
Domestique: The Real-life Ups and Downs of a Tour Pro
Charly Wegelius
**Winner - Sweetspot Cycling Book of the Year**
For 11 years I was a professional cyclist, competing in the hardest and greatest races on Earth. I was in demand from the world’s best teams, a well-paid elite athlete. But I never won a race. I was the hired help.
When my mum dropped me off in a small French town aged 17, I was full of determination to be a professional cyclist, but I was completely green. I went from mowing the team manager’s lawn to winning every amateur race I entered. Then I turned pro and realised I hated the responsibility and pressure of chasing victory. And that’s when I became a domestique.
I learned to take that hurt and give it everything I had to give, all for someone else’s win. When the order came in to ride I pushed out with the hardest rhythm I could, dragging the group faster and faster, until my whole body screamed with pain. There were times I rode myself to a standstill, clutching the barrier metres from the line, as the lead group shot past. But that’s what made me a so good at my job.
As my career took off, I started looking at the fans lining the route, cheering us like heroes. The passion for cycling oozed off them, but they couldn’t know what it was really like. They didn’t see the terrible hotels, the crazy egos or all the shit that goes with great expectations. Well, this is how it is…
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About Charly Wegelius
Reviews for Domestique: The Real-life Ups and Downs of a Tour Pro
The Washing Machine Post.net
Interesting and revealing... the most accurate description of what being a highly-regarded domestique in the modern peloton is really like'
Cycling Weekly
One of the hardest working domestiques in the sport
Cycling Weekly
Couldn't put it down…the best insight into the peloton since Paul Kimmage’s Rough Ride
William Fotheringham A must read. Absolutely outstanding
Paul Kimmage [Wegelius] tells it better than anyone before him
Independent
[Charly Wegelius] tell[s] it better than anyone else before him
Independent
Loved this book
David Millar Lays bare the true struggle of life on the circuit and demystifies much of cycling’s inner machinations
Cyclo