles==
 +
[[Image:Tafi roubaix.jpg|thumb|left|[[Andrea Tafi (cyclist)|Andrea Tafi]]'s special Paris-Roubaix bicycle, with dual brake levers.]]
 +
 +
Paris-Roubaix presents a technical challenge to riders, team personnel, and equipment. Special [[Bicycle frame|frames]] and [[Bicycle wheel|wheels]] are often used. Some have wider tires, cantilever brakes, and dual brake levers. Many teams disperse personnel along the course with spare wheels, equipment and bicycles to help in locations not accessible to the team car.
 +
 +
André Mahé, winner in 1948, said such specialisation is recent:
 +
 +
"[In 1948] We rode the same bikes as the rest of the season. We didn't need to change them because they were much less rigid than modern bikes. The frames moved all over the place. When I attacked, I could feel the bottom bracket swaying underneath me. On the other hand, we had more cobbles. People talk of the amount of cobbles they have now, but when they've finished them they're back on surfaced roads."
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 +
Riders have experimented, however. After the [[second world war]] many tried wooden rims of the sort used at the start of cycle-racing. [[Francesco Moser]] wrapped his handlebars with strips of foam in the 1970s. [[Gilbert Duclos-Lasalle]] and [[Greg LeMond]] experimented with suspension in their front forks in the 1990s.
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 +
Some top riders receive special frames to give more stability and comfort. Different materials make the ride more comfortable. [[Tom Boonen]], used a [[Time (bicycles)|Time]] frame with longer wheelbase for the first time in 2005, he won the race that year and has since continued to use a bike with a longer wheelbase. [[George Hincapie]] had a frame featuring a 2mm elastomer insert at the top of the [[Bicycle frame#Frame tubes|seat stays]]. The manufacturers claimed this took nearly all the shock out of the cobbles. Hincapie's Trek bicycle fared less well in 2006: his aluminum steerer tube snapped with 46km to go, the crash injuring his shoulder.
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 +
The bicycle made for [[Peter van Petegem]] in 2004 was a Time. The distance from bottom bracket to rear axle was 419mm rather than his normal 403. The distance from the bottom bracket to the front hub was 605mm instead of 600mm. The depth of the front forks was 372mm instead of 367.5mm The forks were spaced to take 28mm tyres. The sprockets were steel rather than alloy and the steerer column was cut 5mm higher than usual to raise the handlebars if needed before the start.
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 +
The bad roads cause frequent punctures. A service fleet consisting of four motorcycles and four cars provides spares to riders regardless of team. Yves Hézard of [[Mavic]] the equipment company which provides the coverage, said:
 +
 +
<blockquote>Every year we change fewer wheels, because the wheels and tyres are getting better and better. We changed about 20 wheels today. Five years ago, it was much worse - we'd be choosing about a hundred. Tyres are becoming much better than before. So, yes, our job is easier - except that the race generally goes faster now, so we're under a bit more pressure. Every year, there's new types of gears, new aluminium frames, new titanium frames, so it's getting more complex for us to offer neutral service. We have a list in the car of who is riding Mavic or [[Shimano]] or [[Campagnolo]]; the moment someone gets a flat tyre we need to think of a lot of things at once. Is it a titanium frame or a carbon frame or a steel frame?</blockquote>
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 +
==Records==
 +
* The record of 45.129kmh has been held since 1964 by [[The Netherlands|Holland's]] [[Peter Post]], but on a different course.
 +
* The record for most victories is by the [[Belgium|Belgian]] [[Roger De Vlaeminck]], who won four times between 1972 and 1977.
 +
* [[Octave Lapize]], [[Gaston Rebry]], [[Rik van Looy]], [[Eddy Merckx]], [[Francesco Moser]], and [[Johan Museeuw]] won three times.
 +
* The nations with most victories are [[Belgium]] (52) and [[France]] (30).
 +
* The record for most races completed is 16 by the [[Belgium|Belgian]] rider [[Raymond Impanis]] between 1947 and 1963. [[Gilbert Duclos-Lassalle]] completed 15.
 +
* The oldest winner was [[Gilbert Duclos-Lassalle]] in 1993 at 38 years and 8 months.
 +
* Eddy Merckx beat Roger De Vlaeminck in 1970 by the largest winning margin, 5 minutes and 21 seconds.
 +
* The closest margin of victory was 1cm, between Planckaert and [[Steve Bauer]] in [[1990]].
 +
* Slowest victory - 12 hours 15 minutes, in 1919 when [[Henri Pélissier]] won on roads devastated by World War I.
 +
* Longest victorious break - 222 km, was by the Belgian Dirk De Mol in 1988.
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 +
==Controversies==
 +
<!-- Unsourced image removed: [[Image:PR2005Crash.jpg|thumb|right|200px|A big crash in cobble section 20 in the 2005 race. Riders hit mud at speed and the crash spread through the peloton.
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===1907 - The wrong gendarme===
 +
In 1907, Georges Passerieu broke away from a small leading group just before Douai because he knew he couldn't outsprint them if they all finished together. He was chased all the way to Roubaix by a Belgian, Cyrille van Hauwaert, and tension in the velodrome was high. The crowd heard that Passerieu had reached the stadium but nobody rode on to the track. The leader was just about to ride in when a gendarme stepped into his path to check if his bicycle had the obligatory tax plate attached to it. Passerieu had already had a hard day and a shouting match broke out before he was allowed to continue.
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 +
===1930 - The wrong team===
 +
In 1930, Jean Maréchal finished 24 seconds ahead of [[Belgium|Belgian]] [[Julien Vervaecke]] but was moved to second because, while Maréchal was trying to pass Vervaecke, the Belgian tumbled into a ditch. According to some, Maréchal hit the Belgian's shoulder, causing his fall. Jacques Augendre, historian of the Tour de France, said Maréchal, who was 20, "was riding as an individual for a little bike-maker, Colin, and he got to Roubaix alone. His happiness was short-lived. Arbitrarily accused of having provoked a fall by Julien Vervaecke, with whom he had broken away, he was disqualified without any sort of hearing. Important detail: Vervaecke belonged to the all-powerful [[Alcyon]] team, run by the no less powerful Ludovic Feuillet..."
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 +
===1934 - The wrong bike===
 +
In 1934 [[Roger Lapébie]] was disqualified for changing bicycles. Second placed rider [[Gaston Rebry]] was awarded the victory once officials discovered that Lapébie's bike was missing a race sticker.
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===1936 - The wrong man ===
 +
In 1936 the [[Belgium|Belgian]], [[Romain Maes]], appeared to win but judges declared Frenchman [[Georges Speicher]] the winner and Maes second. Shouting began in the stands and for a moment it looked as though fighting would start, but calm returned and the result was upheld. A Belgian may not have won but there were seven Belgians in the first ten.
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===1949 - The wrong route===
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[[image:Andremahe.JPG|thumb|André Mahé in 2007]]The result in 1949 took several months and two international conferences to sort out. [[André Mahé]] was first but his win was challenged because he took the wrong course. Mahé was in a break of three that reached [[Roubaix]] velodrome in the lead, but he was misdirected by officials and entered the track by the wrong gate. Mahé was declared winner but a few minutes later other riders arrived using the correct route and [[Serse Coppi]], brother of famous [[Fausto Coppi|Fausto]], won the sprint for what was assumed to be the minor placings. After a protest and several months, Serse Coppi was named joint winner with Mahé. Mahé said in [[2007]]:
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 +
<blockquote>''C'est trop bête d'en parler''(It's too stupid to talk about) There was a break. Coppi attacked. His brother Fausto gave him a push to get him away. He wanted his brother to win. I waited a bit and then I attacked and I caught him and the break. Then I went off by myself. I was going to win Paris-Roubaix. At the entrance to the vélodrome, there were crowds everywhere, blocking the way. I looked around for where to go and I was directed round the outside wall of the track, to where the team cars had to park. It wasn't like nowadays, when there's television and everything. Then it was more chaotic and the whole road was blocked. People said I should have known the way into the track. But how do you know a thing like that at the end of Paris-Roubaix, when you've raced all day over roads like that? A gendarme signalled the way to go and that's the way I went.</blockquote>
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 +
<blockquote>It was a journalist on a motorbike who managed to get up to me. He was shouting 'Not that way! Not that way!' And I turned round in the road and I rode back beneath the outside wall of the grandstand and I saw a gateway that went into the track, a gateway for journalists. And that's the way I went, except that it came out on the other side of the track from the proper entrance. The bunch came in and Serse won the sprint. But then his brother told Serse to go to the judges to object. He told Serse that I hadn't ridden the entire and precise course and that therefore I should be ''déclassé''. But that was below him. Coppi wanted his brother to have a big victory. He was a great champion, Coppi, but to do what he did, to protest like that to get a victory for his brother, that wasn't dignified for a champion. That was below him. A champion like that should never have stooped that low. I never spoke to him about it. Never did. Why should I?</blockquote>
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===1981 - The wrong race===
 +
In 1981 Bernard Hinault said after winning:
 +
''Paris-Roubaix est une connerie'' - "Paris-Roubaix is bullshit" or "Paris-Roubaix is plain stupid". He refused to ride again. When he was criticised, he said: "I don't go into offices and tell people to work harder, yet people ask me to be the strongest on the cobbles." Hinault fell seven times in that race, including 13km from the finish when a small black dog called Gruson ran out in a bend and ran under his wheel. Hinault had been clear with [[Roger de Vlaeminck]], [[Hennie Kuiper]] and [[Dirk de Meyer]]. The incident made Hinault angry and he raced back to the others and won in Roubaix.
 +
 +
He was not the first star to refuse. [[Jacques Anquetil]] called it a lottery after puncturing 13km from the end in [[1958]] and never took it seriously again.
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 +
In 2002 only two of the top 20 riders in the UCI table - [[Jens Voigt]] and [[Erik Zabel]] - were on the line. The following year only Zabel was there. In 2004 he had stayed at home as well. Philippe Brunel wrote in ''L'Équipe'':
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 +
<blockquote>We won't go as far as say that the five-time winner of the Tour [Hinault] - who every year gives the winner his celebration cobble stone on behalf of the organisers -  has contributed to the dilution [''paupérisation''] of the queen of classics, which would offend him, but his words have contributed to the snub, or the indifference, of those who stay away. The fact isn't new but the phenomenon is getting worse and is concerning. The peloton of stayaways has grown to the point where Paris-Roubaix is now only for a tight group of specialists... especially the Belgians, capable of maintaining high speed on the cobbles.</blockquote>
