Saturday, April 20, 2024

Pete Smith

"A class act in every way."

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British cycling recently lost one of its unsung but great riders and personalities with the sad news that Pete Smith has died at the age of 76 after being in collision with a motor vehicle.

If you were around the cycling scene in the mid-60’s to mid-70’s it was hard not to be aware of the man. 

His list of achievements was long and varied and we touch here only on the career highlights of a man who could do it all; time trials over all distances and parcours, road racing at world championship level and arguably his strongest suite, team time trials, a discipline where he excelled and was the ‘strong man’ in the GB team which finished 11th in the 1968 Mexico Olympics.

Pete Smith
Pete Smith began his career with BBAR competitions.

Season 1966 saw him second in the National ‘50’ Championship and third in the Best British All Rounder competition.

The following season, 1967 saw him collect no less than four silver medals as runner-up in the 50 mile, 100 mile, 12 hour and BBAR championships.

But that season saw him twice break the 50 mile record, becoming the first man to dip sub 1:50 with 1:49:22 then lowering it further to 1:48:33.  

As a team player he led the Clifton CC to the team title in the British Best All-Rounder competition in 1965, 1966 and 1967, and was again part of the winning team in 1969. 

He led Tony Boswell and Alan Hargreaves to the national 100-mile team title in 1965 and 1967; in ’67 he teamed up with John Watson and Mike Potter to the national 50-mile team championship.

He was also a member of Clifton line ups which broke team competition records at 25, 50 and 100 miles and 12 hours.

Pete Smith
Pete Smith didn’t get to the 1968 Olympics due to non-sporting reasons.

Olympic year, 1968 saw him post a raft of top domestic time trial and road results, including the Cleveland Two Day and John Peel Grand Prix in Cumbria, beating quality riders like Geoff Wiles and Brian Jolly in the process. 

He also won a stage in the Tour of Morocco where he was crowned King of the Mountains.

Smith’s close friend and team mate in many road and time trial events, John Watson told VeloVeritas in an interview which will be featuring on the site that Smith should really also have been in the team which rode the Olympic Road Race in Mexico but ‘politics’ were in play.

It’s arguable that Season 1969 was Smith’s finest.

He beat men like the late Grant Thomas, Doug Dailey and Dave Rollinson to win the classic, early season but now late lamented GP of Essex.

He won the time trial classic, The Circuit of the Dales and set a new 100 mile record with a 3:50:20 ride.

Pete Smith
1969 was arguably the best season for Pete Smith.

In the World Amateur Road Race Championship in Brno he finished an excellent eighth against the very best in the world, Denmark’s Leif Mortensen won from the late, great Jempi Monsere with Smith the principle animator in the race.

Moretensen’s winning attack came just as Smith swung off after his spell; the Briton reacted, taking Monsere’s Belgian team mate, Staf Van Roosbroeck with him.

Smith gestured for Van Roosbroeck to come through – but in true Belgian style there was no ‘spell’ forthcoming, rather than drag the Belgian clear, Smith sat up with Van Roosbroeck eventually taking the bronze medal in the group sprint.  

With little left for him to achieve in the amateur world, he turned pro for 1970 with the controversial Clive Stuart team.

He announced his arrival by breaking the Road Records association straight-out 50 mile record.

Pete Smith
Pete Smith rode professionally for four seasons with Clive Stuart and TI Carlton/Raleigh.

There were wins as a pro, like in the Wolverhampton-Aberystwyth-Wolverhampton stage race but the wily UK pros were only too happy to have a rider among them who would work tirelessly, while they thought about the sprint finish.

Pete Smith
Pete Smith wasn’t fussed about saving his considerable strength in races.

We close our obituary with the words of his friend, Clifton CC, Worlds and Olympic team mate and former time trial champion, John Watson:

“It’s with immense sadness that I have to inform you all that Pete Smith passed away yesterday following a tragic road accident.

“Pete was out on his bike, on his own, on Monday, when he collided with a vehicle. He suffered catastrophic injuries – a cardiac arrest and extensive damage to his neck and spinal cord. He was air-lifted to Leeds Hospital, where he was placed on a life-support machine but he never came out of the coma, and yesterday the support was withdrawn. 

“I’m utterly devastated. I was only talking to Pete a week ago. He told me that he and Margaret were going to Lanzarote for a month in November, and that he was still riding his bike three times each week.

“Pete was my best friend, best mate, someone I always looked up to, and wanted to emulate. 

“I owe him so much. 

