De Waele at the 1929 Tour de France | |
| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Full name | Maurice De Waele |
| Born | (1896-12-27)27 December 1896 Lovendegem,East Flanders, Belgium |
| Died | 14 February 1952(1952-02-14) (aged 55) Maldegem, East Flanders, Belgium |
| Team information | |
| Discipline | Road |
| Role | Rider |
| Amateur team | |
| 1921-1922 | Individual |
| Professional teams | |
| 1923 | Wonder-Dunlop |
| 1924 | Wonder-Russell Cycles |
| 1925 | Wonder |
| 1926 | Ravat-Wonder-Dunlop |
| 1927 | Alcyon-Dunlop, Labor-Dunlop |
| 1928-1930 | Alcyon-Dunlop |
| 1931 | Individual |
| Major wins | |
| |
Maurice De Waele (pronounced[mʌuˈrizdəˈʋaːlə]; 27 December 1896 – 14 February 1952) was aBelgian professionalroad bicycle racer.[1]
De Waele placed second in the1927 Tour, an hour and fifty eight minutes behindNicolas Frantz, and third in1928, again won by Frantz. However, he is most famous for winning the1929 Tour de France. He led the Tour until stage seven when two punctures on the way toBordeaux cost him the yellow jersey to no less than three other riders on the same time in the general classification, Frantz,Andre Leducq andVictor Fontan. Fontan was the sole leader of the race when a broken bike led to his retirement, leaving De Waele in the lead, seventy five seconds ahead of Frantz. However, punctures to De Waele gave the lead to his nearest rival until he too suffered the same problem. With Frantz out of the running for the title, sickness inGrenoble nearly cost him too but with help from his teammates, he was led to victory.[2]
After winning the 1929 Tour, the organiser,Henri Desgrange despaired so much of the trickery that he thought had let such a minor rider succeed that he abandoned commercially sponsored teams and ran the Tour for national teams for two decades. Desgrange had until then insisted that while riders could compete in the name of their sponsors, cooperation or tactics between those riders was not allowed. They were to consider everyone their rival and ride against them whether they had the same sponsor or not.

De Waele was sponsored by the French bicycle company,Alcyon, whose ability to employ many of the leading riders gave it a dominant place in the sport. Clashes between Alcyon and Desgrange were frequent and came to a head when De Waele won the Tour with the illegal help of other Alcyon riders even though he was ill.
"My Tour has been won by a corpse," Desgrange complained and from the following year denied entries to commercial teams and accepted national teams instead.
De Waele finished 5th in1931. Other notable wins include the 1928 and 1929Tour of the Basque Country.[3]
| 1927 | 1928 | 1929 | 1930 | 1931 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Giro d'Italia | DNE | DNE | DNE | DNE | DNE |
| Stages won | — | — | — | — | — |
| Tour de France | 2 | 3 | 1 | DNE | 5 |
| Stages won | 2 | 2 | 1 | — | 0 |
| Vuelta a España | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Stages won |
| 1 | Winner |
| 2–3 | Top three-finish |
| 4–10 | Top ten-finish |
| 11– | Other finish |
| DNE | Did not enter |
| DNF-x | Did not finish (retired on stage x) |
| DNS-x | Did not start (not started on stage x) |
| HD-x | Finished outside time limit (occurred on stage x) |
| DSQ | Disqualified |
| N/A | Race/classification not held |
| NR | Not ranked in this classification |