
When
Scotland had a National Stage Race: Part 2 - The Pro-Am Years
Sunday 17th December, 2007
by Alastair Hamilton
In Part
1 we saw the domination of the East Europeans that ended with
the introduction of Professionals in to the Scottish Milk Race. The
first year it was the British based pro's, then the big boys in the
shape of the Belgian Isjberk-Gios team arrived in 1978 and set fire
to the race, so instead of an East European domination we now had
a Continental Pro domination, but they had something the Czechoslovakians,
Poles, East Germans or Russians didn’t have: style; class; and
that "Pro-appeal".
1977
The year was 1977 and the Scottish Milk Race had
gone Pro-Am for the first time. Co-organizer; the late Arthur Campbell,
said before the start “perhaps the shape of things to come”.
How right he was, as now we have open racing all around the world.
Many people thought it would be a Polish and Czech
whitewash, but they didn’t know the hardman character of Sid
Barras. Barras had some trouble from the Pole Stanislav Szozda and
the strong Czech team, but “Super Sid” never lost control
at any point in the five stage race.

2nd overall Szozda with teammate Synowiecki.
The field consisted of teams representing the nations
of Scotland, Great Britain, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Holland and Ireland,
they were joined by three British professional teams; Bantel, Holdsworth/Campagnolo
and Carlton-Weinmann, and the Swiss team of ADS-Colnago.
The Bantel team leader, Sid Barras took the first
yellow jersey by winning the first stage in Rouken Glen Park by out
sprinting Szozda, Matousek (Czech), Graham Jones (GB) and Kostadinov
(Czech), his time bonus gave him the lead, but 10 seconds are not
much in hand and by the end of stage two Barras and Szozda were on
the same time overall.
Stage 2 was from East Kilbride to Leven, unluckiest
rider has to Irishman, Mick Nulty who punctured but was unable to
get back to the bunch and due to a circuit around East Kilbribe he
was lone leader of the race on the road (one lap down) and so he had
to be disqualified, the luck of the Irish!
Klasa won the stage bunch gallop into Leven, with
Szozda second in front of Barras in third and this put them on the
same time and it looked like the gauntlet had been thrown down by
the Pole and battle would be fought over the coming days.

Ed's hero - Hugh Porter.
Stage 3, Arbroath to Aberdeen and stage four from
Stonehaven to Dunfermline, both ended in stale-mate with large group
sprints.

Paul Sherwen leading an escape group to Dunfermline.
The stages had many attacks and groups trying to
split things up, but any dangerous break to Barras was brought back
by ex-pursuit World Champion and Ed Hood’s hero, Hugh Porter,
who kept thing together so well that Barras was always finishing one
place in front of his rival, Szozda.

Sid wins into Aberdeen.
Two
very active protagonists
who went on to ride and finish the Tour de France were Paul Sherwen
and Graham Jones, and it was Jones who nearly stole the race on stage
four, but was reeled in (it was suggested at the time) by a combine
of the British Pro teams.
Going into the last stage from Dunfermline to Ayr.
Barras had a 40 second advantage on Szozda and had him watched through
out the stage.
At the finish Barras could allow a few unimportant
riders slip away, Scheuneman from Holland took the stage from a young
man named Robert Millar in a Scotland jersey and Barras finished in
1w0th position and held his winning margin over Szozda and the first
Pro-Am Scottish Milk Race was a success.
Graham Jones forces the pace on Cairn O' Mount
What about the home riders? It was not a great
race for the Scottish riders, apart from Robert Millar’s second
spot on stage five, the only other rider of merit was the evergreen
Sandy Gilchrist who was ninth overall and got in the top on another
occasion, the Scotland team were sixth.

Sid outsprints Szozda in Rouken Glen Park.
An Irish rider by the name of Pat McQuaid was seventh
overall, what ever happened to him?

Bantel pro Sid Barras and Arthur Campbell.
1978
1978 looked like it could be a repeat of the previous
year as Sid Barras was back with the strong new Viking-Campagnolo
team, there was going to be one big problem, the powerful Ijsboerke-Gios
squad from Belgium with riders like Gerry Verlinden, Rudy Pevenage,
Frank Hoste and Adri Van De Poel, probably the best riders to line
up in a race on Scottish soil.

1st puncture of the race goes to Keith Lambert
The first yellow jersey was worn by Dutchman, Bert
Oosterbosch after winning the prologue time trial and stage one was
going to be a real tussle to set the scene for the rest of the race.

Sid Barras follows Verlinden, Ailsa Craig
in the background.
Previous year’s winner, Sid Barras got away
with Gerry Verlinden and in his own words “it was like being
behind a Derny”. He still managed to take the stage win
by out smarting Verlinden in the two-up sprint.

Sid wins 1st stage.

The first yellow jersey was worn by Dutchman,
Bert Oosterbosch.

The bunch on the Isle of Arran.
The second stage was around the Isle of Arran,
this stage was crucial for the hopes of the Viking team and those
hopes were dashed by a plague of punctures. The Ijsboerke team piled
on the pressure at the front and decimated the peloton, with the exception
of the Czech and Dutch teams that were strong enough to stay with
the blistering pace.
%20wins%202nd%20stage%20round%20Arran-smilk78i.jpg)
Bartolsic (Czech) wins 2nd stage round Arran.
Stage three to Dunbar saw Van De Poel of Ijsboerke
got away and was chased down by Ian Banbury of Holdsworth-Campagnolo;
it was so close for the Englishman that he crossed a gap of 100 meters
in 500 meters, but lost out by a bike length at the finish.

Van De Poel wins into Dunbar from Ian Banbury.

Paul Carbutt on his lone stage to Perth.
The Ijsboerke team were dominating every stage
and it took former 100 mile time trial champion, Paul Carbutt of Viking
to shake things up on the stage from Edinburgh to Perth and make a
long, long lone break, 70 miles on his own to be exact.

Paul Carbutt's long solo victory into Perth.
He was chased by Canadian Robert Pelletier but
was never caught by him or the bunch for a great solo win, but it
made no difference to the final outcome.

last stage into Leven, Ijsboerke take first
4 places with Pevenage 1st.
By the last stage Verlinden was leading his team
mate Pevenage by 8 seconds, the next rider was the Czech Bartolsic
and Scotland’s Robert Millar was 10th equal with Phil Bayton
of Holdsworth, Millar was also 3rd in the mountains competition behind
final stage winner, Pevenage and Reg Smith, these two had been battling
it out until the last climb of the day before Leven, Smith took the
jersey by one point in the end.

Last stage winner Pevenage, he lost the mountains
jersey, but is still wearing it.
If you want to see more photographs and read about
1978, then have a look at our previous story “The
Trossachs: 1978 remembered”.

Reg Smith with Billy Bilsland.

Verlinden, the winner with miss Leven.
So the Scottish Milk Race had come full circle
form being dominated by the Eastern Europeans to being dominated by
Western European professionals. Scotland had to wait till the Health
Race in 1983 to see a home win by Jamie McGahan - in part three we
will look at that Health race of ’83 and the race of ‘81.