Thursday, April 25, 2024

Sandy Gordon – Part One: a fixture on the West of Scotland cycling scene in the 60’s and 70’s

-

HomeInterviewsSandy Gordon - Part One: a fixture on the West of Scotland...
Sandy Gordon
Sandy Gordon.

Late June 1972, Loch Lomond and history is made as Sandy’s Gilchrist and Gordon tie for the Scottish ‘50’ mile time trial title with 2:01:46 whilst Ron Gardner is third with 2:05:15. My part in this historic day on the old road which tracked every curve and bump of those bonnie, bonnie but tough banks? I was caught by both winners on my way to some ignominious time which I now no longer remember but which would have been closer to 20 mph than 25 mph…

VeloVeritas has already caught up with Mr. Gilchrist so high times we spoke to the ‘second Sandy,’ who won a record breaking seven Scottish titles that season.

Sandy Gordon was a fixture on the West cycling scene for a decade and more with the Glasgow Clarion, Glasgow Regent, Glasgow Wheelers and Scotia Sport clubs.

As well as his championship wins there are few winner’s trophies for major Scottish road races which don’t bear his name at least once; The Ayrshire Grand Prix, The Girvan Three Day, The Davie Bell Memorial, Glasgow-Dunoon, The Crianlarich Road Race, The David Campbell Memorial and The Glasgow-Dundee. Many of these events haven’t survived but in their day were all well supported, hard fought ‘Classics.’

And back to the subject of clubs; he might even have been a member of the famous VC Stella, the ‘hard core roadman’s’ club of the day – but was put off by the fact they didn’t stop for drum-ups on their Sunday runs…

We decided to start with the painful questions first for this former Rudi Altig and Jacques Anquetil fan:

Thank you for meeting with us, Sandy – let’s open with that horror crash in the Tour of Austria 1966.

“I was riding with the GB team along with the like of Colin Lewis [who would go on to ride the Tour de France and win the British Professional road Race Championship, ed.] with the famous Bill Bradley as our manager. [Bradley won the Milk Race, a stage in the Peace Race and National Road Race Championship during a long and highly successful career, ed.]

Bradley had been second overall in the Tour of Austria in his days as a rider and set the record for the famous Grossglockner climb – I was first over it but got a row from Bradley for riding it too hard!

“The accident happened on the second to last stage, the race was held in roasting conditions, I hadn’t worn an Oppy cap or sun cream, got horribly burned and couldn’t sleep because of the discomfort.

“I think what happened was that I was so exhausted that I fell asleep in the saddle and rode straight into the back of this Volkswagen Beetle which was parked half on the grass, half on the road.

“I was on a three week old Flying Scot frame which was written off.

“Along with other guys who I’d brought down they put me on the back of a pickup truck to take me to hospital, during the trip I stopped breathing, I’d swallowed my tongue but was lucky there was a doctor on hand.

“I was unconscious for eight days, they flew my mother out to be with me and gradually I recovered – the doctors said that the reason I recovered well from such a trauma was because I was so fit.

“When I came too I was still caked in blood and couldn’t use my hands because of the dressings; this lovely blonde Austrian nurse cleaned me up in a big bath of hot water – that was a nice experience…”

Sandy Gordon
Photo©supplied

Tell us a little about your early days in the sport.

“I was initially with the Glasgow Clarion and was winning pretty much from the start.

“They used to have two ‘Rothesay Weekends’ each year, spring and autumn and I remember winning the junior road race at both of them, twice on the trot – four consecutive wins.

“I met Ian Thomson one day and he suggested I join the VC Stella, which was the club all the best roadmen were in.

“But when I asked about ‘drum ups’ he said they didn’t have any, they stopped at cafés.

“I told him that ‘drum ups’ were one of the things I liked best about cycling and couldn’t join a club that didn’t have them; I liked the atmosphere and the craic too much!”

Albert McLellan told me that you were down to go to the Commonwealth Games in Jamaica that year, ‘66 but the Austria crash scuppered that?

“That’s right, it broke my heart not to go but I’d lost a stone in weight and was in no fit state.