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===2006 - The wrong train===
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In 2006 [[Leif Hoste]], [[Peter van Petegem]] and [[Vladimir Gusev]] were disqualified in 2006 for riding through a closed train crossing 10km before the finish and just ahead of an approaching freight train. [[Fabian Cancellara]] won and [[Tom Boonen]] and [[Alessandro Ballan]] were given the remaining places on the podium.
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"I know the rules, yes, but I don't understand why nobody stopped us, and why nothing was said to us in the 10km that followed. All that just to be told two minutes before going to the podium that we had been disqualified. Cancellara deserved his victory but for me, I will always be in second place even though I have been disqualified." Leif Hoste, L'Équipe, April 2006.
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"It's crazy. In Belgium they would have stopped the train."|Peter van Petegem, April 2006
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==Comments==
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===Theo de Rooy===
 +
The American television channel [[CBS]] covered Paris-Roubaix, said the writer James Startt, and was delighted to find a prominent rider who could speak English. Theo de Rooy, a Dutchman, had been in a promising position but had then crashed, losing his chance of winning. Startt wrote:
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<blockquote>No sooner was de Rooy off his bike than the CBS crew jumped on him. His haggard face was covered with mud and blood when they asked for his race impressions. He was so exhausted he could barely speak, but he muttered something about how hard and heart-breaking Paris-Roubaix could be. So dejected did he sound and so naive was the crew (who didn't know this was the umpteenth time the Dutchman had ridden the race), that they asked if he would ever ride Paris-Roubaix again. De Rooy's face instantly transformed. 'Ride it again?' he asked incredulously. 'Of course I will. This is the most beautiful race in the world!'</blockquote>
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"Thousands line the road in this annual rite of spring cheering their larger than life heroes. Urging, at times, even helping them victory. They ride in the tracks of bygone legends dreaming of distant fame and glory. But glory is not without a price.<br>These bloodied and battered warriors struggle through the rain, the cold, the mud, on roads better suited to oxen cart than bicycles. But for the victor there is glory, immortality and a place in history amongst the giants of the road. <br>Since 1896, the greatest bike racers on earth have come to test their very souls in this brutal and beautiful spectacle".
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===Other observations===
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* "A Paris-Roubaix without rain is not a true Paris-Roubaix. Throw in a little snow as well, it's not serious." - [[Seán Kelly (cyclist)|Seán Kelly]]
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* "This is the one race that I dream of all year long, and look forward to all year long." - George Hincapie.
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* "When you attack in Paris-Roubaix, you don't have to think. It doesn't take five minutes to work it all out. You just do what feels right at the moment." -  Johan Museeuw in ''Cycle Sport''.
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*"This is a race that suits me when I'm having a good day. On the other hand, if you don't have the legs, this is the worst place you could possibly be." - Jo Planckaert, 2004
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 +
*"It's a circus, and I don't want to be one of the clowns." - [[Chris Boardman]] (Speaking before the start on British Eurosport).
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 +
==Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix==
 +
[[Image:Paris Roubaix - Les forçats du pavé at Mons en Pévèle - 02.jpg|thumb|200px|'Les forçats du pavé' working at Mons en Pévèle]]
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[[Image:Paris-Roubaix, Les travaux réalisés en 2008.jpg|left|thumb|200px|Pavé under repair by Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix]]
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Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix - the "friends" of the race - is an enthusiasts' group founded by Jean-Claude Vallaeys in [[1983]]. It is based in France but open to members all over the world. It has its roots in the Paris-Roubaix Cyclo-Touriste of [[1972]]. By [[1982]] there were 7,242 participants. There and at other events on the course, a petition calling for the cobbles to be saved gathered 10,000 signatures. Jean-Claude Valleys, Jean-François Pescheux and the Vélo-club de Roubaix, which Vallaeys founded in [[1966]], formed Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix in [[1982]] at a  photo exhibition at the Maison du Nord-Pas de Calais in Paris.
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Its aim was to find enough stretches of cobbled road to preserve the nature of the race. So many roads had been resurfaced that, as the organiser said, there was a risk that it would become a fast, race on smooth roads won by sprinters rather than those who had fought through hell. Alain Bernard, who succeeded Vallaeys, says: "We have succeeded in that. Today, the association looks after the maintenance of these paths of legend, working with local administrations to preserve them. But alongside that, we also do other things to preserve the value of the race, building up an impressive collection of documents, holding exhibitions, honouring former winners, holding tours of the route."
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Les Amis says it is too late to save the sector of Bersée, which was scratched from the race because of its dangerous state in 2007. The situation is becoming critical, it says, at the Pont Gibus at Wallers, at Mons-en-Pévèle, Pont Thibaut at Ennevelin, the pavé of the Duclos-Lasalle section at Cysoing, and at Camphin-en-Pévèle.
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"Their disappearance would be a fatal blow to the Queen of Classics," says the association.
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===Work in 2008===
 +
[[Image:Paris-Roubaix - Secteur pavé de Vertain à Saint-Martin sur Ecaillon (du 25 mars au 4 Avril).jpg|thumb|200px|left|'Les Forcats' lifting the tar surface on the 'secteur pavé' from Vertain to Saint-Martin sur Ecaillon.]]
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'''Vertain to St-Martin-sur-Ecaillon''' - Complete repaving of 10m of road; Lifting of the tar surface over 120m. Carried out by students from Raismes; Douai and Dunkirk, co-ordinated by Les Amis with the help of local councils, in March and April.
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'''Mons-en-Pévèle''' - Cleaning and weeding of the second section, improving the bend at the start of the cobbles to prevent lying rainwater. The work was requested by Les Amis and carried out in March by communes of the Pays de Pévèle.
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'''Bourghelles – le Calvaire''' - Continuation of general maintenance started two years earlier, repaving 20m of the last section with granite cobbles recovered from elsewhere. The work was by Les Amis , by students from [[Lomme]], and the communes of the Pays de Pévèle and Bourghelles. It was done in March.
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'''Warlaing to Brillon''' - Complete repaving of 1,600 square metres, requested by Les Amis, paid for by the communes of the Pays de Pévèle and Bourghelles, and carried out by students from Lomme. It was done in March and April.
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'''Capelle - Buat ''' - Weeding of the height of the cobbles over 400m. Paid for by Les Amis and carried out by horticultural students from Raismes, Douai and Dunkirk with support from local councils. Carried out in March and April.
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'''Maing - Monchaux-sue-Ecaillon''' - Cleaning of the edges of the road and the higher cobbles. Work done by the regional council of the [[Nord]] region at the request of Les Amis. The rest of the work was scheduled to follow the 2008 race.
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=== ''Les forçats du pavé'' ===
 +
[[Image:Paris Roubaix - Les forçats du pavé at Mons en Pévèle - 01.jpg|thumb|200px|'Les forçats du pavé' working at Mons en Pévèle]]
 +
The weather is often bad for the riders; it is frequently worse for the ''forçats du pavé'', as they call themselves Les Amis said of their work at Mons-en-Pévèle in March 2008:
 +
 +
<blockquote>Saturday 22 March, a cold wind sweeps the plain of Pévèle. The showers alternate: hail, molten snow and cold rain. Not a day to put your nose through the door. Nevertheless at the foot of the ridge of Mons-en-Pévèle, a line of silhouettes along the path of soaked cobbles. They bend their backs beneath their loads but, continuously, they scratch the ground with their primitive tools. There are a dozen of them, but why are they? A prison chain-gang from another era? Zombies [''inconscients'']? Treasure-hunters? No, they're members of Les Amis de Paris Roubaix busy lifting the lumps of mud left on the pavé by farm work. They are on an important section of Paris-Roubaix and, without their intervention, the greatest of cycling classics, Paris-Roubaix, would eventually disappear, depriving the whole world of the most intense and gripping events in sport. They know it and they will come back two weeks before the race, far from the gaze of the media  who will soon flock this way. The passion that drives them is much stronger than the bad weather... These discreet servants of the Queen of the Classics have no other ambition but to make the cobbles clean so that the best of the champions can tear it up when the day comes.</blockquote>
 +
 +
===Cobbles of honour===
 +
The winner of Paris-Roubaix receives a cobble stone as well as his prize. The tradition started too late for most riders. Les Amis traces former winners and holds presentations. For [[Émile Masson]], the oldest living winner, Les Amis dedicated a square of cobbles and placed  a plaque at the point at Faches-Thumesnil where he punctured while heading the race alone in [[1939]]. Those who have died are honoured posthumously with a ceremony at the grave or elsewhere. Les Amis laid a cobble on Maurice Garin's grave at Lens.
 +
 +
===Contact===
 +
Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix is at 39 avenue Fleming, 59100 Roubaix,[http://www.lesamisdeparisroubaix.com].
 +
 +
{{-}}
 +
== Winners and records==
 +
=== Individual victories ===
 +
*''4 wins (1) :''
 +
**[[Roger De Vlaeminck]] (1972, 1974, 1975, 1977) {{flagiconBEL}}
 +
*''3 wins (6) :''
 +
** {{flagiconFRA}} [[Octave Lapize]] (1909, 1910, 1911)
 +
** {{flagiconBEL}} [[Gaston Rebry]] (1931, 1934, 1935)
 +
** {{flagiconBEL}} [[Rik Van Looy]] (1961, 1962, 1965)
 +
** {{flagiconBEL}} [[Eddy Merckx]] (1968, 1970, 1973)
 +
** {{flagiconITA}} [[Francesco Moser]] (1978, 1979, 1980)
 +
** {{flagiconBEL}} [[Johan Museeuw]] (1996, 2000, 2002)
 +
*''2 wins (12) :''
 +
** {{flagiconFRA}} [[Maurice Garin]] (1897, 1898)
 +
** {{flagiconFRA}} [[Lucien Lesna]] (1901, 1902)
 +
** {{flagiconFRA}} [[Hippolyte Aucouturier]] (1903, 1904)
 +
** {{flagiconFRA}} [[Charles Crupelandt]] (1912, 1914)
 +
** {{flagiconFRA}} [[Henri Pélissier]] (1919, 1921)
 +
** {{flagiconBEL}} [[Georges Claes]] (1946, 1947)
 +
** {{flagiconBEL}} [[Rik Van Steenbergen]] (1948, 1952)
 +
** {{flagiconIRL}} [[Sean Kelly]] (1984, 1986)
 +
** {{flagiconFRA}} [[Marc Madiot]] (1985, 1991)
 +
** {{flagiconFRA}} [[Gilbert Duclos-Lassalle]] (1992, 1993)
 +
** {{flagiconITA}} [[Franco Ballerini]] (1995, 1998)
 +
** {{flagiconBEL}} [[Tom Boonen]] (2005, 2008)
 +
{{-}}
 +
 +
===Winners by Year===
 
