本頁面尚未被翻譯為您的指定語言
[ locale string ]
We are showing you the Taiwanese version of our site: would you prefer a different location?
Shay Elliott

The Shay Elliott Memorial Road Race is run every year in Ireland in honour of Shay Elliott, the first Irishman to wear the yellow jersey in the Tour de France. Rapha Condor Sharp took all three podium places at the 2010 edition of the prestigious race last Sunday. Dan Craven took top spot with Dean Windsor and Matt Cronshaw taking second and third respectively.
Seamus 'Shay' Elliott only learnt to ride a bike at the age of 14. Turning professional in 1957, he won his first race, outsprinting André Darrigade. At the Omloop Het Volk in Belgium in 1957 he made a race-long break with Englishman Brian Robinson.
Elliott soon became a team-mate of Jacques Anquetil and Jean Stablinski, and in 1959 won the Omloop Het Volk, the first non-Belgian to do so. The same season Elliott rode the Tour de France where, on one stage, his team-mate Brian Robinson, who was lying ninth, dropped way behind the field. Although Elliott did his very best to drag Robinson to the finish, both came outside the time limit. The rule that no rider in the top ten could be eliminated was argued and so Robinson stayed but Elliott was sent home. Team loyalty was a theme that ran throughout Elliott's career.
Elliott's best result was in the 1963 Tour de France. After a 150km breakaway, Elliott sprinted away with six kilometres to the finish in the velodrome in Roubaix. He won by 33 seconds, enough to give him the maillot jaune. It would be another 20 years before the next Irishman, Sean Kelly, led the Tour.
Like many domestiques of his generation, he made a career from appearance money, riding criteriums in Belgium and races in Britain, including a meeting at Herne Hill track in London where Fausto Coppi was the star attraction. Elliott returned to Dublin in 1967 and set up a metal-working business with his father. Two years later his wife left him. Despite problems, he continued to ride and coach in Ireland. Tragically, in 1971, two days after his father's funeral, Elliott was found dead from a self-inflicted shotgun wound. He was laid to rest alongside his father in Kilmacanogue near Enniskerry, Co. Wicklow.
A monument to Elliott stands at the top of the climb from Drumgoff Bridge in County Wicklow.
分享
BLOG分類
分享
- Will all these numbers be able to wear the coveted t-shirt in one weeks time? #menoftheras #ras2013 http://t.co/ai1oqnDIyh
- Team about to start the @anpostras probably the Worlds friendliest race.
- RT @nedboulting: Kristian House's Grandad was a fantastic man. He told me about him once. Then I read this: http://t.co/ZCeYbm4sFU
- @DeanHardman @nedboulting @j_t_locke such a shame...
- @TeamSkyGirl @nedboulting @j_t_locke we've asked JTL to change his name.
- RT @Ed_Clancy: Watch @raphacondor team mate Kristian House take another win (and lap me in the process) around his favourite circuit to…
- RT @TourSeries: Catch-up with all of the #Durham #tourseries action on ITV4 tonight http://t.co/YE9zgNaZem
- Some helpful #womens100 tips from Australian pro @tiffanycromwell that you might find useful over on @gcntweet → http://t.co/ZqgODQ6Tz3
- New Media, New Myths: @TrueBS writes for our blog about the building of legends at the @AmgenTourofCali → http://t.co/SEEBqxorZh #AToC
- Starting this Sunday, the Irish tour @anpostras is being raced by @raphacondor JLT and our very own Ultan Coyle. → http://t.co/gJmiGGr2zy







評論
William McCabe
15th May 2010 12:50am
Thank you for your nice piece on Shay Elliott. It's a great annual race hosted by Bray Wheelers in his honour and well done to the Rapha guys. Will