It was only five days before the start of the 1965 Tour de France that Salvarani’s first-year pro, Felice Gimondi, got the message that would transform his life. Gimondi was in Forlì, northern Italy, for a 77km time-trial when he was told he was needed for the Tour because one teammate, Bruno Fantinato, had injured a knee, and another, Battista Babini, had been struck down with fever.
Gimondi came second in Forlì, two and a half minutes behind five-time Tour winner Jacques Anquetil, then dashed home to Sedrina, just north of Bergamo, to pack a bag. Three days later he was alongside nine teammates on a plane bound for Frankfurt, on his way to the Grand Départ in Cologne.
Gimondi didn’t want to ride the Tour. He was only 22…