== Winners ==
 
== Winners ==
{| width=100%
+
{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:center; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:600px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
| valign=top width=33% align=left |
+
|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
*[[2005]] - [[Tom Boonen]] {{BEL}}  
+
| valign=top width=34% align=left |
*[[2004]] - [[Magnus Bäckstedt]] {{SWE}}
+
*[[2008]] - [[Tom Boonen]] {{flagiconBEL}}
*[[2003]] - [[Peter Van Petegem]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[2007]] - [[Stuart O'Grady]] {{flagiconAUS}}
*[[2002]] - [[Johan Museeuw]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[2006]] - [[Fabian Cancellara]] {{flagiconSUI}}
*[[2001]] - [[Servais Knaven]] {{NED}}
+
*[[2005]] - [[Tom Boonen]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[2000]] - [[Johan Museeuw]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[2004]] - [[Magnus Bäckstedt]] {{flagiconSWE}}
*[[1999]] - [[Andrea Tafi]] {{ITA}}
+
*[[2003]] - [[Peter Van Petegem]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1998]] - [[Franco Ballerini]] {{ITA}}
+
*[[2002]] - [[Johan Museeuw]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1997]] - [[Frédéric Guesdon]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[2001]] - [[Servais Knaven]] {{flagiconNED}}
*[[1996]] - [[Johan Museeuw]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[2000]] - [[Johan Museeuw]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1995]] - [[Franco Ballerini]] {{ITA}}
+
*[[1999]] - [[Andrea Tafi]] {{flagiconITA}}
*[[1994]] - [[Andrei Tsjmil]] {{UKR}}
+
*[[1998]] - [[Franco Ballerini]] {{flagiconITA}}
*[[1993]] - [[Gilbert Duclos-Lasalle]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1997]] - [[Frédéric Guesdon]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1992]] - [[Gilbert Duclos-Lasalle]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1996]] - [[Johan Museeuw]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1991]] - [[Marc Madiot]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1995]] - [[Franco Ballerini]] {{flagiconITA}}
*[[1990]] - [[Eddy Planckaert]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1994]] - [[Andrei Tsjmil]] {{flagiconUKR}}
*[[1989]] - [[Jean-Marie Wampers]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1993]] - [[Gilbert Duclos-Lasalle]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1988]] - [[Dirk Demol]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1992]] - [[Gilbert Duclos-Lasalle]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1987]] - [[Eric Vanderaerden]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1991]] - [[Marc Madiot]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1986]] - [[Sean Kelly]] {{IRL}}
+
*[[1990]] - [[Eddy Planckaert]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1985]] - [[Marc Madiot]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1989]] - [[Jean-Marie Wampers]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1984]] - [[Sean Kelly]] {{IRL}}
+
*[[1988]] - [[Dirk Demol]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1983]] - [[Hennie Kuiper]] {{NED}}
+
*[[1987]] - [[Eric Vanderaerden]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1982]] - [[Jan Raas]] {{NED}}
+
*[[1986]] - [[Sean Kelly]] {{flagiconIRL}}
*[[1981]] - [[Bernard Hinault]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1985]] - [[Marc Madiot]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1980]] - [[Francesco Moser]] {{ITA}}
+
*[[1984]] - [[Sean Kelly]] {{flagiconIRL}}
*[[1979]] - [[Francesco Moser]] {{ITA}}
+
*[[1983]] - [[Hennie Kuiper]] {{flagiconNED}}
*[[1978]] - [[Francesco Moser]] {{ITA}}
+
*[[1982]] - [[Jan Raas]] {{flagiconNED}}
*[[1977]] - [[Roger De Vlaeminck]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1981]] - [[Bernard Hinault]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1976]] - [[Marc Demeyer]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1980]] - [[Francesco Moser]] {{flagiconITA}}
*[[1975]] - [[Roger De Vlaeminck]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1979]] - [[Francesco Moser]] {{flagiconITA}}
*[[1974]] - [[Roger De Vlaeminck]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1978]] - [[Francesco Moser]] {{flagiconITA}}
*[[1973]] - [[Eddy Merckx]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1977]] - [[Roger De Vlaeminck]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1972]] - [[Roger De Vlaeminck]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1976]] - [[Marc Demeyer]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1971]] - [[Roger Rosiers]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1975]] - [[Roger De Vlaeminck]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
 +
*[[1974]] - [[Roger De Vlaeminck]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
 +
*[[1973]] - [[Eddy Merckx]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
 +
*[[1972]] - [[Roger De Vlaeminck]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
 +
*[[1971]] - [[Roger Rosiers]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
 
| valign=top width=34% align=left |
 
| valign=top width=34% align=left |
*[[1970]] - [[Eddy Merckx]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1970]] - [[Eddy Merckx]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1969]] - [[Walter Godefroot]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1969]] - [[Walter Godefroot]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1968]] - [[Eddy Merckx]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1968]] - [[Eddy Merckx]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1967]] - [[Jan Janssen]] {{NED}}
+
*[[1967]] - [[Jan Janssen]] {{flagiconNED}}
*[[1966]] - [[Felice Gimondi]] {{ITA}}
+
*[[1966]] - [[Felice Gimondi]] {{flagiconITA}}
*[[1965]] - [[Rik Van Looy]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1965]] - [[Rik Van Looy]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1964]] - [[Peter Post|Peter Post]] {{NED}}
+
*[[1964]] - [[Peter Post|Peter Post]] {{flagiconNED}}
*[[1963]] - [[Emiel Daems]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1963]] - [[Emiel Daems]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1962]] - [[Rik Van Looy]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1962]] - [[Rik Van Looy]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1961]] - [[Rik Van Looy]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1961]] - [[Rik Van Looy]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1960]] - [[Pino Cerami]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1960]] - [[Pino Cerami]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1959]] - [[Noel Fore]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1959]] - [[Noel Fore]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1958]] - [[Leon Van Daele]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1958]] - [[Leon Van Daele]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1957]] - [[Fred De Bruyne]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1957]] - [[Fred De Bruyne]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1956]] - [[Louison Bobet]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1956]] - [[Louison Bobet]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1955]] - [[Jean Forestier]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1955]] - [[Jean Forestier]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1954]] - [[Raymond Impanis]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1954]] - [[Raymond Impanis]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1953]] - [[Germain Derijcke]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1953]] - [[Germain Derijcke]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1952]] - [[Rik Van Steenbergen]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1952]] - [[Rik Van Steenbergen]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1951]] - [[Antonio Bevilacqua]] {{ITA}}
+
*[[1951]] - [[Antonio Bevilacqua]] {{flagiconITA}}
*[[1950]] - [[Fausto Coppi]] {{ITA}}
+
*[[1950]] - [[Fausto Coppi]] {{flagiconITA}}
*[[1949]] - [[Serge Coppi]] {{ITA}}
+
*[[1949]] - [[Serge Coppi]] {{flagiconITA}}
*[[1948]] - [[Rik Van Steenbergen]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1948]] - [[Rik Van Steenbergen]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1947]] - [[Georges Claes]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1947]] - [[Georges Claes]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1946]] - [[Georges Claes]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1946]] - [[Georges Claes]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1945]] - [[Paul Maye]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1945]] - [[Paul Maye]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1944]] - [[Maurice Desimpelaere]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1944]] - [[Maurice Desimpelaere]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1943]] - [[Marcel Kint]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1943]] - [[Marcel Kint]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1939]] - [[Emile Masson jr]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1939]] - [[Emile Masson jr]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1938]] - [[Lucien Storme]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1938]] - [[Lucien Storme]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1937]] - [[Jules Rossi]] {{ITA}}
+
*[[1937]] - [[Jules Rossi]] {{flagiconITA}}
*[[1936]] - [[Georges Speicher]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1936]] - [[Georges Speicher]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1935]] - [[Gaston Rebry]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1935]] - [[Gaston Rebry]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1934]] - [[Gaston Rebry]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1934]] - [[Gaston Rebry]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
 
| valign=top width=33% align=left |
 
| valign=top width=33% align=left |
*[[1933]] - [[Sylveer Maes]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1933]] - [[Sylveer Maes]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1932]] - [[Romain Gijssels]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1932]] - [[Romain Gijssels]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1931]] - [[Gaston Rebry]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1931]] - [[Gaston Rebry]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1930]] - [[Julien Vervaecke]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1930]] - [[Julien Vervaecke]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1929]] - [[Charles Meunier]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1929]] - [[Charles Meunier]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1928]] - [[Andre Leducq]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1928]] - [[Andre Leducq]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1927]] - [[Georges Ronsse]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1927]] - [[Georges Ronsse]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1926]] - [[Julien Delbecque]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1926]] - [[Julien Delbecque]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1925]] - [[Felix Sellier]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1925]] - [[Felix Sellier]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1924]] - [[Jules Van Hevel]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1924]] - [[Jules Van Hevel]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
 
*[[1923]] - [[Henri Suter]] (Sui)
 
*[[1923]] - [[Henri Suter]] (Sui)
*[[1922]] - [[Berten Dejonghe]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1922]] - [[Berten Dejonghe]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1921]] - [[Henri Pélissier]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1921]] - [[Henri Pélissier]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1920]] - [[Paul Deman]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1920]] - [[Paul Deman]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1919]] - [[Henri Pelissier]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1919]] - [[Henri Pelissier]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1914]] - [[Charles Crupelandt]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1914]] - [[Charles Crupelandt]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1913]] - [[François Faber]] {{LUX}}
+
*[[1913]] - [[François Faber]] {{flagiconLUX}}
*[[1912]] - [[Charles Crupelandt]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1912]] - [[Charles Crupelandt]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1911]] - [[Octave Lapize]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1911]] - [[Octave Lapize]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1910]] - [[Octave Lapize]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1910]] - [[Octave Lapize]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1909]] - [[Octave Lapize]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1909]] - [[Octave Lapize]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1908]] - [[Cyrille Van Hauwaert]] {{BEL}}  
+
*[[1908]] - [[Cyrille Van Hauwaert]] {{flagiconBEL}}  
*[[1907]] - [[Georges Passerieu]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1907]] - [[Georges Passerieu]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1906]] - [[Henri Cornet]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1906]] - [[Henri Cornet]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1905]] - [[Louis Trousselier]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1905]] - [[Louis Trousselier]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1904]] - [[Hippolyte Aucouturier]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1904]] - [[Hippolyte Aucouturier]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1903]] - [[Hippolyte Aucouturier]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1903]] - [[Hippolyte Aucouturier]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1902]] - [[Lucien Lesna]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1902]] - [[Lucien Lesna]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1901]] - [[Lucien Lesna]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1901]] - [[Lucien Lesna]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1900]] - [[Emile Bouhours]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1900]] - [[Emile Bouhours]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1899]] - [[Albert Champion]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1899]] - [[Albert Champion]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1898]] - [[Maurice Garin]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1898]] - [[Maurice Garin]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1897]] - [[Maurice Garin]] {{FRA}}
+
*[[1897]] - [[Maurice Garin]] {{flagiconFRA}}
*[[1896]] - [[Josef Fischer]] {{GER}}
+
*[[1896]] - [[Josef Fischer]] {{flagiconGER}}
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
=== Winners by country ===
 +
{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:center; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:300px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
 +
|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
 +
|- tr BGCOLOR=darkred
 +
! # !! Country !! Victories
 +
|-
 +
| 1.
 +
| [[Image:Flag of Belgium.png|17px|]]  [[Belgium]]
 +
| align="center"|52
 +
|-
 +
| 2.
 +
| [[Image:Flag of France.png|17px|]] [[France]]
 +
| align="center"|30
 +
|-
 +
| 3.
 +
| [[Image:Flag of Italy.png|17px|]]  [[Italy]]
 +
| align="center"|11
 +
|-
 +
| 4.
 +
| [[Image:Flag of the Netherlands.png|17px|]]  [[Netherlands]]
 +
| align="center"|5
 +
|-
 +
| 5.
 +
| [[Image:Flag of Ireland.png|17px|]] [[Ireland]]
 +
| align="center"|2
 +
|-
 +
| 5.
 +
| [[Image:Flag of Switzerland.png|17px|]] [[Switzerland]]
 +
| align="center"|2
 +
|-
 +
| 7.
 +
| [[Image:Flag of Germany.png|17px|]] [[Germany]]
 +
| align="center"|1
 +
|-
 +
| 7.
 +
| [[Image:Flag of Luxembourg.png|19px|]] [[Luxembourg]]
 +
| align="center"|1
 +
|-
 +
| 7.
 +
| [[Image:Flag of Sweden.png|17px|]] [[Sweden]]
 +
| align="center"|1
 +
|-
 +
| 7.
 +
| [[Image:Flag of Ukraine.png|17px|]] [[Ukraine]]
 +
| align="center"|1
 +
|-
 +
| 7.
 +
| [[Image:Flag of Australia.png|17px|]] [[Australia]]
 +
| align="center"|1
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
===Fastest races===
 +
{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:center; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:400px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
 +
|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
 +
|- tr BGCOLOR=darkred
 +
|+The fastest editions of Paris-Roubaix
 +
! Avg speed (Distance) !! Rider !! Year
 +
|-
 +
| 45,129 km/h (265 km) || {{flagathNED}} [[Peter Post]]| || 1964
 +
|-
 +
| 43,612 km/h (246 km) || {{flagiconBEL}} [[Rik Van Steenbergen]]| || 1948
 +
|-
 +
| 43,538 km/h (262 km) || {{flagisonBEL}} [[Pino Cerami]]| || 1960
 +
|-
 +
| 43,522 km/h (245 km) || {{flagiconBEL}} [[Germain Derijcke]]| || 1953
 +
|-
 +
| 43,406 km/h (259,5 km) || {{flagiconBEL}} [[Tom Boonen]]| || 2008
 +
|-
 +
| 43,305 km/h (262 km) || {{flagiconBEL}} [[Johan Museeuw]]| || 1996
 +
|-
 +
| 43,105 km/h (264 km) || {{flagiconNED}} [[Francesco Moser]]| || 1980
 +
|-
 
|}
 
|}
 +
 +
==Other cobbled races==
 +
Paris-Roubaix is sometimes compared to the other famous cobbled race, the [[Ronde van Vlaanderen]] in Belgium. Paris-Roubaix is flatter and has more difficult cobbles while the Ronde van Vlaanderen contains a series of hills, many on cobbles, like the [[Koppenberg]] or [[Kapelmuur]]. In addition to Paris-Roubaix and the Ronde van Vlaanderen, called the ''cobbled classics'', other spring races like [[Omloop "Het Volk"|Ghent-Ghent]] and [[Gent-Wevelgem]] feature extensive cobbles.
 +
 +
 +
{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:center; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:400px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
 +
|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
 +
|- tr BGCOLOR=darkred
 +
|+Winners of Paris-Roubaix and<br />Ronde van Vlaanderen
 +
!Rider !! Country !!Year
 +
|-
 +
| [[Henri Suter]] || {{flagiconSUI}} || 1923
 +
|-
 +
| [[Romain Gijssels]] || {{flagiconBEL}} || 1932
 +
|-
 +
| [[Gaston Rebry]] || {{flagiconBEL}} || 1934
 +
|-
 +
| [[Raymond Impanis]] || {{flagiconBEL}} || 1954
 +
|-
 +
| [[Fred De Bruyne]] || {{flagiconBEL}} || 1957
 +
|-
 +
| [[Rik van Looy]] || {{flagiconBEL}} || 1962
 +
|-
 +
| [[Roger De Vlaeminck]] || {{flagiconBEL}} || 1977
 +
|-
 +
| [[Peter van Petegem]] || {{flagiconBEL}} || 2003
 +
|-
 +
| [[Tom Boonen]] || {{flagiconBEL}} || 2005
 +
|-
 +
|}
 +
 +
 +
==Films==
 +
*''[[A Sunday in Hell]]''
 +
*''[[Road to Roubaix]]'', a documentary of the [[2007 Paris-Roubaix|2007]] race
 +
 +
==Paris-Roubaix Cyclo==
 +
The Paris-Roubaix Cyclo is organised by the Velo Club de Roubaix every other June. This allows amateurs to experience the cobbles, the finishing laps in the vélodrome, and the showers. There is a choice of three levels: 120km, most of the cobbled sectors; 190km all the cobbles; or the full 261km. All finishers receive a small cobblestone on a wooden plinth.
 +
 +
 +
==Further reading==
 +
* Philippe Bouvet, Pierre Callewaert, Jean-Luc Gatellier, Laget Serge: ''Paris-Roubaix: A Journey Through Hell'' (ISBN 1934030090), VeloPress. The inside story of the race, its great riders, its traditions, and its secrets
 +
  