“How lucky was I to have Pete and the late Roy Cromack as friends and Clifton CC team mates at the same time. Pete was three years older than me, and when I started cycling at 18, he immediately took me under his wing and we became inseparable.

“Although we would train in a group, if the weather was inclement there would just be the two of us; we never missed the ride, side by side, in all weathers.

“We would ride the early season two-up time trials, which escalated to the four man 100 Km Team Time Trial selection events for the GB team in the Mexico Olympics in ’68, and the Worlds in ’69.

“I’ve said this so many times before that Pete was always the strongest rider in the many events we rode, irrespective of all the different riders who tried out for the various teams. 

“He was never a “Show Boater”, he’d just do longer turns on the front – no problem, and he would never take credit from Cycling Reporters or the Media at the finish. 

“Pete was a class act in every way.

“Roy Cromack always said that Pete would have slotted easily into the Dutch team which won gold in the 100 kilometre TTT in Mexico.

“Pete was Old School Cycling, starting with the Clarion and the CTC, before joining the Clifton CC. Apart from when he was a professional at Clive Stuart and then Raleigh, he always worked full-time, as a joiner. He worked for a company based 14 miles from his home in York; of course, he rode there and back every day, before coming out training.

“I could write so much about Pete’s career but will single out one week-end in the early season of ’69 which epitomises his legendary status.

“We travelled to Lancashire on Saturday, and in the afternoon rode a 60 mile Road Race in which we finished first and second. We then drove down to Essex, and on the Sunday he won the Essex Grand Prix; I was second. After the race we made the five hour journey back to York, arriving home after 11pm. Next morning he was back at work at 8:00 am, having ridden there in pouring rain. 

“This was the legend that was Pete Smith.

“I have so many more memories, that I can recall later, but for now l feel utterly shocked, devastated, and so sad,

“My thoughts are with Margaret and all the family.

“RIP mate.”  

Pete Smith
Pete Smith, R.I.P.
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.

Hugh McGuire

Hugh McGuire, who has died suddenly of a heart attack aged 71, was the Glasgow-born Scot who became one of the top UK cyclists in the 1960s, representing both Scotland and the British Army. He took part with the best of GB riders in the Tour of Britain / Milk Race era, winning stages - and in so doing following the wheels of a slightly older top gun, Jimmy Savile. McGuire became noticed, and in 1962 and 1963, was selected to travel behind the Iron Curtain to participate in the annual Berlin-Warsaw-Prague road race, the co-called Peace Race designed by the Soviets to bring together the world's top cyclists in reconciliation between Warsaw Pact countries and the West.

Vittorio Adorni

Vittorio Adorni was one of the classiest riders to sit on a bike, at a time when there were many top riders; Jacques Anquetil, Jan Janssen, Felice Gimondi and sometime teammate, Eddy Merckx. Vittorio Adorni died on 24th December at the age of 85.

Raymond Poulidor

Sadly, on 13th November at the age of 83 – he was born on April 15th 1936 – Raymond Poulidor, Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur left us. Rest in peace, Monsieur Raymond Poulidor – second in le Tour but winner in the hearts of the French public.

Lewis Oliphant

This is the least favourite part of having our own wee website; writing the obituaries of bright young men with most of their lives still ahead of them. This past week we lost Lewis Oliphant, perhaps best known for his exploits on the grass track. At VeloVeritas we knew Lewis but couldn't claim to know him well; what we've done then is to ask for people who were close to let us have their tributes.

Memories of Jason MacIntyre

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Raymond Delisle

Here at VeloVeritas we were saddened to hear of the recent loss of one of the names from our youth. Former French professional champion and Tour de France ace Raymond Delisle died recently at the age of 70. One of those super cool Peugeot riders from the late 60's and early 70's with names like Pingeon, Thevenet, Danguillaume, Ovion - and Delisle, they even sounded classy.

Wouter Weylandt R.I.P.

Wouter Weylandt tragically lost his life today, in a crash on the twisty, steep dangerous descent of the Passo del Bocco climb, about 12.4-miles from the finish of stage three of the Giro. The briefest of pictures of the scene were shown on live TV before the broadcasting director wisely stopped showing any more, but that was enough to be able to tell that the situation was grave.

Harry Hampson

Harry Hampson wasn’t a man that VeloVeritas knew personally but we knew of him from the many mentions of his name in the ‘Cycling Weekly’ in the days when the magazine was the main reporting organ for cycle sport in the UK. And when Mr. Hampson died recently we were struck by the outpouring of emotion from the men he mentored/coached, ‘back in the day.’