Ernie Clements
Personal information | |
---|---|
Full name | Ernest A Clements |
Nickname | Ernie |
Born | (1922-02-28)28 February 1922 Hadley, England, United Kingdom |
Died | 3 February 2006(2006-02-03) (aged 83) Malvern, England, United Kingdom |
Team information | |
Discipline | Road |
Role | Rider |
Ernest J Clements (28 February 1922 – 3 February 2006) was an English road racing cyclist, frame builder and cycle shop owner.
Biography
Born in Hadley, Telford, Shropshire, Clements was one of the leaders in the introduction of massed start road races to Britain, initially as a rider and later as a sponsor.[1]
He won the BLRC British national road race championship in 1943 and 1945, and came second in 1944. Riders who competed in BLRC races were banned from competing in NCU races, but Clements managed to circumvent the ban; he won the NCU national road championship in 1946 and come second in 1948. If Clements had not been a member of the NCU, he would not have been considered to ride the world amateur road championship in 1946, nor the 1948 Summer Olympics in London. At the latter event, he won a silver medal as part of the team in the road race - alongside team mates Bob Maitland, Gordon Thomas and Ian Scott.
Clements also won the first stage of the Brighton-Glasgow race in 1951.[2] Note - possible inaccuracies: The 1946 Brighton-Glasgow race programme states that E A (Ernie) Clements won the first stage of the 1945 Brighton-Glasgow race. This also indicates that Ernie Clements was Ernest A rather than Ernest J Clements. This is supported by the Register of Births for England and Wales which lists an Ernest A Clements as being registered in the March quarter of 1922 in the Wellington District of Shropshire.
In 1947, there was a proposal that he turn professional should Britain send a team to the Tour de France. Clements declined and in the event no team was sent anyway. Clements said he turned down the chance because he did not wish to relinquish his amateur status in Britain.[3] At the time, cyclists in Britain were unable to return to amateur status once they had been professionals. This proved restrictive for many professional cyclists, who at the end of their careers were unable to return to competing at a lower level purely for enjoyment.
Clements was born in Hadley, Shropshire but spent the majority of his early years at Old Park where he later opened a cycle shop. He became a frame builder and managed Falcon Cycles in the 1950s, and up to the 1970s.
His last address was in Ledbury, Herefordshire where, aged 67 in 1990, he opened Clements Cycles to keep in touch with cycling.[4] He died in Malvern Community Hospital, Malvern, Worcestershire, aged 83 on 5 February 2006, having suffered from Parkinson's disease for several years.[3]
In memoriam
His death was announced in the Cycling Weekly magazine through a paid small-ad. It said:
- CLEMENTS - ERNEST. (cycle trader and former road racing champion) died peacefully on February 3rd 2006. Aged 83 years. Husband of Rosemary and father of Edward. A quiet family funeral will take place. Details of a memorial service to follow.[5]
Memorial race
In his memory, the annual Ernie Clements Memorial two-day stage race is organised by Rob Finch on behalf of the LVRC League of Veteran Racing Cyclists, with separate races for riders aged 40–54 and 55 and over. There are two stages in the first day of racing, a short prologue (1.36 miles in 2007) and a criterium (27 miles in 2007), the third stage, on the second day, is a Road race (64/48 miles in 2007).[6]
Palmarès
- 1943
- 1st BLRC British National Road Race Championship
- 1st Tour of the Peak (1st edition)
- 1944
- 1st 2nd Tour of the Peak
- 2nd BLRC national road race championship
- 1945
- 1st BLRC national road race championship
- 1946
- 1st NCU national road race championship
- 1948
- 2nd Team Road Race, Olympic Games
- 2nd NCU national road race championship
- 1951
- 1as Stage 1, from Brighton to London, Brighton-Glasgow stage race
References
- ^ RR Pioneer Ernie Clements Passes Away[permanent dead link] British Cycling 11 February 2006
- ^ "1951 Brighton to Glasgow, Stage one was Brighton to London, won by Ernie Clements from Wolverhampton." Extract from 'A Ketley Mon' by Terry Low.
- ^ a b Worcester News[permanent dead link] & Hereford Times[permanent dead link] 10 February 2006
- ^ Obituary in the LVRC newsletter[permanent dead link]
- ^ CLEMENTS - ERNEST, Cycling Weekly, February 2003
- ^ "Ernie Clements Memorial, results on LVRC website". Archived from the original on 20 July 2011. Retrieved 25 September 2007.