 
==External link==
 
==External link==
 
*[http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siegerliste_der_Radklassiker Winner list of Paris-Roubaix]
 
*[http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siegerliste_der_Radklassiker Winner list of Paris-Roubaix]
 +
*[http://www.lesamisdeparisroubaix.com/ Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix] {{fr icon}}
 +
*[http://www.cyclingnews.com/road/2007/apr07/roubaix07/?id=/features/2007/roubaix_secteurs07 Description of Paris-Roubaix cobbled sectors by cyclingnews.com]
 +
  
 
[[Category:Cycle races]]
 
[[Category:Cycle races]]
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Latest revision as of 16:28, 14 March 2009

Paris-Roubaix logo.png
Paris-Roubaix
Current event 2009 Paris-Roubaix
Date Early-April
Region Northern France
English Paris-Roubaix
Local names 22px-Flag of France.png Paris-Roubaix
Nickname The Hell of the North
Queen of the Classics
The Easter race
A Sunday in Hell
Discipline Road
Type Monument one-day race
Organiser Amaury Sport Organisation
Director
First 1896
Number 106 (as of 2008)
Last
First winner 22px-Flag of Germany.png Josef Fischer
Most wins 22px-Flag of Belgium (civil).png Roger De Vlaeminck
(4 wins)
Most recent 22px-Flag of Belgium (civil).png Tom Boonen
Uwe Raab at Paris-Roubaix 1995


Paris-Roubaix is a one-day professional bicycle road race in northern France from Compiègne to Roubaix, near the Belgian frontier. Famous for rough terrain and cobblestones, it is one of the 'Monuments' or Classics of the European calendar. It has been called the The Hell of the North, A Sunday in Hell, Queen of the Classics or La Pascale: the Easter race. The race is organised by the media group Amaury Sport Organisation annually in mid-April.

History

Winners since 1977 have received a mounted cobble; the organisers keep a gold-plated cobble for themselves
Théodore Vienne
Roubaix entrepreneur.

Paris-Roubaix is one of the oldest races of professional road cycling. It was run first in 1896 and has stopped only for two world wars. It was created by two Roubaix textile manufacturers, Théodore Vienne (born 28 July 1864) and Maurice Perez. They had been behind the building of a velodrome on 46,000 square metres at the corner of the rue Verte and the route d'Hempempont. It opened on 9 June 1895.

Vienne and Perez held several meetings on the track, one including the first appearance in France by the American sprinter Major Taylor, then looked for further ideas. In February 1896 they hit on holding a race from Paris to their track. It gave them two problems. The first was that the biggest races started or ended in Paris and that Roubaix would be seen as too provincial a destination. The second was that they could organise the start or the finish but not both.

They spoke to Louis Minart, the editor of Le Vélo, the only daily sports paper. Minart was enthusiastic but said the decision of whether the paper would run the start and provide publicity belonged to the director, Paul Rousseau. Minart may also have suggested an indirect approach because the mill owners recommended their race not on its own merits but as preparation for another. They wrote:

Dear M. Rousseau, Bordeaux-Paris is approaching and this great annual event which has done so much to promote cycling has given us an idea. What would you think of a training race which preceded Bordeaux-Paris by four weeks? The distance between Paris and Roubaix is roughly 280km, so it would be child's play for the future participants of Bordeaux-Paris. The finish would take place at the Roubaix vélodrome after several laps of the track. Everyone would be assured of an enthusiastic welcome as most of our citizens have never had the privilege of seeing the spectacle of a major road race and we count on enough friends to believe that Roubaix is truly a hospitable town. As prizes we already have subscribed to a first prize of 1,000 francs in the name of the Roubaix velodrome and we will be busy establishing a generous prize list which will be to the satisfaction of all. But for the moment, can we count on the patronage of Le Vélo and on your support for organising the start?

The first prize represented seven months' wages for a miner at the time.

Rousseau was enthusiastic and sent his cycling editor, Victor Breyer, to find a route. Breyer travelled to Amiens in a Panhard driven by his colleague, Paul Meyan. The following morning Breyer - later deputy organiser of the Tour de France and a leading official of the Union Cycliste Internationale - continued by bike. The wind blew, the rain fell and the temperature dropped. Breyer reached Roubaix filthy and exhausted after a day of riding in disjointed cobbles. He swore he would send a telegram to Minart urging him to drop the idea, saying it was dangerous to send a race the way he had just ridden. But that evening a meal and drinks with the team from Roubaix changed his mind.

Pavé Emblem of Paris-Roubaix,
Donated on the 100th anniversary
by 'Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix'
and 'La Ville de Roubaix'

Easter mystery

Vienne and Perez scheduled their race for Easter Sunday. The Church objected. Riders would not have time to attend mass and spectators might not bother to try. Tracts were distributed in Roubaix decrying the venture. What happened next is uncertain. Legend says that Vienne and Perez promised the church that a mass would be said for the riders in a chapel 200m from the start, in the boulevard Maillot. The story is repeated by Pascal Sergent, the historian of the race, and by Pierre Chany, historian of the sport in general. Sergent goes as far as saying that Victor Breyer, whom he says was there, said the service was cancelled because 4am was too early. Neither mentions if the date of the race was subsequently changed.

However, the first Paris-Roubaix, Sergent says, was on 19 April 1896. But Easter Sunday in 1896 was two weeks earlier. The first Paris-Roubaix on Easter Sunday was the following year, 1897.

The first race

Josef Fischer won the first edition of Paris-Roubaix.

News of Breyer's ride to Roubaix may have spread. Half those who entered did not turn up at the Brassérie de l'Espérance, the race headquarters. Those who dropped out included Henri Desgrange, a prominent track rider who went on to organise the Tour de France. The starters did include Maurice Garin, winner of Desgrange's first Tour, who was the local hope in Roubaix because he and two brothers had opened a cycle shop in the boulevard de Paris the previous year.

Garin came third, 15 minutes behind Josef Fischer, the only German to have won. Only four finished within an hour. Garin would have come second had he not been knocked over by a crash between two tandems, one of them ridden by his pacers. Garin "finished exhausted and Dr Butrille was obliged to attend the man who had been run over by two machines," said Sergent. He won the following year, beating the Dutchman Mathieu Cordang in the last two kilometres of the velodrome at Roubaix. In 2004 Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix marked Garin's victories in the Paris-Roubaix event by placing a cobblestone - traditional trophy for winners of the race, on his grave. Sergent said:

As the two champions appeared they were greeted by a frenzy of excitement and everyone was on their feet to acclaim the two heroes. It was difficult to recognise them. Garin was first, followed by the mud-soaked figure of Cordang. Suddenly, to the stupefaction of everyone, Cordang slipped and fell on the velodrome's cement surface. Garin could not believe his luck. By the time Cordang was back on his bike, he had lost 100 metres. There remained six laps to cover. Two miserable kilometres in which to catch Garin. The crowd held its breath as they watched the incredible pursuit match. The bell rang out. One lap, there remained one lap. 333 metres for Garin, who had a lead of 30 metres on the Batave.

A classic victory was within his grasp but he could almost feel his adversary's breath on his neck. Somehow Garin held on to his lead of two metres, two little metres for a legendary victory. The stands exploded and the ovation united the two men. Garin exulted under the cheers of the crowd. Cordang cried bitter tears of disappointment.

Hell of the North

The race usually leaves riders caked in mud and grit, from the cobbled roads and rutted tracks of northern France's former coal-mining region. However, this is not how this race earned the name l'enfer du Nord, or Hell of the North. The term was used to describe the route of the race after World War I. Organisers and journalists set off from Paris in 1919 to see how much of the route had survived four years of shelling and trench warfare. Procycling

They knew little of the permanent effects of the war. Nine million had died and France lost more than any. But, as elsewhere, news was scant. Who even knew if there was still a road to Roubaix? If Roubaix was still there? The car of organisers and journalists made its way along the route those first riders had gone. And at first all looked well. There was destruction and there was poverty and there was a strange shortage of men. But France had survived. But then, as they neared the north, the air began to reek of broken drains, raw sewage and the stench of rotting cattle. Trees which had begun to look forward to spring became instead blackened, ragged stumps, their twisted branches pushed to the sky like the crippled arms of a dying man. Everywhere was mud. Nobody knows who first described it as 'hell', but there was no better word. And that's how it appeared next day in the papers: that little party had seen 'the hell of the north.'

The words in L'Auto were:

We enter into the centre of the battlefield. There's not a tree, everything is flattened! Not a square metre that has not been hurled upside down. There's one shell hole after another. The only things that stand out in this churned earth are the crosses with their ribbons in blue, white and red. It is hell!

"This wasn't a race. It was a pilgrimage.|Henri Pélissier, speaking of his 1919 victory.

History of the cobbles

Alain Bernard, President of 'Les Amis de Paris Roubaix': "These days the mayors come to me with cobbles."

Seeking cobbles is relatively recent. It began at the same time in Paris-Roubaix and the Ronde van Vlaanderen, when widespread improvements to roads after the second world war brought realisation that the character of both races were changing. Until then the race had been over cobbles not because they were bad but because that was how roads were made. André Mahé, who won in 1948 (see below Controversies), said:

After the war, of course, the roads were all bad. There were cobbles from the moment you left Paris, or Senlis where we started in those days. There'd be stretches of surfaced roads and often there'd be a cycle path or a pavement [sidewalk] and sometimes a thin stretch of something smoother. But you never knew where was best to ride and you were for ever switching about. You could jump your bike up on to a pavement but that got harder the more tired you got. Then you'd get your front wheel up but not your back wheel. That happened to me. And then you'd go sprawling, of course, and you could bring other riders down. Or they'd fall off and bring you down with them. And the cycle paths were often just compressed cinders, which got soft in the rain and got churned up by so many riders using them and then you got stuck and you lost your balance. And come what may, you got covered in coal dust and other muck. No, it's all changed and you can't compare then and now.

