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Herman Van Springel. (Tour de France Photo)
Herman Van Springel. (Tour de France Photo)
He held a 12 second lead going into that final stage and was 16 seconds ahead of
Jan Jansen but it was the Dutchman who came through stronger to snatch the
crown away from Van Springel.
The 38-second gap was the tightest winning margin on the Tour until 1989
when Greg LeMond beat Laurent Fignon by eight seconds.
"The biggest disappointment of my career," said Van Springel, who went on to
win the green points jersey on the 1973 Tour de France without winning a single
stage.
He won five stages and had four top 10 finishes in his 10 participations in the
Tour de France. He also finished third in the 1970 Vuelta a Espana and second in
the Giro d'Italia a year later.
His greatest success came in the Bordeaux-Paris, the longest classic on the
calendar with distances varying between 580 and 620 kilometres and more than
13 hours on the bike.
Van Springel, who was Eddy Merckx's teammate for two seasons at Molteni in
1971 and 1972, showed his capacity for speed and endurance by winning the race
a remarkable seven times between 1970 and 1981, his final year in the saddle,
when he was 37.
Belgian champion in 1971, he also won the Tour of Lombardy (1968), Ghent-
Wevelgem (1966) and Paris-Tours (1979).