“I did ride two more Games though; Edinburgh in 1970 and Christchurch in 1974.”

Brian Temple speaks very highly of the contribution you made to his taking the silver medal in the ten mile scratch in Edinburgh in ’70.

“Brian was away in the break with the eventual winner, the late Jocelyn Lovell of Canada and Vernon Stauble from Trinidad.

“But the English and Australian teams weren’t represented so were chasing and trying to get the trio back; I was jumping from one wheel to another on the front of the bunch, blocking for Brian and of course they managed to stay away.

“I remember the Scottish manager, Ian Thomson coming up to me rather than Brian after the race and saying; ‘that was some ride!

“I also rode the kilometre and 4,000 metre pursuit but would say that my ride in the 10 mile was perhaps the best I ever produced.

“Christchurch is another story, I got my place there by winning the 10 mile at the Meadowbank Grand Prix but a woman ran her big Holden car over my foot a week before the track races and whilst the rest were putting the finishing touches to their form, I was doing physio to try to sort my swollen foot out.

“I rode the kilometre and team pursuit but was obviously not at my best.”

Sandy Gordon
Photo©supplied

You rode the Scottish Milk Race several times?

“I finished it seven times and chucked it once, that was 1970 and my preparation had all been geared towards the track at the Edinburgh Commonwealth Games.

“It was a hard race and you were up against the best of the East Europeans.

“I remember we rode one stage from St. Andrews to Largs where we were in the saddle for six hours and 20 minutes.

“Another time I was in the break coming into the finish in Kirkcaldy, maybe 12 of us, I started edging up for the sprint then moved out to go for it – but nothing happened, I was just swamped, the East Europeans were at a different level.

“When I look back to racing in Austria and Czechoslovakia you remember the Italians with their beautiful wee wooden boxes which contained gleaming syringes – ‘vitamins,’ they said…

“On the subject of that kind of thing, I remember one race where Arthur Campbell ceremoniously placed little pills on our tongues before the start, in front of everyone – Smarties!”

What was the Tour of Czechoslovakia like?

“On the flat stages the echelons formed in the cross winds and if you weren’t strong enough then gradually you’d slip back from one to the next and eventually out of the back of the last one.

“There was one day I was dropped and was way off the back when this motorbike with a guy driving and a lass on the back appeared.

“The girl had on a big black leather coat and she took the belt off and passed the end of it to me; it didn’t need it explained to me, they towed me for miles and I got back on.

“Ian Thomson said; ‘how did you manage to get back?

“I replied; ‘it was a hell of a chase!’”

Sandy Gordon
Photo©supplied

And you were suspended for racing in South Africa?

“It was at the time when South Africa was ostracised by sporting bodies because of the apartheid regime – but ironically there were black African guys in the race as well as Portuguese, Rhodesian and Italian squads.

“We knew the score, we’d get a two month suspension when we got back and that would be over the winter; but Arthur Campbell, who was very influential in the UCI and SCU – pushed for us to get a nine month ban.

“I didn’t get back to racing until the end of June 1975 and left The Wheelers because of it [UCI man Campbell was one of the bedrocks of the Glasgow club, ed.]

“Arthur Metcalfe of England won the Rapport overall but the late John Curran from Ayr who was on our team won the last stage.

“The other riders were Sandy Gilchrist and Drew Robertson – we all got banned.

“Sean Kelly went out in 1975 and got himself banned from the Olympics because of it.”

Check out Part Two of our interview with Sandy.

Ed Hood
Ed Hood
Ed's been involved in cycling for over 50 years. In that time he's been a successful time triallist, a team manager and a sponsor of several teams and clubs. He's also a respected and successful coach and during the winter months was often working in the cabins at the Six Days for some of the world's top riders. Ed remains a massive fan of the sport and couples his extensive contacts with an inexhaustible enthusiasm for the minutiae and the history of our sport. In February 2023 however, our dear friend and beloved colleague Ed suffered a devastating stroke and faces an uncertain future; Ed has lost his ability to speak, to read, and has lost movement on the right side of his body. He's working with speech and physical therapists on rehabilitation, but all strokes are different and each patient responds differently, so unfortunately recovery is one day at a time. Ed ran his own business installing windows, and will probably not be able to work again. Please consider joining us to make a contribution to Ed's GoFundMe page to help stabilise and secure his future.