The coming of live television prompted mayors along the route to surface their cobbled roads for fear the rest of France would see them as backward and not invest in the region. Albert Bouvet, the organiser, said: "If things don't change, we'll soon be calling it Paris-Valenciennes," reference to a flat race on good roads that often ends in a mass sprint. L'Équipe said: "The riders don't deserve that." Its editor, Jacques Goddet, called Paris-Roubaix "the last great madness of cycling." Bouvet and Jean-Claude Vallaeys formed Les Amis de Paris Roubaix (see below). Its president, Alain Bernard, led enthusiasts to look for and sometimes maintain obscure cobbled paths. He said:

"Until the war, Paris-Roubaix was all on routes nationales. But many of those were cobbled, which was the spirit of the race, and the riders used to try to ride the cycle paths, if there were any. So Paris-Roubaix has always been on pavé, because pavé was what the roads were made of. Then in 1967 things began to change. There was less pavé than there had been. And so from 1967 the course started moving to the east to use the cobbles that remained there. And then those cobbles began to disappear as well and we feared that Bouvet's predictions were going to come true. That's when we started going out looking for old tracks and abandoned roads that didn't show up on our maps.

In the 1970s, the race only had to go through a village for the mayor to order the road to be surfaced. Pierre Mauroy, when he was mayor of Lille [Roubaix is virtually a suburb of Lille], said he wanted nothing to do with the race and that he'd do nothing to help it. A few years ago, there was barely a village or an area that wanted anything to do with us. If Paris-Roubaix came their way, they felt they were shamed because we were exposing their bad roads. They went out and surfaced them, did all they could to obstruct us. Now they can't get enough of us. I have mayors ringing me to say they've found another stretch of cobbles and would we like to use them.|Alain Bernard, President of 'Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix', 2007.

Commemorative marker-post for the Pavé de Luchin at the Carrefour de l'Arbre
The first section of pavé at the Carrefour de l'Arbre

It was Alain Bernard who found one of the race's most significant cobbled stretches, the Carrefour de l'Arbre. He was out on a Sunday ride, turned off the main road to see what was there and found the last bad cobbles before the finish. It is a bleak area with just a bar by the crossroads. Bernard said: "Until then, it [the bar ('Cafe de l'Arbre')] was open only one day a year. In France, a bar has to open one day a year to keep its licence. That's all it did, because it's out in the middle of nowhere and nobody went there to drink any more. With the fame that the race brought it, it's now open all year and a busy restaurant as well."|Alain Bernard, President of 'Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix', 2007.

The Amis de Paris-Roubaix spend €10-15,000 a year on restoring and rebuilding cobbles. The Amis supply the sand and other material and the repairs are made as training by students from horticulture schools at Dunkirk, Lomme, Raismes and Douai. Each section costs €4-6,000, paid for equally by the Amis, the organisers and the local commune. Bernard said:

"The trouble is that the Belgians then come out to see the race and they pull up a cobble stone each and take it home as a souvenir. They've even gone off with the milestones. It's a real headache. But I'm confident now that Paris-Roubaix is safe, that it will always be the race it has always been."|Alain Bernard, President of 'Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix', 2007.


Strategic places of historic races

The strategic places where earlier races could be won or lost include Doullens Hill, Arras, Carvin and the Wattignies bend. Some sections of cobbles have deteriorated beyond the point of safety and repair or have been resurfaced and lost their significance. Other sections are excluded because the route of the race has moved east.

Pacers

Early races were run behind pacers, as were many competitions of the era. The first were other cyclists, on bicycles or tandems. Cars and motorcycles were allowed to pace from 1898. The historian Fer Schroeders says:

In 1898, even cars and motorcycles were allowed to open the road for the competitors. In 1900, the race was within a hair's breadth of disappearing, with only 19 riders at the start. The following year, the organisation therefore decided to allow help only from pacers on bicycles. And in 1910, help from pacers were stopped for good. An option which lifted Paris-Roubaix out of the background and pushed it, in terms of interest, ahead of the prestigious Bordeaux-Paris.

Course

Cobblestone in northern France, near Lille.

Originally, the race was from Paris to Roubaix, but in 1966 the start moved to Chantilly, 50km north, then in 1977 to Compiègne, 80km north. From Compiègne it now follows a 260km winding route north to Roubaix, hitting the first cobbles after 100 km. During the last 150km the cobbles extend more than 50 km. The race culminates with 750m on the smooth concrete of the large outdoor velodrome in Roubaix. The route is adjusted from year to year as older roads are resurfaced and the organisers seek more cobbles to maintain the character of the race - in 2005, for example, the race included 54.7km of cobbles.

The start

The race has started at numerous places:

  • 1896-1897 Porte Maillot, Paris
  • 1898-1899: Chatou
  • 1900: Saint-Germain
  • 1901: Porte Maillot, Paris
  • 1902-1913: Chatou
  • 1914: Suresnes
  • 1919-1928: Suresnes
  • 1929-1937: Porte Maillot, Paris
  • 1938: Argenteuil
  • 1939: Porte Maillot, Paris
  • 1943-1965: Saint-Denis
  • 1966-1976: Chantilly
  • 1977-present Compiègne

The opening kilometres (the départ fictif) have often been a rolling procession. Racing has started further into the ride (départ réel). The start of open racing has been at:

  • 1896-1897: Porte Maillot
  • 1898-1899: Chatou
  • 1900: Saint-Germain
  • 1901: Porte Maillot
  • 1902-1913: Chatou
  • 1914: Suresnes
  • 1919: Suresnes
  • 1920-1922: Chatou
  • 1923-1929: Le Vésinet
  • 1930-1938: Argenteuil
  • 1939: Le Vésinet


28 cobbled sectors

The organiser, Jean-François Pescheux, grades the cobbles by length, irregularity, the general condition and their position in the race.

In 2008, there were 28 cobbled sections, three considered maximum difficulty. As well as the Trouée d'Arenberg, difficult sections include the 3000m Mons-en-Pévèle (213km) and the 2100 m Carrefour de l'Arbre (244km) — often decisive in the final kilometres.

Section
Number
Name Kilometer Length
(in m)
Category
28 Troisvilles to Inchy 98 2200 ***
27 Viesly to Quiévy 104 1800 ***
26 Quievy to Saint Python 106,5 3700 ****
25 Saint-Python 111,5 1500 **
24 Vertain to Saint-Martin-sur-Écaillon 119 2000 ***
23 Capelle-sur-Ecaillon - Le Buat 126 1700 ***
22 Verchain-Maugré - Quérénaing 138 1600 ***
21 Quérénaing - Maing 141 2500 ***
20 Maing - Monchaux-sur-Écaillon 144 1600 ***
19 Haveluy 155,5 2500 ****
18 Trouée d'Arenberg 163,5 2400 *****
17 Wallers - Hélesmes 170 1600 ****
16 Hornaing - Wandignies-Hamage 176,5 3700 ***
15 Warlaing - Brillon 184 2400 ***
14 Tilloy-lez-Marchiennes - Sars-et-Rosières 187,5 2400 ***
Section
Number
Name Kilometer Length
(in m)
Category
13 Beuvry-la-Forêt - Orchies 194 1400 ***
12 Orchies 199 1700 ***
11 Auchy-lez-Orchies - Bersée 205 1200 **
10 Mons-en-Pévèle 210,5 3000 *****
9 Mérignies – Pont-à-Marcq 216,5 700 **
8 Pont Thibaut to Ennevelin 219,5 1400 ***
7 Templeuve l'Epinette
Templeuve Le Moulin de Vertain
225
225,5
200
500
*
**
6 Cysoing - Bourghelles
Bourghelles - Wannehain
232
234,5
1300
1100
****
****
5 Camphin-en-Pévèle 239 1800 ****
4 Le Carrefour de l'Arbre 242 2100 *****
3 Gruson 244 1100 **
2 Hem 251 1400 *
1 Roubaix 'Espace Charles Crupelandt' 257,5 300 *


28 - Troisvilles to Inchy

Length - 2,200m

First used 1987. The highest of all the cobbles at 136m. Jean Stablinski memorial on the right. The section drops 900m at two per cent. Students of the Lycée Professionnel Horticole de Raismes planted a hedge in November 2007 to prevent flowing mud. The section climbs gently for the next 900m on to the plateau at 121m. This section is often difficult because of mud. The right-angled left bend towards Inchy is made difficult by mud. The road then drops at 3.2 per cent for 400m.

Cobbles rated ***. The cobbles are in fairly good condition except at the end. The second part, after the main road, is always muddy.

27 - Viesly (rue de la chapelle) to Quievy

Length - 1,800m.

First used 1973. This section is slightly descending, dropping evenly from 120m to 100m. It is almost entirely straight, although muddy in parts.

Cobbles rated ***. In fairly good condition.

Paris-Roubaix 2006.png

26 - Quievy to Saint Python

Length - 3,700m

First used 1973. This section crosses two regional roads, D113b and D134. This and the section from Hornaing to Wandignies-Hamage is the longest. It rises from 95 to 117m. It begins with a gentle drop, continues with a gentle rise over 600m, then a section almost entirely flat. After being straight, there is then a difficult 90-degree right bend that leads to a 2km uphill drag that riders find exhausting.

