On
his World Championship
Maggie
Thompson, club member and past committee member, was a prominent
track rider in the 1970's, competing initially under her maiden
name, Margaret Gordon Smith. Her speciality was the Pursuit, over 3000m, winning
the National Championship in 1977 and again in 1978 beating
big names such as Beryl Burton and her daughter Denise, Brenda
Atkinson and Catherine Swinnerton.
Outside the UK, she rode in 1971, 1977 and 1978 track and
road World Championships and gained 3rd place overall
in the 3-day Tour Feminine based at Le Havre, France in 1978.
Now she turns her hand to interviewing another trackie,
Walter (Wally) Fowler, second-claim member of Stourbridge
Cycling Club who went to Australia, to the Sydney Velodrome,
in 2008 and won the World Track Masters 500m time trial, in
the 70+ age category.
Q Wally, at 74 years old, you left this a bit
late?
Well,
yes, on the face of it, I did. But, on the other hand, sport is not just for
the young, or for the middle aged or any special group of
people. It is for everybody. And in cycling, in particular, there are plenty
of riders in their 60s, 70s and over who are able to enjoy
sport to a level that surprises people who think the armchair
is the only proper place to be when they retire!
In
cycling, as in other sports, we have the Masters programme
of events, on track or road, consisting of 5-year age bands,
starting at 30 or 35 and ending at 75+ to any age. This means that anybody in between has the chance to
compete in similar age/ability groups, winning medals, rainbow
jerseys or recording Best Times. At 74, all I had to do was beat other older men in
my age category.
Q You joined SCC in 1980. Tell me, what has the club meant to you?
I
came back to cycling in 1980, having spent 20 years out of
it as many men do when running a business or bringing up
a family. I looked for a club where I could get the kind
of support needed to get going again, initially in getting
fit through clubruns, riding the short distance time trials and enjoying
the camaraderie that is special to cyclists. At such times, we make friends for life when
we help someone get past the wall (as a marathon runner might
say) or eat his way out of "the bonk"
(as old-fashioned cyclists would say)!
Although
by physique I am a sprinter, long distance riding/touring
has featured in club activities. The End to End is an example, as are Etape du Tour, Pacific Coast and the Three Raids, Pyrenees, Alps
and Dolomites. Among club members there is a wealth of experience
in similar riding. This,
and the variety of competitions, is the appeal of the club,
catering as it does for all age groups. We should not forget the social side, too. A chapter could be written on pints consumed per mile! By others, of course.
Q So what
made you take to the track again?
I
started at 16 in 1950, on the track at Preston Park, Brighton
in the days of Reg Harris and Van Vliet, both of whom visited our clubroom and showed us how
it is done. I must
be a slow learner, though, because I did not get further than
the Club and Army Championships. I had to do the normal National Service (three years
in my case), but I did take the bike with me to Singapore
and Hong Kong. Riding
through the jungle at night, the path lit by a dynamo, humming
just above the noise of the insects, or riding fixed wheel
over Tai Mo Shan mountain in Hong
Kong are memories that are still vivid today. I
digress.
To
answer the question, I went back on the track after 50 years
just to see if I still could. I found that I could and was persuaded by members of
Halesowen CC that I should ride the Masters.
Q How did
you prepare and train?
Another
club for the purpose of competing on the track was necessary
because access to one for training is vital, particularly
to a sprinter. Halesowen
has its own outdoor track and I compete in their colours.
Surprisingly,
the World Masters was on the plan from the beginning and I
started serious training in October 2007, one year ahead of
the Worlds in October 2008. My fitness level, generally, was good in the light
of the clubriding in previous years,
but the accent had to alter in favour of strength and speed. The first came from weights and circuit training in
the winter and spring months. The second was improved from
road riding, shorter distance, trying a bit harder, then the
indoor track at Newport, the outdoor in the better months
and turbo variable resistance.
My
principal coach was Courtney Rowe at Newport. He gave me the programme, not an easy one to
devise in view of my age and absence of racing history. There is a certain poignancy about that lack of racing. A prominent older rider said to me when sussing out
the competition in advance, "You haven't done much racing, don't bother to come back!" Perhaps more by luck than anything,
that rider finished behind me in a competition. It is a fine line, though, between right and
wrong in older riders.
Q What comes next?
I
campaigned for an additional age group, 75+, for the World
Masters because I did not want to be beaten by 69 year-olds. I have got it, so I go there again in October. It is more of the same (punishment) for me in a quest
for another title in a new category. As luck would have it, the World Masters Games
is in Sydney the week before the Championship. There is a 75+ category in that one as well! And track is listed, too. |