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Allez! Allez!
- Thursday Night Racing, Part IV
by David Teall
This project began
with a little
piece on my humble beginnings as Dave Skiver's protegé in 1975. [Then there] was the
Cliff Mueller story, a leap forward in the chronology, because, in my opinion, Cliff had a
huge impact on the tone of the races at a time (1980-83) when the membership numbers were
beginning to really take off. A bit nostalgic on my part, but I see those days of the Pied
Piper of O.O.I.P., not only as golden years, but as the beginnings of a new era for
the club. Now
it is possible to see my "golden years' as a product of
the early club's growth from the Bowling Green based Wheels Inc., to the larger
geographical area (including Toledo), and the Maumee Valley Wheelmen. One of the
significant developments of this growth was when a Belgian emigrant joined the MVW in the
mid-seventies. His name was John Petiniot.
Most everyone should recognize the
Petiniot name from somewhere. Ifnot ultra-distance runner Jim Petiniot, whose on-foot
mileage might put some cyclists (author, for one) to shame, or his son Chance, the local
X-country star, then perhaps the John Petiniot Memorial Trophy, currently the property of
[the] club champ
, will ring a bell. That there are few current members who knew
John Petiniot is testimony to our number of years as an organization. It also points
toward our lack of historical perspective. On the latter point, I shall try now to set the
record straight.
Born in Belgium, John Petiniot emigrated
to the United States in 1930 when he was eighteen. He eventually wound up in Toledo, where
he had a long career working at Jeep. Shortly after his retirement in 1977 John started
coming out to watch club races. Dave Skiver, who became very close to John, believes that
he must have come across a flier in a bike shop or somewhere, and then "just showed
up in his van one night to watch a Thursday race." John came to nearly every club
race after that, often bringing along his wife and daughter Patricia. When John learned
about federation racing, he started driving to the weekend U.S.C.F. races also. Skiver
said that he saw John at every weekend race. John offered Dave rides to the weekend races,
which he occasionally accepted, and the two grew close.
My most vivid memory of John Petiniot is
from the spring of 1979, I can't remember if it was April or May. I do remember the
miserable weather: fifty-five degrees, steady drizzle, windy, all on a Thursday Night at
the old Dutch road course. It was one of those nights where you put your bike together
with you street clothes on, then change in the car with the motor running and forget about
any warm-up. Only about eight of us started the race, there were a few (I'll mention no
names) who did not even put their bikes together. But the weather did not stop John
Petiniot. Now Dutch road was a seven-mile rectangle near Whitehouse, not exactly a great
spectator course. It's not like Scotch Ridge, where you can get a glimpse of the
back-stretch while standing on a nice grassy hillside. In fact, at our start/finish line
on the corner of Stitt and Keener Roads, one must either stand on the road or in the
ditch, which is exactly where John stood, cheering and coaching us on as we plodded along
for three laps (the race was shortened due to conditions) until Skiver finally won the
sprint.
When I spoke to his son Jim Petiniot
recently, he tried to describe for me the source of his father's enthusiasm for cycling.
"It was like going back to his childhood [in Belgium]," Jim said. "His
immigrant experience was the key." That John was from the 'Old Country" was, of
course, a big plus for the Wheelmen. Cycling was even more Eurocentric back then, and the
trickle of information coming into the U.S. on the European scene was not easy to obtain.
Bill Hammond had special subscriptions to some European journals, Scott Gerkin had made a
pilgrimage to race in the Low Countries, and Mark Tyson got his hands on some French
newsreels that were a real treat to watch, (mais, je ne le comprends pas,) all in
an effort to bring something of the real cycling world home. John brought a piece of that
continental world to club races with his patronage. It was nice to have someone at the
races who could shout out encouragement in something other than football metaphors. Allez!
Allez! Allez!
John Petiniot died in August 1979. He
had been with the Wheelmen for less than two seasons. The day before he died, John was at
Scott Park watching his six-year-old grandson Chance ride sixty miles in the Pepsi
Marathon. At the funeral, Gary Dauer, Mark Tyson, and Dave Skiver were pallbearers
alongside three members of the Roadrunners. At the winter meeting later that year, Skiver
proposed that the new rotating trophy that Jim Black had just donated to the club be named
the John Petiniot Memorial. "John was a guy who just really loved cycling," Dave
said, and went on to describe how many times John had driven him to races, always refusing
gas money because "he was going there anyway," how John was like a father to him
(his "racing father"), and how John generously patronized our club and the
sport. Skiver wanted the new trophy to honor, not only the man, but his love for the
sport. He realized then how necessary people who really loved the sport would be if the
club were to grow. Skiver wanted the most prestigious award that the club offered for
racing achievement to be a memorial to those whose love for the sport make the racing
possible.
It's hard for old-timers like myself to
believe that nearly [twenty] years have gone by since John Petiniot passed away. That
there have been [twenty] successful seasons of MVW racing with [twenty] more names added
to the championship trophy that bears his name is due in no small part to the fact that
more people have come along who have had, like John, a passion for cycling. Throughout
those years the club has leaned heavily on a handful of members who, week after week, set
aside their personal aspirations for the greater good of the group. These are the people
Skiver had in mind when we dedicated the John Petiniot Memorial Club Championship Trophy.
In the process of penning out the above,
I've come to realize how presumptuous it was of me to begin an oral history of the club
with little vignettes of the racers who have had, in mine opinion, something to say about
the development of that long-standing MVW institution of Thursday Night Racing. Retelling
the John Petiniot story has reminded me that institutions like the "Breakfast
Club", the Equinox, the Dirty Derailleur, and Thursday Nights, that make the
MVW such an attractive club, don't just happen by themselves. At the end of this season, a
[twenty-fifth] name will be added to the club championship trophy. [(The names of previous
champions, 1974-1978, were also inscribed when the trophy was dedicated.)] Too often in
the past we have leaned too heavily on the same handful of people to run things. The Race
Committee has added a new twist for 1994, the Race Director of the Week, giving
championship points to the weekly director and making at least one week of participation
mandatory. Besides being a great idea, the weekly directorship can, I think, forge a
closer link between the championship and the true spirit of the John Petiniot Memorial.

Next
03/19/08
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