Cobbles rated ****. Fairly good condition. The regional council relaid the cobbles at the end of the section in 2007. The beautiful farm of Fontaine au Tertre is on the left at the end of the cobbles.

25 - Saint-Python

Length - 1,500m

First used 1973. The start is at 104m, the end at 82m. The road is almost straight, starting with 500 flat metres then a 1km descent to Saint-Python.

Cobbles rated **. In good condition but muddy at first.

24 - Vertain to Saint-Martin-sur-Écaillon

Length - 1,900m plus 100m from which the tar has been removed.

First used 1985. It drops from 105m to 89m in almost a straight line apart from a small bend to the left in the middle.

Cobbles rated ***

Paris-Roubaix, Secteur pavé de Capelle – Buat.jpg

23 - Capelle sur Ecaillon to Buat

Length - 1,700m.

First used 2005. Rises from 91m to 102m in almost a straight line. It starts with a four per cent drop over 700m, then rises from 66m to 400m at seven per cent, followed by a slow rise of two per cent for 7 500m. The steepest part of the course, ridden by specialists on a 46-tooth ring.

Cobbles rated ***. Fairly good state but with strip of tar on the right during the descent.

22 - Verchain-Maugré to Quérénaing

Length - 1,600m.

First used possibly 1974 . Virtually level - 80m to 78m, virtually straight, rising a little and then descending more gently for longer.

Cobbles rated **. In good condition apart from some holes.

21 - Quérénaing to Maing

Length - 2,500m

First used 1996 and used thereafter and always in the same direction. The road is the D59, falling from 85m to 40m in a straight line. It starts with a gentle decline to 72m over 400m, then a slight ride 400m. Then comes a flat stretch followed by a long descent of between 2.5 and 3.8 per cent.

Cobbles rated ***. In good condition with a muddy part.

Paris-Roubaix Secteur pavé de Maing à Monchaux sur Ecaillon.

20 - Maing to Monchaux sur Ecaillon

Length - 1,600m.

First used 2001. The road is the D88, rising from 47 to 50m in an almost straight line. It begins with a slight ride of 1,000m, then a slow descent of 600m.

Cobbles rated ***. Hard at first, with deep holes, then in excellent condition.

19 - Wallers Haveluy

Length - 2,500m.

First used 2001 and ever since. This is Bernard Hinault section, named in his presence on 28 March 2005 by the municipality. This section is sometimes used by the Quatre Jours de Dunkerque. It starts at 31m and finishes at 34m. It starts with a gentle rise, finishes with a gentle fall.

Cobbles rated ****. They are described as average condition but with a lot of mud. The second half is more difficult.

18 - Trouée d'Arenberg

Trouee d'Arenberg - 2008 Paris-Roubaix.

The Trouée d'Arenberg, Tranchée d'Arenberg, (Trench of Arenberg), Trouee de Wallers Arenberg, has become the symbol of Paris-Roubaix. Officially 'La Drève des Boules d'Herin', the 2400m of cobbles were laid in the time of Napoleon through the Raismes Forest-Saint-Amand-Wallers, close to Wallers and Valenciennes. The road was proposed for Paris-Roubaix by former professional Jean Stablinski, who had worked in the mine under the woods of Arenberg. The mine closed in 1990 and the passage is now preserved. Although almost 100km from Roubaix, the sector usually proves decisive and as Stablinski said, {{cquote|Paris-Roubaix is not won in Arenberg, but from there the group with the winners is selected. A memorial to him stands at one end of the road.

Introduced in 1968, the passage was closed from 1974 to 1983 by the Office National des Fôrets. Until 1998 the entry to the Arenberg pavé was slightly downhill, leading to a sprint for best position. The route was reversed in 1999 to reduce the speed. This was as a result of Johan Museeuw's crash in 1998 as World Cup leader, which nearly cost his leg to gangrene. In 2005 the Trouée d'Arenberg was left out, organisers saying conditions had deteriorated beyond safety limits. Abandoned mines had caused sections to subside. The regional and local councils spent €250,000 on adding 50cm to restore the original width of three metres and the race continued using it. The Italian rider Filippo Pozzato said after trying the road after its repairs:

It's the true definition of hell. It's very dangerous, especially in the first kilometre when we enter it at more than 60kh. It's unbelievable. The bike goes in all directions. It will be a real spectacle but I don't know if it's really necessary to impose it on us.

In 2001 a French rider, Philippe Gaumont, broke his femur after falling at the start of the Trouée when leading the peloton. He said:

What I went through, only I will ever know. My knee cap completely turned to the right, a ball of blood forming on my leg and the bone that broke, without being able to move my body. And the pain, a pain that I wouldn't wish on anyone. The surgeon placed a big support [un gros matériel] in my leg, because the bone had moved so much. Breaking a femur is always serious in itself but an open break in an athlete of high level going flat out, that tears the muscles. At 180 beats [a minute of the heart], there was a a colossal amount of blood being pumped, which meant my leg was full of blood. I'm just grateful that the artery was untouched.

Gaumont spent a month and a half in bed, unable to move, and was fitted with a 40mm section fixed just above the knee and, to the head of the femur, with a 12mm screw.

Length - 2,400m.

First used 1968. A straight road through the forêt domaniale de Raismes/Saint-Amand/Wallers, dropping slightly at first, then rising. The road is at 25m at the start and 19m at the end.

Cobbles rated *****. The cobbles are extremely difficult to ride because of their irregularity. So many fans have taken away cobbles as souvenirs that the Amis de Paris-Roubaix have had to replace them.

Joost Posthuma (Paris-Roubaix 2008)

17 - Wallers pont Gibus to Hélesmes

-1,600m. - First used 1974 as a replacement for the Trouée. It is straight and level. The start is difficult, the road having partly collapsed, and the stones are irregular.

Cobbles rated ****

16 - Hornaing to Wandignies-Hamage

Length - 3,700m.

First used 1983. First used over its entire length 1988. The last 2,900m were used by the Tour de France in 2004. The road is the D130. It falls from 23 to 17m in the shape of an L. It is flat, starting with 800m in a straight line, followed by a turn to the right near two châteaux, then a straight line of 2,900m towards Wandignies-Hamage.

Cobbles rated ***. In good condition.

Paris-Roubaix Secteur pavé de Warlaing à Brillon

15 - Warlaing to Brillon

Length - 2,400m.

First used 1983. The road is the D81, at 17m at each end, formed in an L. First 400m straight, then a right bend followed by a 2km straight.

Cobbles rated ***. In a good condition at first but then with sunken sections.

14 - Tilloy-lez-Marchiennes to Sars-et-Rosières

Length - 2,400m.

First used 1980 but only for the first 1,400m. Used over its entire length from 1982. An L-shaped section of the D158b with two 90-degree right turns and one 90-degree to the left. Starts at 18m and finishes at 19m.

Cobbles rated ***. In good condition and regularly maintained. Sometimes muddy because of tractors.

Michail Ignatiev, Paris-Roubaix, 2008

13 - Beuvry-la-Forêt to Orchies

Length - 1,400m.

First used 2007. The section was laid for the race, 700m of cobbles being added to 700 already there. The section was named after Marc Madiot in 2007. It rises slightly for the first half and is then flat.

Cobbles rated ***. In a correct condition, although the surface is described as "chaotic" in the first part.

Secteur pavé de Orchies, chemin des prières

12 - Orchies, chemin des Prières, and chemin des Abattoirs

Length - 1700m.

First used 1980. The 600 last metres were used in the opposite direction for the first time in 1977. The section is L-shaped, the first 1,100m flat and the last 600 slightly uphill.

Cobbles rated ***. In a correct state, fairly muddy at first, disjointed in the last 600m.

11 - Auchy-lez-Orchies to Bersee

Length - 1,200m.

First used 1980. The second section, Nouveau Monde, has deteriorated too much to be raced on. The sector rises from 40 to 54m. It is almost flat in the form of a semi-circle.

Cobbles rated ***. In correct state, although irregular and difficult in the second half.

'Les Amis' clean and repair the Secteur pavé de Mons-en-Pévèle

10 - Mons-en-Pévèle

Mons-en-Pévèle, cobblestone sector 10, is the 10th section of pavé before the finish. Its 3,000m are rated the hardest level of difficulty, five stars. It is in the municipality of Mons-en-Pévèle. It is one of the key sectors, one of the toughest and within 50km of the finish. It has been used every year since 1978, 2001 excepted. In 1997, 2000, 2002 and 2003, only the first 1,100m were used.

In 2008, Stijn Devolder's attack on this sector was a contribution to the victory of Tom Boonen, his Quick Step team-mate.

Overall the 3,000m rise from 53m at the start to 63m at the end. It begins with a 300m drop of two per cent down to the Ruisseau La Petite Marque at 47m. This is followed by 800m that rise 3m. A 90 degree right-turn to the rue du Blocus introduces a 800m straight that falls 2m and leads to a difficult, muddy, 90-degree left turn to the ruelle Flamande. The final 1,100m of the ruelle Flamande and Chemin de Randonnée Pédèstre rise 16m to Mérignies.

Length - 3,000m

First used 1978. It starts at 53m and finishes at 63m. The first 300m descend at two per cent. Then a right turn at 90 degrees, 800m of flat road, a muddy and difficult left turn at 90 degres and 1,100m of slight rise.

Cobbles rated *****. Correct condition for the first 1,100m, then worse, followed by 1,100m on which mud runs down from fields.

