Eritrean Cycling: Good Times Never Been So Good.
Eritrean Cycling: Good Times Never Been So Good.
By Bereket Kidane
What a summer it is turning out to be for Eritrean cycling. It all started when Daniel Teklehaimanot won the King of the Mountains jersey in June at the Criterium Du Dauphine, an important race in the lead-up to the Tour de France, and continued his prowess at the Tour de France in July holding the polka dot leader’s jersey in the mountains classification from stages 6 to 10.
Before the Criterium Du Dauphine in June, Team Eritrea had scored major victories this past spring. It had won the African Continental Cycling Championship Team Time Trial for the fifth year in a row beating the South Africans in their own turf. Five straight championships should qualify any team as a dynasty.
These days, Eritrean cycling fans may feel like singing along to Neil Diamond’s Sweet Caroline. “Good times never seemed so good…Where it began, I can’t begin to know, but then I know it’s growing strong. Was in the spring, spring became the summer, who’d believed you’d come along…Sweet Caroline, Good times never seemed so good…so good.”
Daniel Teklehaimanot subsequently surrendered the leader’s jersey in stage 10 to Chris Froome of Britain, but Team MTN and its Eritrean riders are still riding high and can be proud of what they have achieved on the Grand Tour this year and how many Eritrean and African fans they brought along with them.
Suffice it to say, Eritrean cycling will never be the same again. Nor will the Tour de France. Terms like “polka dot jersey” and “peloton” entered into our lexicon for the first time. We learned what the different leader’s jersey stood for: yellow, green, polka dot, and white. The white jersey is given to the best young rider at the Tour de France. The principals and trainers at MTN believe that Merhawi Kudus will wear that jersey in the not too distant future. As for Le Tour itself, it had never seen that kind of boisterous, unabashed flag waving and patriotism before.
Daniel Teklehaimanot, Merhawi Kudus and Natnael Berhane have shown Eritrean kids what’s possible on the world stage. School boys in Eritrea now know that if given a little more training and worked a little harder, they can not only compete but dominate at the highest levels of cycling’s pinnacle. Eritrean cycling will take a quantum leap after this year. The Tour de France is one of the biggest advertising platforms in the world. Daniel Teklehaimanot’s stage 6,7,8, 9 victory and the subsequent coverage it received by the international media has brought Eritrea positive advertising worth in the tens of millions. One would expect the Government of Eritrea to make further investments in the cycling infrastructure after this.
The Tour de France is one of the most demanding endurance events in sports history. It goes through some of the most grueling mountain passes in Europe and is held over 23 days covering some 2,200 miles. Just completing the event itself is considered a huge accomplishment. Already there have been major crashes and serious injuries. Some 28 riders have had to withdraw since the event started earlier this month. As the tour goes into its final week, we are thankful that Eritrean riders and their MTN teammates are staying safe on the peloton as it winds down to its most challenging terrains before finishing up at the Champ-Elysees in Paris.
Team MTN has already achieved its goals for this tour and can be proud of what it has accomplished and how many new fans it brought along to the tour. Though it came in as a wild card this year, it is safe to say that it has earned a spot on the Grand Tour next year among the established elite teams.
As for Daniel, Merhawi and Natnael, no matter what they do from here on out, they will be talked about for a long time by Eritrean kids growing up today just as us adults still invoke the names of Salambini, Zeragabr, Tesfaldet and others. Daniel, Merhawi, and Natnael have earned a spot in the pantheon of Eritrea’s cycling heroes.

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