- v
- t
- e
- Jack Holmes (1938)
- Jack Fancourt (1939)
- Reg Braddick (1944)
- J. A. O'Driscoll (1945)
- Ernie Clements (1946)
- Alex Taylor (1947)
- Bob Maitland (1948)
- A D Newman (1949)
- Gordon Thomas (1950)
- Peter Procter (1951)
- Graham Vines (1952)
- Ted Gerrard (1953)
- B J Sandy (1954)
- Bernard King (1955)
- Alan Jackson (1956)
- Ron Coe (1957 Independent)
- Stan Brittain (1957 Amateur)
- Bill Seggar (1958)
- Ernie Clements (1943)
- Percy Stallard (1944)
- Ernie Clements (1945)
- George Edwards (1946)
- E I Upton (1947)
- R C Ashwin (1948)
- Dave Bedwell (1949)
- Ralph Parkin (1950)
- Charlie Bland (1951)
- Mike Howarth (1952)
- Derek Evans (1953)
- Reg Browne (1954)
- Des Robinson (1955)
- Mike England (1956)
- Charlie Mather (1957)
- Bill Baty (1958)
(1946–1958)
- A H Clarke (1946)
- Dennis Jaggard (1947)
- Harold Johnson (1948)
- Bob Thom (1949)
- Leonard West (1950)
- Dave Bedwell (1951)
- Ian Steel (1952)
- Bob Maitland (1953)
- Arthur Ilsley (1954)
- Graham Vines (1955)
- not held in 1956
- Ron Coe (1958–1957)
(1959–1995)
- Bill Baty (1959)
- Bill Bradley (1960–(1961)
- Keith Butler (1962)
- Bob Addy (1963)
- Pete Gordon (1964)
- Les West (1965)
- Arthur Metcalfe (1966)
- Les West (1967)
- Pete Matthews (1968)
- Brian Jolly (1969)
- Dave Rollinson (1970–1971)
- Doug Dailey (1972)
- Grant Thomas (1973)
- William Nickson (1974)
- Kevin Apter (1975)
- Doug Dailey (1976)
- Steve Lawrence (1977)
- Robert Millar (1978–1979)
- Steve Lawrence (1980)
- Mark Bell (1981)
- Jeff Williams (1982)
- John Cavanagh (1983)
- Neil Martin (1984)
- Paul Watson (1985)
- Deno Davie (1986)
- Paul Curran (1987)
- Neil Hoban (1988)
- David Cook (1989)
- Simeon Hempsall (1990)
- John Hughes (1991)
- Simon Bray (1992)
- Rob Harris (1993–1994)
- Simon Bray (1995)
(1959–1995)
- Ron Coe (1959)
- race was not held in 1960
- Dave Bedwell (1961)
- John Harvey (1962)
- Albert Hitchen (1963)
- Keith Butler (1964)
- Albert Hitchen (1965)
- Dick Goodman (1966)
- Colin Lewis (1967–1968)
- Bill Lawrie (1969)
- Les West (1970)
- Danny Horton (1971)
- Gary Crewe (1972)
- Brian Jolly (1973)
- Keith Lambert (1974)
- Les West (1975)
- Geoff Wiles (1976)
- Phil Edwards (1977)
- Phil Corley (1978)
- Sid Barras (1979)
- Keith Lambert (1980)
- William Nickson (1981)
- John Herety (1982)
- Phil Thomas (1983)
- Steve Joughin (1984)
- Ian Banbury (1985)
- Mark Bell (1986)
- Paul Sherwen (1987)
- Steve Joughin (1988)
- Tim Harris (1989)
- Colin Sturgess (1990)
- Brian Smith (1991)
- Sean Yates (1992)
- Malcolm Elliott (1993)
- Brian Smith (1994)
- Robert Millar (1995)
- Dave Rand (1996)
- Jeremy Hunt (1997)
- Matt Stephens (1998)
- John Tanner (1999–2000)
- Jeremy Hunt (2001)
- Julian Winn (2002)
- Roger Hammond (2003–2004)
- Russell Downing (2005)
- Hamish Haynes (2006)
- David Millar (2007)
- Rob Hayles (2008)
- Kristian House (2009)
- Geraint Thomas (2010)
- Bradley Wiggins (2011)
- Ian Stannard (2012)
- Mark Cavendish (2013)
- Peter Kennaugh (2014–2015)
- Adam Blythe (2016)
- Steve Cummings (2017)
- Connor Swift (2018)
- Ben Swift (2019)
- not held in 2020
- Ben Swift (2021)
- Mark Cavendish (2022)
- Fred Wright (2023)