How one man is quietly writing the history of professional cycling
Posted: May 29th, 2010 | 2 Comments »This is Nick’s dream.
He is training the first black team to win the Tour de France – the third largest sporting event in the world, but with no African presence all these years because equipment and training are too costly. He fell in love with professional cycling as a young boy, and tells me that people are slowly losing respect for the sport with all the recent doping cases. And like in Golf, Tennis, and the American President candidature, there is no better time to give the sport his opinion, a shakeup and simply some perspective.
It started 4 years ago, visiting Eldoret, the heart of where all the marathon winners are born. They have the physique, the mindset, and the hunger to win. He finds these talents in the rural villages in Kenya, and gives them bicycles to train.
I could listen to his anecdotes forever. We discussed the inflection points of leadership – and his came during the civil war. His team was literally seeking to kill each other as they pledged allegiances to their own tribes, and he flew back in the midst of crisis to unite them together. He described how one of his training sessions was disrupted when one of his athletes received an urgent call, pulled out his machete and ran all the way back to his fields because a robber was stealing his sheep. And jokes about how he worries every time his athletes leave camp to go back to their wives because nine months later, they might be having a baby and drop out. I begged him to tell me he was recording all these moments which was probably an unnecessary question, of course, there’s the movie that’s on it’s way.
So now you have a Singaporean who’s writing the history of competitive cycling.. getting the media attention in America and Europe, but we hear nothing of this in our own country. Why? Because it is not yet a success story, and I’m quite sure this will change the moment they hit Tour de France. If I were running a newspaper that was honestly concerned about my community, this is exactly the kind of story, at this stage of an endeavor that I know they need the most support, not when it’s all over.
I met Nick through another young entrepreneur, both with very international backgrounds which explains their trail blazing attitude. It’s a common story when you put such folks together with a mission that’s larger-than-life. You automatically hear the accompanying war stories of trying to garner support in our home country, as much as we’d like to align ourselves and give back. We concluded that Singapore is great for playing to be good, but we never play to win. Is this really cultural?
I haven’t lost all hope though, and it is up to our generation to change this.


[...] Read more about Nick’s dream here. [...]
Hey,
Remember to forward Nick’s contact, and I can try to hook him up with my friend whose family business is in manufacturing electric bicycles.
Ryan
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