Joaquim Agostinho

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For Portuguese footballer, see Agostinho (footballer).
Joaquim Agostinho
Joaquim Agostinho Besancon 1980.jpg
Joaquim Agostinho 1980
Personal information
Full name Joaquim Francisco Agostinho
Nickname Tinho
Born (1943-04-07)April 7, 1943
 Portugal
Died May 10, 1984(1984-05-10) (aged 41)
Team information
Discipline Road
Role Rider
Professional team(s)
1968
1969 - 1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976 - 1977
1978 - 1979
1980
1981 - 1983
1984
Sporting Clube de Portugal
Frimatic
Hoover
Magniflex
Sporting Clube de Portugal
Bic
Sporting Clube de Portugal
Teka
Flandria
Puch
Sem France Loire
Sporting Clube de Portugal
Infobox last updated on
July 14, 2008

Joaquim Fernandes Agostinho, OIH (born Brejenjas,[1] Torres Vedras, Portugal, 7 April 1942,[2][3] died Lisboa, 10 May 1984) was a Portuguese professional bicycle racer. He was champion of Portugal in six successive years.[4] He rode the Tour de France 13 times and finished all but once,[5] winning on Alpe d'Huez in 1979, and finishing 3rd twice. He died after colliding with a dog whilst leading the Tour of the Algarve.

Youth[edit]

Joaquim Francisco Agostinho was born in a small village "Brejenjas" near Torres Vedras. He lived for several years in Casalinhos de Alfaiata. Out for a ride as a youth, he encountered Sporting Clube de Portugal's cycling team on a road near Casalinhos de Alfaiata - Torres Vedras. He began an impromptu race; the team could did not catch him, even though Agostinho was riding a standard steel bicycle.

Agostinho fought for three years with the Portuguese army in Angola and Mozambique during the Portuguese Colonial War of 1961-1974. Jean-Pierre Douçot, who became his mechanic as a professional, said:

"It was his captain during the war in Mozambique who discovered him. When he carried messages on a heavy bike, he took two hours to ride 50km when the others took five."[6]

Racing career[edit]

Joaquim Agostinho started racing as an amateur at the age of 25 years-old in some Portuguese races, wearing some borrowed cycling wear lent by João Roque. After winning some races, Agostinho signed a professional contract with Sporting Clube de Portugal. Then, when racing with the Sporting Clube de Portugal cycling team in São Paulo, Agostinho - a rider "of average height but with the build of a rhinoceros", according to the historian Pierre Chany[6] - left Jean de Gribaldy in awe of him, a team manager and former cyclist.[7] They met in Brazil in 1968, when Agostinho won the Tour de São Paulo.[7] De Gribaldy was managing an amateur team in the race. That year Agostinho rode the world professional road championship at Imola, while still an amateur,[7] and came 16th after initiating the move which brought victory for the Italian, Vittorio Adorni. De Gribaldy and Agostinho became lifelong friends. De Gribaldy said in 1980:

"At the end of my life, if I had to recall a single place in the world, I wouldn't hesitate long. I would choose the little Brazilian hotel, insignificant, discreet, in Sao Paulo, where I had arranged to meet Joaquim. It was in 1968. I had noticed him two months earlier at Imola, at the world championship, but it was in Sao Paulo that I spoke to him for the first time. I asked him simply: 'Do you want to come and race in France?' He didn't know a word of French but in his smile I understood immediately what he was trying to answer. What a long way we went together afterwards. What memories we created together."

De Gribaldy asked him to join his Frimatic team in France, promising a ride in the 1969 Tour de France.[5] Agostinho was already 27, a late age to turn professional. Agostinho won two stages that year. He also had one of the heavy falls that characterised his career, crashing on the cinder track at Divonne-les-Bains and being carried away with concussion, insomnia and cuts.[5] He restarted next morning and rode as far as Paris, finishing the race eighth.[8] He rode 13 Tours de France from 1969 to 1983, came third in 1978 and 1979 and won four stages. He finished 12 times.[8]

1969 Frimatic-Jean de Gribaldy Team with Joaquim Agostinho, on the right.

Agostinho stayed with de Gribaldy as his teams were successively sponsored by Frimatic, Hoover, and Van Cauter Magniflex. In 1973 he left de Gribaldy to ride for Bic and then Teka before re-associating with de Gribaldy when he joined Flandria's French team in 1978.

Raphaël Géminiani said:

"Joaquim Agostinho didn't know his own strength. He was a ball of muscles of out-of-the-ordinary power. He was built like a cast-iron founder. Having come to cycling fairly late, he had trouble integrating with it. It's a shame he didn't want to dedicate himself 100 per cent to being a professional cyclist. Now and then he showed his very great physical powers, but no more often than that. He didn't want to do more. The peloton scared him, which is why he fell so often. More than that, Tinho was never aggressive enough to impose himself totally. He had a legendary kindness and his only ambition was to be good, gentle Tinho. If he'd been ambitious, he would easily have written his name into the records of the Tour de France."[9]

Pierre Martin said in International Cycle Sport:

He was a man of strange contradictions. Built like a sprinter, he was no good at sprinting. He was one of the great climbers. Eddy Merckx said in 1969, the year when he and Agostinho made their debuts in the Tour de France, that Agostinho was the rival who worried him most, indeed the only rival who had worried him at all."[5]

Agostinho was Portuguese champion in six successive years, from 1968 to 1973.[4] He was a gifted climber and a consistent leader in both in the Vuelta a España and the Tour de France where he was a winner at Alpe d'Huez. Martin said:

1970 : Frimatic-Jean de Gribaldy Team, "le Vicomte" de Gribaldy with Joaquim Agostinho

"He loved the Tour de France. There were few other races which he took seriously, indeed he raced relatively little during an average season - enough to pay for and maintain life's dream, but no more. On the roads of the Tour, nobody ever knew when he would suddenly burst into action. He might be quiet for days on end, when suddenly the racing fever would grip him, not always in the mountains, and away he went. When he went, those with serious ambitions went with him, knowing that, otherwise, they would see him no more until the end of the stage. He didn't take cycling too seriously. It had brought him wealth and security, had allowed him to buy and stock a large farm about 20 miles from Lisbon. The farm and his family were his life; cycling was his hobby. When he was riding the Tour d'Indre-et-Loire once, news reached him that 20 cows had been stolen. Off he went, in mid-race, back to Portugal to organise a posse to hunt the cattle, chartering a light plane for himself to direct the search.[5]

In 1982 he took a whole year off to look after his farm, demoralised by a fall in form the previous season.[6]

Doping[edit]

Joaquim Agostinho was caught three times in drugs checks: in the Tour of Portugal in 1969[10][11] and 1973,[10] and the Tour de France of 1977.[12]

Death[edit]

Agostinho was leading the Tour of the Algarve at Quarteira in April 1984 when a dog ran into the race a few hundred metres before the finish.[13] Agostinho hit it and fell to the ground, hitting his head. He remounted and crossed the line accompanied by other riders.[14] He was dazed but seemed otherwise unhurt. He walked to an ambulance, holding his head.[5] He then went to a hotel, where his head was dressed in ice. Two hours later he was taken to hospital in Faro, where an X-ray showed he had broken the parietal bone in his skull. He was taken by ambulance, four hours after his fall, the 280 km to Lisbon, the nearest city that could treat him. He fell into a coma in the ambulance and never emerged.

Monuments & tributes[edit]

Monument of Joaquim Agostinho in Torres Vedras, Portugal
  • In the gardens of Silveira a monument was inaugurated on 14 May 1989.[1]
  • The 'Avenida Joaquim Agostinho' (avenue) leads to the centre the Santa Cruz Beach.[1]
  • In France, on the 14th curve of the Alpe d'Huez, a bronze bust (1.70 m high, 70 cm wide and weighing 70 kg), mounted on a granite pedestal three feet high, commemorates his stage victory in 1979.
  • In 2000 the journalists of A Bola selected Agostinho as the 4th most important Portuguese Sportsman of the 20th Century, behind Eusébio (1st), Carlos Lopes (2nd) and Rosa Mota (3rd).[1]
  • In 1984 Agostinho was awarded the official title Grau de Oficial da Ordem do Infante, by then President of Portugal Ramalho Eanes.[1]

Notable results[edit]

1969:8th place, winner stages 5 and 14
1970:14th place
1971:5th place
1972:8th place
1973:8th place, winner stage 16B
1974:6th place
1975:15th place
1977:13th place, winner stage 18 (later awarded to Eddy Merckx, for testing doping)
1978:3rd place
1979:3rd place, winner stage 17
1980:5th place
1981:not finished
1983:11th place

Agostinho Champion du Portugal Tour de France 71

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Praia de Santa Cruz, Article about Joaquim Agostinho with pictures and monuments" (in Portuguese). Praiadesantacruz.com. Retrieved 2012-02-13. 
  2. ^ "memoire-du-cyclisme.net". memoire-du-cyclisme.net. Retrieved 2012-02-13. 
  3. ^ "letour.fr". letour.fr. Retrieved 2012-02-13. 
  4. ^ a b "Cyclisme-CB, Profile, joaquim-agostinho". Cyclisme-cb.blogspot.com. 2004-02-28. Retrieved 2012-02-13. 
  5. ^ a b c d e f International Cycle Sport, UK, 1984
  6. ^ a b c "Cyclismag, article 4617". Cyclismag.com. 2008-11-08. Retrieved 2012-02-13. 
  7. ^ a b c "Jean de Gribaldy, profile - Joaquim Agostinho". Jeandegribaldy.com. Retrieved 2012-02-13. 
  8. ^ a b Le Tour, Rider database - Joaquim Agostinho[dead link]
  9. ^ Raphaël Raconte, expired web site
  10. ^ a b Alguns dos maiores escândalos da história do ciclismo[dead link]
  11. ^ "memoire-du-cyclisme, Tour de Portugal - stages". Memoire-du-cyclisme.net. 2011-10-28. Retrieved 2012-02-13. 
  12. ^ Dopage.com, tombes-au-champs-dhonneur[dead link]
  13. ^ iFrance, article, Joaquim Agostinho
  14. ^ Video of the finish and a review of Agostinho's career on YouTube[dead link]

External links[edit]