Supreme Banana: Tour de France 2019 – George Bennett

Supreme Banana: Tour de France 2019 – George Bennett

No other rider had more Tour ups and downs than the charismatic New Zealander, who worked his socks off for Kruijswijk after midrace misfortune

George Bennett Jumbo-Visma Racing Top Banana 2019 Tour de France 2019


The Rouleur Supreme Banana goes to our overall unsung hero of the Tour de France – not a stage winner nor the yellow jersey – but a rider whose efforts over the three weeks deserve recognition.


Val Thorens, the penultimate day of the 2019 Tour de France, 18 kilometres to go. After riding almost half the race’s final climb on the front for his Jumbo-Visma leader, George Bennett peeled off the front and ground to a near halt.

 

A penny for his thoughts. It was a mindboggling Tour for him – as a team, Jumbo-Visma have been outstanding, with four stage wins and third place for Steven Kruijswijk. But individually, Bennett’s race had more ups and downs than a jack-in-the-box on a malfunctioning cherry picker.

 

It was all going so well, with sprint victories for team-mates Teunissen and Groenewegen, sandwiched by a TTT where the New Zealand was a linchpin. Bennett was sat pretty before stage 10, fourth overall, best of the potential contenders aside from Alaphilippe and Pinot.

 

Forty kilometres from the finish in Albi, Jumbo-Visma erroneously sent Bennett – to reiterate, the bloke fourth on GC! – back for bottles and all hell broke loose in front. Amid crosswind splits, it was a “communication cock-up”: it transpired nobody even needed the extra sustenance.

 

His team-mate Wout van Aert won and they saved face, but Bennett lost nearly ten minutes and any hopes of being New Zealand’s first yellow jersey wearer or finishing in the top ten.

 

Instead of sulking and skulking around the back of the race till Paris after this cruel turn, he became a shining helper to Kruijswijk – his avowed goal for the race, after all. That was most prominent on the Tourmalet, taking the Dutchman to the last kilometre and outclimbing several contenders, despite still suffering with occasional side stitch problems when he goes at his maximum.

 

On stage 18, he crashed hard going down the Col de Vars, yet scraped himself off the tarmac and got back to help Kruijswijk. He fell again, hard, descending the Galibier that same day. Brave to the point of foolhardy.

 

 

The 29-year-old has taken his very eventful three weeks with humour and hardiness. “Looks like I’ve become a domestique. I can’t say I like it, but that’s racing,” he told the New York Times last week.

 

Not only that, but it doesn’t hurt he’s a nice fella who is always generous, open and eloquent in his dealings with the media, not least when we approached him with a bunch of bananas and a big smile on the Champs-Élysées.

 

Honorable mentions, and considerations, for this prize went to the likes of Thomas De Gendt, David Gaudu, Séb Reichenbach, Andrey Amador, Dylan Van Baarle, Yoann Offredo.

 

But Supreme Banana had to be Bennett. He experienced one of the broadest spectrums of experiences a modern Tour rider can reasonably expect – expectation, promise, victory, misfortune, pain, disappointment, perseverance, selflessness, a bit more pain and courage. Few would begrudge him a fine Vuelta next month.

 

Rouleur Top Bananas 2019:


Stage 1 – Greg Van Avermaet
Stage 2 – Tony Martin
Stage 3 – Michael Matthews
Stage 4 – Max Richeze
Stage 5 – Toms Skuiņš
Stage 6 – Geraint Thomas
Stage 7 – Wout van Aert
Stage 8 – Thomas de Gendt
Stage 9 – Jasper Stuyven
Stage 10 – Luke Rowe 
Stage 11 – Emanuel Buchmann
Stage 12 – Matteo Trentin
Stage 13 – Enric Mas
Stage 14 – David Gaudu
Stage 15 – Lennard Kämna
Stage 16 – Lotto-Soudal
Stage 17 – Kasper Asgreen
Stage 18 – Romain Bardet
Stage 19 – The snowplough driver
Stage 20 – Laurens De Plus

 

The post Supreme Banana: Tour de France 2019 – George Bennett appeared first on The world's finest cycling magazine.

George Bennett Jumbo-Visma Racing Top Banana 2019 Tour de France 2019

READ MORE

The poetic beauty of Siena: inside the city that hosts Strade Bianche

The poetic beauty of Siena: inside the city that hosts Strade Bianche

Rouleur's James Startt takes a photographic journey around one of Tuscany's most picturesque cities

Leggi di più
Katarzyna Niewiadoma and Demi Vollering at Strade Bianche Donne 2024

Strade Bianche 2025 women’s contenders: a showdown over the dirt roads of northern Italy

Rouleur looks at the contenders to take victory in Siena at the tenth anniversary of Strade Bianche Donne

Leggi di più
The peloton at Strade Bianche 2024

Strade Bianche 2025 men’s contenders: Who will conquer the white roads of Tuscany?

As the WorldTour takes on the dirt roads of northern Italy, Rouleur looks at who is in with a chance of winning in Siena

Leggi di più
Opinion: Unless other teams step up, Alpecin-Deceuninck are about to dominate this Classics season

Opinion: Unless other teams step up, Alpecin-Deceuninck are about to dominate this Classics season

Good luck to the rest of the peloton, because the Belgian team are on track to be stronger than ever in 2025

Leggi di più
Upset at Omloop: Is this going to be the most unpredictable Classics season ever?

Upset at Omloop: Is this going to be the most unpredictable Classics season ever?

Wærenskjold’s surprise victory in the men’s Omloop Nieuwsblad shows that with the peloton at its current level, winning is tougher than ever

Leggi di più
Lotte Claes wins Omloop Het Nieuwsblad

Stalemate: How the breakaway took advantage of an FDJ-Suez and SD Worx-Protime standoff at Omloop Het Nieuwsblad

Lotte Claes of Arkéa-B&B Hotels Women profited from politics in the peloton behind to take the biggest victory of her career

Leggi di più

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