Rouleur - Issue # 25.
anniversary edition!
Very high-quality magazine in catalog format
21cm x 26cm
164 pages bound, full color
texts in English |
Rouleur celebrates its 25th edition with a suitably eclectic mix from the wonderful world of bike racing, starting with the Editor's visit to Trek in Wisconsin.
Guy contends with snowdrifts and ice fishing whilst having his preconceptions about the hugely successful Manufacturing giant shattered. Photographer Taz Darling thaws out inside the factory side of one of Waterloo's biggest employers.
Richard Moore's teenage tour watching perked up no end When images of 7-Eleven's soigneur Shelley verse flashed across the TV screen. The groundbreaking woman in a Previously men-only world recarecalls life on the road with 'her boys'.
Photographer Paolo Ciaberta witnesses a fellow Italian resurrect a classic Paris-Roubaix winning machine, ridden by a Belgian and Described by an Englishman Roger de Vlaeminck's Gios, with words from Rohan Duan Dubash
Staying in Italy, Herbie Sykes tracks down former professional turned egg farmer Giovanni Varini.. And his 58,000 chickens -. Herbie goes so deep into the bowels of the Velodromo Vigorelli in Milan search of another great Italian framebuimebuilder, Alberto Masi
Graeme Fife, meanwhile, seeks and finds him Chavanel on the massage table , The French National Champion and our you enjoy a heart-to-heart dressed in just a towel - Chavanel, That is, not ... Graeme
Mr Fife so conclconcludes his miniseries on Promising Youngsters with Jake Womersley's Progress on the British Cycling Talent Team
Wide Eyed and Legless has been hailed as one of the finest books ever written about the Tour de France, yet its subject -. The British Aish ANC Halfords squad - had a wretched race and disbanded shortly after. Ian Cleverly gathers the team together for dinner to discuss the 1987 Tour and Jeff Connor's book.
Photography by Ben Ingham, Dan Sharp, Geoff Waugh, Gerard Brown and Paul Sander Anders. Plus columns from regulars Matt Seaton, William Fotheringham, Johnny Green and Paul Fournel.