Saturday, May 18, 2024

Youcef Reguigui – the Tour de Langkawi 2015 Winner Tells All

-

HomeInterviewsYoucef Reguigui - the Tour de Langkawi 2015 Winner Tells All
Youcef Reguigui
Youcef Reguigui.

Millionaires living in Monaco and the late, great Alan Van Heerden apart, the recent Tour de Langkawi saw perhaps the best ever result for an African cyclist with Algerian and MTN Qhubeka climber/sprinter Youcef Reguigui taking the penultimate stage up Fraser’s Hill, grabbing the leader’s jersey and holding on to it through the frantic last stage criterium in Kuala Lumpur.

The Fraser’s Hill stage was substituted for the now famous mega-grind up to Genting Highlands resort – officially the reason given was that construction work made the finale dangerous.

However, the most likely explanation is that the resort owners didn’t want their flagship seen by the world’s Media in anything but it’s glory.

And lest you think it was a ‘soft’ win, Reguigui had to hold off World Tour squads Astana – with Valerio Agnoli in second spot on GC and Sky – with Sebastien Henao in third spot on GC to take the honours.

In addition he had a diminished team around him on the stage he won and on the final day – MTN being among many teams hit by a nasty stomach bug during the race.

Reguigui has good genes – his father, Abdelkader won the Tour of Algeria in 1987.

Reguigui junior rode for the UCI Centre Mondial du Cyclisme and Groupement Sportif Petrolier Algerie between 2010 and 2012 before moving to MTN-Qhubeka for season 2013.

In 2009 he won the Ouverture Saison de l’Algerie and was second overall in the Tour of Algeria.

The following season saw numerous North African wins including the prologue in the Tour of Algeria.

He won the Algerian U23 road race and time trial championships in 2011 along with a raft of other North African races and there was second on a stage in the very hotly contested Ville Saguenay, Nations Cup race in Canada.

There were wins in North Africa, Switzerland, Tuscany and Azerbaijan in 2012; with 2013 seeing more wins on his home continent and the Arab Championships in Bahrain go his way.

Last year there were more African wins and a stage win in the ever more prestigious and tough Tour of Azerbaijan.

But Langkawi is his biggest result so far.

MTN-Qhubeka main man, Brian Smith very kindly put or questions to his rider soon after his fine win.

Youcef Reguigui
Youcef on the podium in Malaysia. Photo©Tim de Waele

Did you think before you won the Fraser’s Hill stage that you could win the overall, Youcef?

“No, when I was sitting third on GC I was only thinking of a top five finish…”

What did you think when you heard that the very tough Genting Highlands stage was out?

“My first my target was to win a stage in Langkawi – but after I heard the Genting stage was out I began thinking of the GC.”

I believe the humidity in Langkawi takes a bit of getting used to on those climbs?

“Coming from Algeria I don’t have any problem with the weather!”

That last stage when you were battling to keep the jersey must have been stressful for you?

“Yes, I’ve never felt stress like that in my entire life; I couldn’t sleep the night before the last stage.”

Your dad, Abdelkader won the ’87 Tour of Algeria – did you want to ‘follow in his footsteps ?’ he must be a big fan?

“When my father won the Tour of Algeria 1987 I wasn’t even born.

“But I have a lot of pictures of him during that tour.

“When I won the Tour de Langkawi he was really happy – I’ve never seen my dad as happy as that before.”

Youcef Reguigui
Taking stage 7 in Langkawi meant a lot to Youcef and the team. Photo©teammtnqhubeka

How big a sport is cycling in Algeria?

“In Algeria football is the number one sport but when my MTN-Qhubeka team did last year’s Vuelta a Espana and when this year we got the wild card for the Tour de France a lot of the focus now is on cycling.”

Has the Algerian media made a fuss over your terrific win?

“Yes I have a lot of media attention from Algeria – and I also had a call from the Algerian Minster of Sport after the victory .”

What’s it like training in Algeria, are the roads good, safe?

“The roads are very nice for training, especially in my city, Blida which is about 45 kilometres from the capital city, Algiers with the Atlas Mountains to the south.”

How did you get the MTN ride?

“When was at the UCI Cycling Center in Switzerland I won a lot of races in the U23 age group.

“MTN knew me from there and I received a call from the boss, Douglas Ryder – and JP van Zyl who was with the African World Cycling Centre as well as MTN supported my joining the team.”

Youcef Reguigui
We’re looking forward to seeing what the Youcef and the MTN team can do at the Tour in July. Photo©aps.dz

You rode Kuurne earlier this year – what was that like?

“The first part of the race very hard but I felt better as the race went on.

“I spoke with Tyler Farrar and he said for me to work for Edvald (Boasson Hagen) – I do my job 100% for the team in a situation like that.”

