Top Banana: Tour de France stage 4 – Max Richeze

Top Banana: Tour de France stage 4 – Max Richeze

The things riders are forced to do for their teams, eh? For the lead-out and the Lidl, Deceuninck Quick Step’s Max Richeze is today’s Top Banana 

Racing Top Banana Top Banana 2019 Tour de France Tour de France 2019

As clinically as they closed out today’s stage in Nancy, nothing at this year’s Tour de France has demonstrated quite how deep Deceuninck Quick Step’s riders are prepared to dig for each other than the team’s pre-Tour press conference. Most teams held them at either the Brussels Expos or their Grand Départ hotel. The Belgian outfit, however, got creative, inviting the world’s cycling media to a suburban branch of the supermarket chain, Lidl.


There we were witness to the team’s top dogs (wolves?), Julian Alaphilippe and Elia Viviani, quite literally squeezing oranges while a Lidl executive interviewed them about their previous juicing experience.


For the visual metaphor potential alone, it didn’t seem the smartest PR decision. More than one person predictably responded to Rouleur’s Tweet of the event with a variant of “Quick Step on the juice”.


The other six simply seemed relieved it wasn’t them having to do it. Kasper Asgreen smirked while Max Richeze looked bemused by the whole thing. He wasn’t the only one.


The Argentine champion’s expression in the closing metres of Tuesday’s Stage 4 was quite different. Richeze was Viviani’s last lead-out lieutenant and once Michael Mørkøv swung off he wasn’t on the front for long. Still, it must have seemed like an age and his responsibilities for those final few seconds were enormous. Those were some of the most important metres of Elia Viviani’s career and each one had to go perfectly. The unassuming Richeze didn’t let him down, drilling into his reserves and taking his captain closer to the line than he could have thought possible.


The second he could sustain the speed no longer, he ensured his captain had room to manoeuvre round him but that no-one else could. With all eyes on Viviani we didn’t catch sight of Richeze’s face as the Italian crossed the line. It ought to have worn one of immense satisfaction. Job – impeccably – done.


There aren’t many at Quick Step who still qualify for “unsung” status, but Richeze might be one of them. Lesser sung, at least. Moreover, as one of the best lead-out locomotives in the game he’s proving that, as long as he’s on the tracks, the game ain’t gone. Maybe steer clear of supermarket-based public appearances, though.

 


The Rouleur Top Banana goes to an unsung hero of each stage of the Tour de France – not the winner, not the yellow jersey – but a rider whose efforts deserve recognition

 

 

The post Top Banana: Tour de France stage 4 – Max Richeze appeared first on The world's finest cycling magazine.

Racing Top Banana Top Banana 2019 Tour de France Tour de France 2019

READ MORE

Portrait of Lukas Nerurkar

‘An altitude camp at the age of seven’ – Lukas Nerurkar on the power of doing things differently

The British rider had a unique upbringing, spending his early childhood in Ethiopia and learning from his marathon runner father – he tells Rouleur about...

Leer más
Women's UAE Tour

Women’s UAE Tour 2025: Who will win the four-stage race in the Middle East?

The third edition of the Women's WorldTour race will begin on Thursday, February, 6 2025 

Leer más
Rob Stannard

Robert Stannard: Lost, fined, and fighting for redemption

The Australian rider speaks to Rouleur about his turbulent past 18 months 

Leer más
Wout van Aert says winning Flanders and Roubaix isn’t an obsession – but it is

Wout van Aert says winning Flanders and Roubaix isn’t an obsession – but it is

All eyes will be on the Belgian rider as he tries to finally win two of the biggest one-day races in the sport

Leer más
Frank van den Broek: hobby DJ, part-time florist, and Tour de France star

Frank van den Broek: hobby DJ, part-time florist, and Tour de France star

Frank van den Broek hasn't had the most conventional rise to the top

Leer más

READ RIDE REPEAT

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Get closer to the sport than ever before.

Enjoy a digital subscription to Rouleur for just £4 per month and get access to our award-winning magazines.

SUBSCRIBE