Related Articles

Mike Kluge – Three Times World Cyclocross Champion and the Man Behind Focus Bikes

All you’ll read about for the foreseeable future are Porte, Aru, Uran and Contador – plus others who the press will ‘big up’ to make it seem like someone other than those four can win. But of course, there isn’t. So if you’ll forgive us if we’re going back to a time when our champions didn’t Tweet but had much more worth talking about - Germany's Mike Kluge is our man; quality road rider, triple World Cyclo-Cross Champion, top mountain bike rider and equipment innovator – he’s the man who started Focus bikes in 1992.

Michael Mørkøv – Deceuninck’s Danish World Champion

Multiple Danish Champion on the track, European Champion and now three time World Champion; Michael Mørkøv has always been happy to give of his time to us and we had to catch up with him after his latest triumph in the Madison.

Dave Bonner – 70 Years Old and Still Going Strong

Dave Bonner's career was ending when I was just getting into cycling, but his name was one which kept cropping up in Cycling Weekly in the early 70's and in the chats where the 'young boys' learned from the older guys in the club about cycling's rich history. He was a star on the track, in time trials and on the road; and 40 years after he quit the pro scene he’s still riding his beloved Condor in the mountains of Southern Spain. Back in 2010 Cycling Weekly even ran a feature about his five hour runs through the mountains of Andalucía – good going for a 70 year-old.

Tom England – u16 French Champion in the Madison

For the first time in many a year VeloVeritas didn’t make it down to Grenoble for the Four Days on the battle scarred boards of the winter track where Post, Merckx, Sercu, Clark, Moser and Thevent have all lifted the laurels. How I miss Bar Clemenceau, Pizza Natalie and the wee bakers where the baker always give me extra croissants ‘for luck.’ ‘New Wave’ French strong men and World Madison Champions Morgan Kneisky and Vivien Brisse took the honours from tough Spaniards Muntaner & Torres with Iljo Keisse limbering up for Gent in third spot with countryman De Buyst.

At Random

Stokes Storms the Sandy Wallace Cycles 50 mile road race

Junior, Jordan Stokes of Pedal Power took an easy sprint win in Sunday's Sandy Wallace Cycles 50 mile road race around a bright but blowy Redcraigs Toll circuit. Second was 'oldie but goody' Callum Gough (Onimpex RT) with Lindsay Gordon (Musselburgh) rounding out the podium. The start village of Wellwood near Dunfermline gave us The Skids lead singer, Ricky Jobson and Barbara Dickson - and on Sunday it gave us sunshine for the fifth Super Six 'B' race of the season.

Luke Durbridge – Critérium du Dauphiné Prologue win

Despite having the advantage of starting as last man in the Dauphine’s 5.7 kilometre prologue time trial, Britain’s defending champion, Bradley Wiggins (Sky) couldn’t best the time set by 21 year-old world under 23 world time trial champion, Luke Durbridge (GreenEdge-Orica & Australia).

Borut Božič – Vacansoleil’s Sprinter

It's only metres from the finish in the final stage of the 2006 Vuelta a Cuba and US rider Joe Papp has it in the bag. His wife is in the cheering crowd as he begins to raise his arms in celebration - but an instant before he crosses the line there's a yellow and red haze to his right - Slovenian Borut Božič glides past the American to take his third stage win of the race.

Brian Temple – Scotland’s First Commonwealth Games Cycling Medallist

Brian is the man who won Scotland’s first cycling medal back in 1970 when the Commonwealth Games came to Edinburgh for the first time. Australia and England were the top cycling nations in the competition with riders like Englishman Ian Hallam (who won the pursuit) and Australian John Nicholson (who won the sprint) and were expected to dominate the 10 mile; but a break comprising Vernon Stauble (Trinidad), Jocelyn Lovell (Canada) and Temple sneaked away from the Big Guns and stayed away.