9 - Mérignies to Pont à Marcq

Length - 700m.

First used 1981. The road is the rue de la Rosée. It rises from 35 to 37m, almost straight.

Cobbles rated **. Good condition.

8 - Pont Thibaut to Ennevelin

Length - 1,400m.

First used 1978. A flat double L with two 90-degree left turns.

Cobbles rated ***. Good condition but muddy for the first 1,000m, then difficult at the end, although work is scheduled to improve it.

7 - Templeuve - Le Moulin de Vertain

Length - 200m.

First used 1992. A straight line rising two metres.

Cobbles rated *. Bad at first, then good.

Length - 500m.

First used 2002. This section, covered by earth, was dug out for the 100th race. It drops from 38m to 33m in a straight line.

Cobbles rated ***. A short section but with cobbles hard to negotiate.

Secteur pavé de Bourghelles, le calvaire (March 2008)
Imanol Erviti, 2008

6 - Cysoing to Bourghelles to Wannehain

Length - 1,400m.

First used 1981. Since 2006 it has included the 300m leading to Bourghelles. Known as the Duclos-Lassalle section, it is level and L-shaped, rising fractionally, descending, rising and then descending again to finish at its original height: 44m.

Cobbles rated ****. In good condition for the first 700m, appalling for 300m to the right-hand corner, and good again for the last 300m.

Length - 1,100m.

First used 1992. A slight rise followed by a slight descent.

Cobbles rated ****. Fairly good condition at first and then hard to ride in the second half because of the irregular surface. Partly repaved with cobbles from the old road at Péronne-en-Mélantois taken by Paris-Roubaix in the 1950s.

5 - Camphin-en-Pévèle

Length - 1,800m.

First used 1980. L-shaped, falling from 52 to 50m. The right-hand corner in the middle of difficult because of mud.

Cobbles rated ****. Fairly disjointed throughout but appalling in the last 300m.

4 - Camphin-en-Pévèle to Carrefour de l'Arbre

Length - 2,100m.

First used 1980.An L-shaped section rising from 48 to 51m. Flat for 1,200m, then a difficult left-hand bend leading to a slight ascent.

Cobbles rated *****. Alternate good and bad sections. The section before the corner leading to the restaurant is particularly bad and hard to ride.

3 - Le Carrefour de l'Arbre to Gruson

Second half of Sector 4, Le Carrefour de l'Arbre, leading up to the Cafe de l'Arbre
Frederik Willems and Filippo Pozzato from Team Liquigas on approach the 'Carrefour de l'Arbre' in 2008

Le Carrefour de l'Arbre (or Pavé de Luchin) is the fourth section of pavé before the finish in Roubaix. Its 2.1 km are rated at the hardest level of difficulty, five stars. The crossroads (carrefour) is on open land between Gruson and Camphin-en-Pévèle. The route departs westward from Camphin-en-Pévèle along the rue de Cysoing towards Camphin de l'Arbre. The first half is a series of corners, then along irregular pavé towards Luchin. The second half finishes at the Café de l'Arbre restaurant and has more even pavé. A sharp turn towards Gruson signals the start of sector 3, although this has sometimes been included in sector 4.

The Carrefour de l'Arbre / Pavé de Luchin sector has often proved decisive. This is due to its proximity to Roubaix (15km) and cumulative difficulty, even it is regarded less challenging than the Trouée d'Arenberg. The leader at the completion of the Cafe has a good chance of leading at the velodrome, as Fabian Cancellara did in 2006 and Stuart O'Grady in 2007. As the last area where an attack could prove decisive, it is popular with spectators.

This 1,100m sector, which was first used 1978, drops from 50m to 45m in a straight line. It was also incorporated into stage 3 of the 2004 Tour de France between Waterloo and Wasquehal.

Cobbles rated **

2 - Hem

This 1,400m sector is believed to have been first used 1968 but perhaps as early as the 1950s. A winding section rising from 25m to 30m. Always swept by wind. In 2004, Johann Museeuw suffered a puncture on this stretch, which cost him the chance to contest the sprint for a record equalling fourth victory.

Cobbles rated *. Fairly good state, sometimes disjointed, but the riders take two strips of tar, even if they are pitted by holes that cause frequent punctures.

1 - Roubaix, Espace Charles Crupelandt - The final cobbles

Togosign.JPG

The final stretch of cobbles before the stadium is named after a local rider, Charles Crupelandt, who won in 1912 and 1914. The organiser of the Tour de France, Henri Desgrange, predicted he would win his race. He then went to war. He returned a hero, with the Croix de Guerre. Three years into peace, however, he fell foul of the law and was found guilty in court. The Union Vélocipédique banned him for life, possibly at the urging of rivals in cycling.

Crupelandt raced again but registered with an unofficial cycling association, with which he won national championships in 1922 and 1923. He died in 1955, blind and with both legs amputated.

This 300m sector, dropping from 32m to 27m, is unofficially known as the 'Chemin des Géants,' [Road of the Giants]. It was first used 1996, having been created for the centenary by laying a strip of smooth new cobbles down the centre of the wide boulevard of Avenue Alfred Motte. Dotted among the cobbles are plaques to every race winner, the giants.

Cobbles rated *. Excellent condition.


The finish

The last 750m are in the vélodrome in Roubaix
Shower cubicles at Roubaix track are named after winners

The finish until 1914 was on the original track at Croix, where the Parc clinic now stands. There were then various finish points:

  • 1896-1914: Rue Verte/route d'Hempempont, Croix, Roubaix
  • 1919: avénue de Jussieu, Roubaix, behind the dairy
  • 1920-1921: Stadium Jean Dubrulle, Roubaix
  • 1922-1928: avénue des Villas (now the avénue Gustave Delory), Roubaix
  • 1929: Stade Amédée Prouvost, Wattrelos
  • 1930-1934: avénue des Villas, Roubaix
  • 1935-1936: Flandres horse track, Marcq
  • 1937-1939: avénue Gustave Delory (former avénue des Villas), Roubaix
  • 1943-1985: Roubaix Velodrome
  • 1986-1988: avenue des Nations-Unies
  • 1989-2008: Roubaix Velodrome

The race moved to the current stadium in 1943, and there it has stayed with the exceptions of 1986, 1987 and 1988 when the finish was in the avenue des Nations-Unies, outside the offices of La Redoute, the mail-order company which sponsored the race.

The shower room inside the velodrome is distinctive for the open, three-sided, low-walled concrete stalls, each with a brass plaque to commemorate a winner. These include Peter van Petegem, Eddy Merckx, Roger De Vlaeminck, Rik van Looy and Fausto Coppi.

When I stand in the showers in Roubaix, I actually start the preparation for next year. Tom Boonen, 2004.

A commemorative plaque at 37 avenue Gustave Delory honours Émile Masson Jr., the last to win there.

Bicycles

File:Tafi roubaix.jpg
Andrea Tafi's special Paris-Roubaix bicycle, with dual brake levers.

Paris-Roubaix presents a technical challenge to riders, team personnel, and equipment. Special frames and wheels are often used. Some have wider tires, cantilever brakes, and dual brake levers. Many teams disperse personnel along the course with spare wheels, equipment and bicycles to help in locations not accessible to the team car.

André Mahé, winner in 1948, said such specialisation is recent:

"[In 1948] We rode the same bikes as the rest of the season. We didn't need to change them because they were much less rigid than modern bikes. The frames moved all over the place. When I attacked, I could feel the bottom bracket swaying underneath me. On the other hand, we had more cobbles. People talk of the amount of cobbles they have now, but when they've finished them they're back on surfaced roads."

Riders have experimented, however. After the second world war many tried wooden rims of the sort used at the start of cycle-racing. Francesco Moser wrapped his handlebars with strips of foam in the 1970s. Gilbert Duclos-Lasalle and Greg LeMond experimented with suspension in their front forks in the 1990s.

Some top riders receive special frames to give more stability and comfort. Different materials make the ride more comfortable. Tom Boonen, used a Time frame with longer wheelbase for the first time in 2005, he won the race that year and has since continued to use a bike with a longer wheelbase. George Hincapie had a frame featuring a 2mm elastomer insert at the top of the seat stays. The manufacturers claimed this took nearly all the shock out of the cobbles. Hincapie's Trek bicycle fared less well in 2006: his aluminum steerer tube snapped with 46km to go, the crash injuring his shoulder.

The bicycle made for Peter van Petegem in 2004 was a Time. The distance from bottom bracket to rear axle was 419mm rather than his normal 403. The distance from the bottom bracket to the front hub was 605mm instead of 600mm. The depth of the front forks was 372mm instead of 367.5mm The forks were spaced to take 28mm tyres. The sprockets were steel rather than alloy and the steerer column was cut 5mm higher than usual to raise the handlebars if needed before the start.

The bad roads cause frequent punctures. A service fleet consisting of four motorcycles and four cars provides spares to riders regardless of team. Yves Hézard of Mavic the equipment company which provides the coverage, said:

Every year we change fewer wheels, because the wheels and tyres are getting better and better. We changed about 20 wheels today. Five years ago, it was much worse - we'd be choosing about a hundred. Tyres are becoming much better than before. So, yes, our job is easier - except that the race generally goes faster now, so we're under a bit more pressure. Every year, there's new types of gears, new aluminium frames, new titanium frames, so it's getting more complex for us to offer neutral service. We have a list in the car of who is riding Mavic or Shimano or Campagnolo; the moment someone gets a flat tyre we need to think of a lot of things at once. Is it a titanium frame or a carbon frame or a steel frame?

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