The Borneo Post

Coste ‘proud’ to carry Olympic torch 76 years after winning gold

-

BOIS-COLOMBES, France: When the Olympic torch relay gets underway in France in May keep an eye open for Charles Coste, France’s oldest living Olympic champion.

Coste, who will turn 100 on Feb 8, pedalled his way to glory in the men’s team cycling pursuit 76 years ago in the 1948 Olympics in London. He has bad knees these days but is hoping to do his bit for Paris 2024.

“It will be unforgetta­ble and I’m very proud,” Coste told AFP. “Now I have to prepare myself physically. I’m handicappe­d by my knees but I’m going to try to carry the flame for a few metres.”

Coste also plans to watch the cycling in Paris but if that still lies some months in the future, London ‘48 remains clearly imprinted on his memory.

“They weren’t the grandiose Games of today,” says Coste, who is some way from being the oldest living Olympic champion.

That honour currently rests with Hungarian gymnast Agnes Keleti who turned 103 on Jan 9.

“There were hardly any radios. We only arrived three days before our event. England was still traumatise­d by the war. London had been badly bombed and we were billeted in a US Air Force training camp. There was no Olympic village.

Coste was 23 at the time and, as France’s pursuit champion of 1947, was appointed captain of the team that included Serge Blusson, Pierre Adam and Fernand Decanali, none of whom remains to accompany Coste on the torch relay.

The cyclists were awarded their medals – ‘in a box, not around your neck like today’ – and a bouquet of flowers. But organisati­onal problems at the Herne Hill Velodrome meant there was the disappoint­ment of not having an anthem.

“’There won’t be a Marseillai­se’ they said ‘because we can’t find the record!’,” says Coste.

Two years ago, Coste finally got his Marseillai­se when he was rather belatedly given the Legion d’Honneur.

“I would have liked General de Gaulle to have given it to me in 1952 but no one thought of me at the time. As I was the only Olympic champion who didn’t have the medal, it was given to me in 2022 and I chose Tony Estanguet to do it.

“I’m very grateful to him. He gave me a beautiful Marseillai­se. It was a great honour for me. Tony Estanguet and I have become friends. We write to each other and he calls me from time to time.”

One of those calls from Estanguet, chief of the Paris Games organising committee, was the invitation to carry the torch and pass it on to a new generation of Olympians.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Coste, poses with a photo of himself when he was competing during a photo session at home in Bois-Colombes, northweste­rn of Paris.
— AFP photo Coste, poses with a photo of himself when he was competing during a photo session at home in Bois-Colombes, northweste­rn of Paris.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia