Harm Ottenbros

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Medal record
Competitor for the Flag of the Netherlands Netherlands
Road bicycle racing
World Championships
Gold 1969 Zolder Elite Men's Road Race

Harm Ottenbros (Alkmaar, 27 June 1943) is a former Dutch road bicycle racer who raced as a professional from 1967 to 1976. Ottenbros is best remembered for capturing the gold medal and rainbow jersey at the 1969 world cycling championship road race in Zolder, Belgium. The relatively unknown Ottenbros edged Julien Stevens of Belgium by a few centimetres to take the victory. What was supposed to be the happiest moment of his life ended up ruining it and he regrets he'd ever been a racing cyclist at all (interview: L'Équipe, 2002).

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[edit] World champion

Harmin Ottenbros, known as Harm, was a late selection for Holland's team for the world cycling championship after its leader, Jan Janssen fell ill. The Dutch federation, the KNWU, needed a replacement and Ottenbros made up the numbers. World cycling was dominated at the time by the Belgian champion Eddy Merckx, whose repeated victories had won him many enemies. "When you know how much Merckx is earning in this race," the French champion Raymond Delisle said during that year's Midi Libre, "you lose the will to compete for just the leftovers." In the world championship, reporters assessed, many riders were keener on stopping Merckx from winning than on winning themselves.

L'Équipe reported: "This world championship, just as we'd forecast, was held to ransom right from the start by the formula of national teams, by disagreements among the Belgians, and by the order of battle, which was to stop Eddy Merckx winning. For him, the best of all in terms of absolute talent, the problem looked insoluble. And it was. So the winner of the Tour de France, crushed by numbers, paralysed by the hunting-wolves of the peloton, Marino Basso among them, left the race on the last lap so that his name never even figured in the results. Many of the 150,000 fans in the Zolder motor-racing circuit jeered and whistled as they saw him step off.

The race then fell into a lull of uncertainty. The two biggest riders, Roger De Vlaeminck of Belgium and the Dutch sprinter Gerben Karstens, held each other in checkmate. The Belgian couldn't attack without taking Karstens with him and being outsprinted but Karstens couldn't risk a break and the ignominy of having De Vlaeminck power past him. Neither would give the other a centimetre.

Profiting from the problem, Ottenbros broke clear with Julien Stevens, champion of Belgium the previous year and a stage winner in the 1969 Tour de France but little else. They stayed away until the line, went to a straight sprint and Ottenbros won on the inside by centimetres, throwing his head down like a track rider and not lifting it again for a couple of seconds.

"It was an odd feeling," he said years later. "The nearer the finish line came, the more I had to tell myself I was just in a kermesse, although with a few more spectators than usual. I had to forget that I was riding for a world title because if I'd realised that, I'd never have won."

"The race needed a winner," wrote the French journalist Pierre Chany with a barely hidden sneer, "and it was Ottenbros: Ottenbros, who finished the Tour de France in 78th place, three hours behind the yellow jersey… He was escorted to the podium by just his team manager and two policemen."

The tone of Chany's reporting was just the start.

[edit] The revenge of the stars

The world of cycling turned on Ottenbros. Some say they felt that an unknown had no right to the biggest prize, others that they were imposing the guilt they felt for denying the championship to Merckx. The only rider to congratulate him was Franco Bitossi, who rode up alongside him in the Ronde van Vlaanderen and said he admired what he'd done. The gesture so moved Ottenbros that he gave him one of his rainbow jerseys. Such was the contempt in which cycling outside held him that he earned no more as world champion - €2,500 - than he had as a criterium rider.

Often he was lucky to get even start money. Riders jeered at his weakness on hills and called him The Eagle of Hogerheide, an ironic reference to the climber Federico Bahamontes, the Eagle of Toledo, and to the unrelenting flatness of south-west Holland where Ottenbros lived.

"That nickname made me more famous than my world championship ever did," Ottenbros told L'Équipe. "And yet I was the strongest rider on the day. Or do you reckon that I bribed all the other 190 riders? Don't forget that they all wanted to be world champion as well. I raced and they didn't. I can't be held to blame if the stars of the day didn't take their chance."

In Holland, fans deserted him, disappointed by the lack of further results. He broke his wrist in the Ronde van Vlaanderen at the start of the following season and could neither ride in his rainbow jersey nor defend his title. Then his team, Willem II, folded, victim of a ban on cigarette advertising. "Believe me," he says, "I wasn't in the slightest bit sorry when my year was as world champion over and I didn't have to wear that jersey any more. I could just go back to being the unknown rider in village criteriums. But the old feeling never came back. I was never happy again."

[edit] Despair

Ottenbros considered suicide. In 1976 he rode to the Zeeland bridge across the Oosterschelde. And there, with Gerrie Knetemann, he lifted his bike over the bridge and threw it down into the North Sea. The pair watched it swirl down through the murky water, shrugged, and Ottenbros finished his journey on the top tube of Knetemann's bike.

Ottenbros then found his marriage breaking up and he lost touch with his three children. He moved into a squat in a condemned building in Sliedrecht and slept on the floor for two years. "I had money in the bank," he said, "but I never touched it. I wanted nothing to do with cycling and the self-centred life that had led to my divorce."

He took up sculpture, then abandoned it when people began buying his work and there was a risk that it would make him well known again. He did voluntary work but tried never to mention his name for fear someone would recognise it. Much of it, in fact, he professes to have forgotten. "I'd need to read the newspapers again to answer that question," he tells journalists who ask about his past. "I'm scared of being interviewed, scared that the questions will revive memories and make me ill again." He says he was delighted when Mario Cipollini won the next world championship at Zolder; it pushed him further out of public memory.

[edit] The present

Ottenbros lives now in Dordrecht, south of Rotterdam. He works with mentally handicapped children. He has taken up sculpting again, creating images of female nudes. He still has his rainbow jersey and medal in a cupboard. But it's been years since he looked at them. He makes appearances with other bygone stars like Jan Janssen - whose absence from the world championship led to his downfall - and Jo De Roo. He is a member of his original club, the Alcmaria Victrix, at Alkmaar

"If I could live my life all over again, I'd miss out the cycling bit," he told L'Équipe.

[edit] Major achievements

1967
1st, Stage 5, Tour de Suisse
1968
1st, Stage 3b, Tour de Suisse
1969
1st (Gold Medal), World Cycling Championships Road Race
1st, Stage 2, Tour de Belgium
1st, Points classification
1970
1st, Stage 2, Tour de Luxembourg

1972

1st, GP Stad Vilvoorde
Sporting positions
Preceded by
Vittorio Adorni
World Road Racing Champion
1969
Succeeded by
Jean-Pierre Monseré