The Eagle of Toledo: The Life and Times of Federico Bahamontes

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Aurum Press, 2014 M08 1 - 304 pages

Federico Martín Bahamontes, the Eagle of Toledo, is rated by many as the greatest climber in cycling history. The first Spaniard to win the Tour de France and a six-time champion of the race's grueling King of the Mountains classification, he became a national hero in a Spain that was struggling to rebuild after the devastation and atrocities of the Spanish Civil War. Indeed, the Eagle of Toledo's success owed much to the conflict. When the Nationalist rebellion of General Franco finally overran the democratically elected Republic in 1939, vast swathes of the country were left impoverished and desperate. On the verge of starvation, the young Bahamontes took to cycling as a means of running black market goods, before realizing that the sport offered a more lucrative future. An impressive amateur career followed, leading to his Tour debut in 1954, when he won the mountains competition on his first attempt. Success and a charismatic, but temperamental, racing style brought him fame at home and abroad - as well as controversy. Today, despite his appropriation by the Franco regime, he remains the godfather of Spanish cycling and a sporting eccentric of phenomenal will power. He is also one of the few living witnesses to cycling's golden age and - as Alasdair Fotheringham discovered when interviewing him for this compelling biography - he's more than ready to tell the tale.

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About the author (2014)

ALASDAIR FOTHERINGHAM is a freelance journalist based in Spain. He has covered twenty Tours de France and eighteen Tours of Spain, as well as numerous other major races. He first interviewed Federico Bahamontes in 1993. The Independent and the Independent on Sunday's correspondent on Spain and cycling, he is also a contributor to a number of leading cycling magazines and websites.

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