And you rode the Tro Bro Leon a year or two ago – what was that like?

“I really liked that race on the dirt roads.

“Last year I was in the front group but I had a puncture in the last 30 kilometres.

“I hope this year I can make good result in that race.”

You won a stage in Azerbaijan in 2014 – that was a nice result.

“That was my first professional win so I was really happy with that result, yes.”

And I have to ask; what do you think of the new stripy strip?

“Yes, it’s good – you can see the team easily in the peloton during a race.”

We never thought of that, but now that Youcef mentions it… With thanks to Brian and Youcef – see you ‘en France’ gentlemen.

Ed Hood
Ed Hood
Ed's been involved in cycling for over 50 years. In that time he's been a successful time triallist, a team manager and a sponsor of several teams and clubs. He's also a respected and successful coach and during the winter months was often working in the cabins at the Six Days for some of the world's top riders. Ed remains a massive fan of the sport and couples his extensive contacts with an inexhaustible enthusiasm for the minutiae and the history of our sport. In February 2023 however, our dear friend and beloved colleague Ed suffered a devastating stroke and faces an uncertain future; Ed has lost his ability to speak, to read, and has lost movement on the right side of his body. He's working with speech and physical therapists on rehabilitation, but all strokes are different and each patient responds differently, so unfortunately recovery is one day at a time. Ed ran his own business installing windows, and will probably not be able to work again. Please consider joining us to make a contribution to Ed's GoFundMe page to help stabilise and secure his future.

Related Articles

David Griffiths – Scottish Hill Climb Champion 2016

Unfortunately, VeloVeritas editor, Martin and I got out priorities wrong and instead of freezing on Purrinden for the Scottish Hill Climb Champs we were in warmer climes. But fear not, we tracked down the new champion, David Griffiths (Pro Vision) and here's what he had to say...

Ryan Oelkers – “I wouldn’t have changed a thing”

With the World Track Championships only a few weeks away, we thought we'd talk to some top riders who you may know not much about, guys with interesting stories to tell, our "left-field' stars. Here's Ryan Oelkers tale...

Jim McFarlane – Endura’s View From the Top

"Goodie bag!" I'm not used to "freebies;" by the time Dave or Martin and I stumble into the press room, all the goodies have gone - but we have the best sun tans. However, when Jim McFarlane mentioned "goodie bag" I was out to Livingston like a ferret. It seemed like a shame to waste a trip to Endura and not interview the main man. The timing was perfect, Jim was just back from seeing his boys in action at Haut Var.

Dan Fleeman – New MTB Team; Forme Coaching-Pactimo-Cannondale

I remember the first time I met Dan Fleeman; 2007 in the days before Twitter, The Shack, LanceGate, the slick marketing of the ‘Flanders Classics’ and the World Tour. Vik still used to go to pro races; before he was too badly scarred by the World Tour – the Tour of Beijing was the last nail in the coffin.

At Random

Le Tour de France 2013 – Stage 2: Bastia > Ajaccio, 154km. Jan Bakelants by a Second!

Jan Bakelants today, but they couldn't resist it; "Tour de Farce" trumpets the headline in the Sunday Times. I'm not really a Times man, my dad wouldn't have approved. But I wanted to see what David Walsh had to say about Stage One.

Dan Patten Blog – New Colours for 2013!

So this is my first blog post from across the pond aka stateside aka the USA writes Dan Patten. Despite everything tending to be bigger here in the US, I intend to keep my blog postings shorter and more frequent this year (well this is the plan!). It's been a little over 3 weeks now since I took off from London Heathrow. A smooth flight to Philadelphia was followed by some airport time before another flight onto Greensboro, North Carolina...

Flavio Zappi – “I don’t want my team to settle for average!”

‘You need to talk that Flavio Zappi boy, his lads are racing all over Europe and getting good results!’ As often happens with VeloVeritas it’s our spiritual guide and fiercest critic, Viktor who gives us inspiration on who we should be speaking to. But there’s also the aspect that QuickStep new recruit James Knox, who we interviewed earlier in the year was a ‘Zappi Man’ so yes, times we had a word with Sen. Zappi.

Le Tour de France 2007 – Day 10: Stage 20, Marcoussis – Paris Champs-Élysées

It was gone 2.00 am when we got to bed, but the alarm blasted at 5.45 am - we had to meet the mechanic from Vélo Sport Vacations at 06.00 am. He was right on time and it was only a couple of minutes after six when we pedalled-off on our borrowed Felts to ride the finishing circuit around the Champs Elysees. It's the first time I've ridden an all carbon bike and it felt very lively, James McCallum rode a Felt last year. The city was buzzing, taxis dropped-off and picked-up those who had decided against sleeping on Saturday night.