Marcel Bidot was the son of a failed café owner, a former racing cyclist who then ran one of the clubs in his home town of
Troyes, in the
Champagne region. His son, Marcel, worked for the
Crédit Lyonnais bank in the town and rode for his father's club. He went training after work at 7pm. He turned professional in 1923 and at
Alcyon earned 2,000 francs a month, ten times his pay at the bank. "At the time you could get a good meal for 20 francs and a newspaper for 25 centimes," he said. He rode every Tour de France from 1926 to 1930 and then again in 1932. His first was the longest of all Tours, at 5,745 km with a stage of 435 km from
Metz to
Dunkirk. The organiser,
Henri Desgrange, forbade riders from accepting mechanical help after breakdowns and his officials watched him pedalling with one foot after the other pedal broke. He stopped after a while and struggled on with the pedal tied to the crank with a leather strap. The judges finally relented and allowed him to borrow a bike from a spectator, but on condition that he used his own wheels. The bike was too small but Bidot still finished the stage. That wasn't the end of his troubles. His
freewheel broke in the
Pyrenees and he could no longer turn the wheel - in the absence of a
derailleur, which Desgrange had also banned - to ride a lower gear. He had to ride up the col du
Tourmalet and three other passes in the gear in which he had planned to ride down them. The weather was so bad that only half the field reached the end of the stage at
Luchon and officials had to search inns and houses along the route to see what had happened to the others. Bidot punctured on the
Izoard and again a judge was there to see he accepted no help. Bidot said: :There I was in the Casse Déserte My fingers were solid with cold and I couldn't unstick the tyre from the rim. I tried to do it with my teeth. Impossible. Several minutes went by and then along came Meunier, the driver of the
Alcyon car, and he threw me a penknife. The
commissaire made sure I couldn't get to it. 'I forbid you to pick it up,' he said. I had to get the tyre off with a wing-nut.' Of that 1926 Tour he said: :We used to set off at midnight and finish the following night, with hours between the riders. The racing was in the last 100km. We used to put two or three tubular tyres round our shoulders and even that wasn't enough. In the rain, the mountain roads became bogs. A lot of riders had wired-on tyres and no brakes. There was no tar on the roads, only stones and rocks. Bidot's best placing in the Tour was fifth, in 1930, the first year of national teams. His prizes, 51,900 francs, bought him his house in St-Lyé. He won stages in 1928 and 1929 and was national champion in 1929. ==Management==