The Colombian Nairo Quintana’s victory in the Girod’Italia, and his
compatriot Rigoberto Uráns second-placed finish, has prompted their countrymen
to embrace the race’s colour in celebration..
El Espectador, a national newspaper, printed its
Sunday cover on pink-tinged newsprint, while fans in Quintana’s home province
of Boyacá dyed their traditional long wool ponchos, known as ruanas,
to match the maglia rosa of his victory.
Quintana is the second Colombian to win
a grand tour and the first to win the Giro.
“Today is a historic day for Colombia,”
said the president, Juan Manuel Santos, wearing a pink button-down shirt, after
joining throngs of fans to watch the last stage of the Giro on a giant television
screen set up outside Quintana’s family home in the small mountain-top town of
Cómbita. “We are very proud,” he said.
Quintana’s win in the Giro, the first ever for a Latin
American, served as a reminder of Colombian cyclists’ glory days in international
competitions during the 1980s, when the country’s extraordinary climbers were
known as the escarabajos, or beetles.
That generation of cyclists spurred a nationwide
passion for the sport, especially at weekends and during holidays, when
thousands of Colombians took to the country’s steep and winding Andean mountain
roads.
That passion was seen again in Bogotá on Sunday when
cyclists stopped pedalling so they could crowd around giant televisions set up
along the city’s cycle routes, known as ciclovías, to watch two of
their countrymen take the winners’ podium in Trieste. A third Colombian, Julián
Arredondo, took the blue jersey for the mountain classification.
“For Colombia this is just as great as
when Lucho Herrera was riding,” said recreational cyclist Carlos Alberto
Torres, waving a pink balloon. Herrera won the Vuelta a España in 1987,
becoming the first South American to win a Grand Tour race. “Things dropped off
since then but they’re taking off again.”
For many Colombians, the Giro offered welcome
respite from a tense presidential election campaign tainted by scandal and
mud-slinging. “With election burnout, the country received with joy the feats
of Nairo Quintana and other Colombian cyclists,” Semana, a news magazine, wrote
on its cover, alongside a picture of Quintana decked out in pink from helmet to
boots.
News presenters, dressed in pink, gushed
about the new “glory” of Colombia, calling Sunday the “most important day in
Colombian cycling”. One newscast dedicated 40 minutes of its one-hour programme
to the results of the Giro, profiling the Colombian riders and interviewing
fans and family members.
Many fans hope that alongside Colombian
cycling’s resurgence there may also be success for the country’s footballers at
this summer’s World Cup, the first time they will have taken part in the
tournament since 1998.
“This [the Giro] is the best preamble
that we could have wished for the World Cup,” said Carlos Camacho, a cyclist on
the ciclovía, wearing the yellow jersey of the Colombian national team.
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