
The
Trossachs: 1978 Remembered
Monday 8th October, 2007
by Alastair Hamilton
When Ed Hood said he and VeloResults
editor Martin Williamson were going out to watch the Tour de Trossachs
it brought back my memories of watching the race for the first time
in 1978.
When I started my reminiscences it was going to
be all about the Trossachs, but one thing led to another and now we
are looking at the early career of Robert Millar and Scottish cycling
in 1978.
The year 1978 was important for Scottish cycling,
a certain Robert Millar, and me! I had been riding a racing bike for
a few years, mainly just to get about, go to work, see my then girlfriend
etc. I had started to wear strange clothing and shoes that you couldn’t
walk in and had been buying the cycling magazines for a while. Bike
rides at the weekend and the occasional mid-week ride were the norm,
but as a 16 and 17 year old lad I had other things on my mind, a different
kind of riding!
How Did It Start?
One day on my way to work on the bike I got talking to this cyclist
who turned out to be Andy Donaldson, he said you should come out with
us on a club run, the Glasgow United CC. seemed a good idea, that
first ride it rained, I had a little jacket and no mudguards, I was
wet and cold, but I loved it and that was me hooked.
The next thing was racing, it seemed to be the
natural progression, I rode a Mercian frame with mudguard eyes, Wienmann
brakes, wheels with Campagnolo large flange hubs and Wolber Junior
tubs, I was 18 when I rode my first time trial and road race and it
was great!
What About 1978?
I was 19 and was sort of racing and didn’t know my arse from
my elbow, but I had read about this guy Robert Millar, he was in the
Glasgow Wheelers and I had seen him at the joint clubs dinner and
dance at the Esquire at Annisland Cross in the West of Glasgow, he
didn’t say much and probably left early.

National Champs. Robert leads Steve Lawrence.
He was one month older than me, but he had ridden
the Sealink International earlier in the year and had then won the
British National Road Race Championships, I was struggling to get
anywhere near the hour for a 25 down the coast!

Robert in the break with Phil Griffiths, Steve
Jones, Bob Downs, Ken Platts, and Micky Morrison.
The National Champs that year was in Carster, Lincolnshire
over 117 miles split into 13 laps and it was a great day for the Scots,
Robert won, Sandy Gilchrist was fourth and Jamie McGahan was fifth.

Sandy Gilchrist, Des Fretwell and Jamie McGahan
on the last lap.
Millar rode away at the yellow flag from his old
adversery, Steve Lawrence, who had beaten him nine days previously
in the Manx International to take the Champs by 5 seconds; it was
the first time a Scotsman had won the National Championships.

National Champs Podium. Robert, with Lawrence
2nd, Des Fretwell 3rd.
Pro Riders in Scotland
Next on the calendar was the Scottish Milk Race, it was Pro-Am and
we had a Scottish team, unbelievable to think that these days we cant
field a Scottish team and even if we could we would be hard pushed
to fill one. That year we had an incredibly strong team and Robert
Millar finished tenth equal with British Pro Phil Bayton and equal
best placed British rider.

Millar attacks on the Forth Bridge with Bartolsic,
Scottish Milk Race.
The winner was Gerry Verlinden from the Belgian
Ijsboerke-Gios team, second was his team mate Rudy Pevenage, Mr. Ulrich’s
friend in the future, it was a class field of top amateurs and professionals
and it was the first time I had seen anything like it.
%20gets%20a%20little%20help%20from%20Ijsboerke%20manager%20Willie%20Jossart.jpg)
Ian Humphreys (Ziggy) gets a little help from
Ijsboerke manager Willie Jossart.
I got tangled up with the race going up the hill
into Strathaven, I felt like a star, as I rode up that hill with the
crowd either side of the road, they were there to watch the best riders
to have ridden on a Scottish road, until later that year when the
TI Raleigh Tour of Britain came to Greenock for the prologue and then
the first stage from Motherwell to Whitley Bay.
We didn’t see riders of those standards in
until the Kellogg’s Tour brought the worlds best to Scotland
in 1989 to Dundee and Glasgow, by that time I was team mechanic for
Raleigh-Banana, but that was in the future, then the Milk Race and
the TI Raleigh Professional Tour of Britain was the biggest bike races
I had ever seen.
What about Robert?
For the amateurs there was the season ending Tour of the Peaks in
Derbyshire, one of the hilliest races on the domestic scene, perfect
for the newly crowned National Champion, Robert Millar.

Tour of the Peaks, Millar, Fretwell and Neil
Martin.
There was an early break away with another fast
Scotsman, David Whitehall, he was small, fast and could climb, at
one time he was the fastest over 4,000 meters in Britain, but was
never given the accolade he deserved, this day he was off the front
for most of the day, until his group were caught and an on form national
champion flew over the last climbs to a three minute solo win. Whitehall
finished in 15th after being one of the strongmen of the day.

Tour of the Peaks podium. Dont fancy yours
much!
And the Trossachs?
This was our chance to see a National champion race on home turf,
I rode out with the others of the Glasgow United, Andy Donaldson’s
younger brother, Steven, was a junior and was racing today and we
wanted to see him do a good ride, but we also wanted to witness the
battle between Millar, Gilchrist, Hannah, Fairweather and Moncrieff,
who were the favourites for the day.
It was a warm October day, blue skies, and there
were lots of cyclists heading for Aberfoyle and the Dukes Pass; most
on bikes, but there were also spectators driving out to see the spectacle.
The bends of the Dukes were like L’Alpe d’Huez
in the Tour de France: the crowds were three deep, shouting either
encouragement or giving a “slagging” to a mate. This was
cycle sport like I thought it should be, and it was a brilliant day
out.
Robert Millar won by a minute from Sandy Gilchrist,
who in turn was five minutes faster than the rest. Steven was well
beaten by George Kermode for the junior prize - he was 12th fastest
up the hill, but was last overall with a time of over 2 hours, due
to snapping a bottom bracket using 52x13 going up through Brig O'turk,
although he did get a prize from Hugh Donald of 12 cans of dog food
and a lift home that night from Ann Horn! But that wasn’t important
- we all went to the Baillie Nicole Jarvie at the bottom of the Dukes
Pass for a few beers.
The “Baillie” is famous for the landlord
chasing Rob Roy McGregor out the door with a red hot poker, but the
more resent landlord became more famous with cyclist for throwing
someone’s overshoes in the fire thinking they were rubbish!
On the return ride back to Glasgow there was a
big bunch heading into the falling darkness and a few the worse for
wear with the drink. One character I remember was Jim in the United
who would do a running commentary on the riding style of everyone,
the attacks and chases, especially on the Devils Elbow before dropping
down to Mugdock and Milngavie for the sprint, you couldn’t ride
hard for laughing so hard, ah those were the days!
My racing never got much better, but I did come
in contact with Mr. Millar again at some races in France, the Kellogg’s
Tour, the Nissan, and when I was his mechanic at the World Road Race,
then later when he retired from the road and raced MTB with the Helly
Hansen/Giant team.
I’ll never forget that Sunday in October
1978, and that year of seeing Pro riders in Scotland, and a Scottish
Team that could hold its own in top class fields.
At the moment that just can't happen - are those
days gone for ever?