How Greg LeMond became a cycling legend

A true sporting icon whose 1989 Tour win is one of cycling’s greatest hits, the American received Cycling Weekly’s 2024 lifetime achievement award

At the tender age of 14, Greg LeMond started cycling in Nevada just to “get in shape for skiing”. After only a fortnight he won his first race, but his choice of outfit attracted some dirty looks. “I showed up to my first race [in 1976] riding a yellow Cinelli bike and in a yellow jersey,” the American tells me by phone. “In my second race, my friend looked at me with such disgust, and I was wondering why. Ten days later I beat him, it broke the ice, and he said: ‘I gotta tell you: you don’t wear the yellow jersey’. When he explained why, I responded, ‘What’s the Tour de France?’”

A decade later, LeMond not only knew the Tour de France intimately but justified that early yellow jersey. As the first American and non-European to win the yellow jersey, LeMond would win two more maillots jaunes, including one in 1989 by a margin of eight seconds.

He is deserving of Cycling Weekly’s 2024 Lifetime Achievement Award for a multitude of reasons. He has set many records through his career – and not only in cycling; in 1991 he found himself in the world record books for catching a four-pound smallmouth bass during a fly fishing trip. He is also famed for astonishing comebacks, radical modifications and innovations that have shaped bike design, and regular outspoken tirades against what he believes was a doping culture that denied him even more Tours.

This article was published in Cycling Weekly in December 2024. You can read the full article here.