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The Allez - Tour de France Polo Shirt by La Machine Cycle Club is a light yellow unisex polo with short sleeves, a collar, three buttons, and an embroidered logo on the left chest, shown flat on a white background.The La Machine Cycle Club Allez - Tour de France Polo Shirt in light yellow features a yellow triangular patch with ALLEZ repeated three times, celebrating the spirit of the Tour de France.
Sale price€ 49,00 Regular price€ 79,00
A pair of Allez Allez - Cycling Socks by La Machine Cycle Club in all white, side by side, each with bold black ALIVE vertically on the front. Seamless toe, optimum elastic fit. Displayed on a plain light gray background.The Allez Allez Cycling Socks by La Machine Cycle Club feature an all-white textured fabric with a repeating black zigzag edge for optimal elastic fit.
Sale price€ 24,00
The Beyond the Bike Sweatshorts in Melange Grey by La Machine Cycle Club feature a relaxed fit, elastic waistband, white drawstrings with orange tips, side pockets, and a red patch with white text on the lower left leg.Close-up of Beyond the bike Sweatshorts by La Machine Cycle Club in Melange Grey, featuring a cotton waistband with white drawstring threaded through black metal eyelets and vibrant orange-tipped ends for a pop of color to this relaxed fit design.
The La Machine Cycle Club Bib Number 13 - Patch - Polo Shirt is a dark green premium stretch pique men’s polo with a three-button placket and an embroidered #13 patch on the left chest, shown laid flat on a white background.A red-haired, bearded man wears La Machine Cycle Club’s Bib Number 13 Patch Polo Shirt with an embroidered #13 on the left chest, paired with light gray jeans, standing against a plain white background.
Sale price€ 39,00 Regular price€ 79,00
La Machine Cycle Club’s Bib Number 13 - Cycling Socks in white feature bold black “1” and “3” on the front, a seamless toe, and are shown upright side by side against a plain background.Close-up of Bib Number 13 - Cycling Socks - White by La Machine Cycle Club, showing the white textured fabric with a bold black letter C on it, set against a light gray background.
The Bib Number 13 - T-shirt by La Machine Cycle Club is a light melange grey unisex tee with a black and white square graphic and an upside-down, distressed number 13 on the front, plus small text on the left sleeve.Bib Number 13 - T-shirt  - Melange Grey
Bib Number 13 - T-shirt  - Off WhiteBib Number 13 - T-shirt  - Off White

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Paris-Roubaix - La Machine Cycle Club
cobblestonesFeb 16, 20212 min read

Paris-Roubaix

The most iconic one day bike race in the world, period. Paris-Roubaix. Famous for it’s cobbles, unpredictability, dirt/dust and that velodrome.

The race usually leaves riders caked in mud and grit, from the cobbled roads and rutted tracks of northern France’s former coal-mining region. You’d be forgiven for thinking that the terrain places an unbelievable strain on the riders and bikes but this is not how this race earned the name ‘l’enfer du Nord’, or ‘Hell of the North’. The term was used to describe the route of the race after World War I. Organisers and journalists set off from Paris in 1919 to see how much of the route had survived four years of shelling and trench warfare. They knew little of the permanent effects of the war. Nine million had died and France lost more than any. But, as elsewhere, news was scant.

Who even knew if there was still a road to Roubaix? If Roubaix was still there? The car of organisers and journalists made its way along the route those first riders had gone. And at first all looked well. There was destruction and there was poverty and there was a strange shortage of men. But France had survived. But then, as they neared the north, the air began to reek of broken drains, raw sewage and the stench of rotting cattle. Trees which had begun to look forward to spring became instead blackened, ragged stumps, their twisted branches pushed to the sky like the crippled arms of a dying man. Everywhere was mud. Nobody knows who first described it as ‘hell’, but there was no better word. And that’s how it appeared next day in the papers:

“We enter into the centre of the battlefield. There’s not a tree, everything is flattened! Not a square metre that has not been hurled upside down. There’s one shell hole after another. The only things that stand out in this churned earth are the crosses with their ribbons in blue, white and red. It is hell!”

The Trouée d’Arenberg has become the symbol of Paris–Roubaix.

The race was conceived by by two Roubaix textile manufacturers, Théodore Vienne and Maurice Perez. Both had been instrumental in building the infamous Vélodrome André-Pétrieux. They pitched the race as a training race for the competitors of Bordeaux–Paris, which followed four weeks later. Tellingly Bordeaux-Paris hasn’t survived as a professional race whilst Pais Roubaix has become iconic.

Start Paris-Roubaix

Paris-Roubaix starts in Compiègne, about 85 kilometres north-east from Paris centre. The finish is still in Roubaix at the Vélodrome André-Pétrieux. The Trouée d’Arenberg has become the symbol of Paris–Roubaix. The race isn’t won in Arenberg, but from here the group containing the winner is usually selected. The Arenberg and Paris–Roubaix as a race presents the ultimate technical challenge to riders, team personnel, and equipment. Special frames and wheels are often used and race support requires particular planning.

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