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Soigneur Reed McCalvin
Soigneur Reed McCalvin (far left) and developmental cycling team Trek LiveStrong

The Caretaker

What goes on behind the scenes at cycling鈥檚 biggest races? We know just the man to ask.

Published: 
Soigneur Reed McCalvin

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Reed McCalvin has spent the last eight years working pro cycling鈥檚 most underrated job. The 35-year-old has been a soigneur (SWAN-yair) for top pros like Christian Vande Velde, Taylor Phinney, and Levi Leipheimer. That means he鈥檚 done everything from packing lunches to programming GPS鈥檚 to massaging riders at the world鈥檚 biggest races. In other words, he鈥檚 witnessed just about every part of every tour in the world. We called him up to see just how romantic the job is, and of course, to see what he had to say about doping.

Reed McCalvin, Michael Vink

Reed McCalvin, Michael Vink Reed McCalvin pins some numbers for Michael Vink

Reed McCalvin feedbags

Reed McCalvin feedbags Lots of feedbags today

Reed McCalvin

Reed McCalvin Reed and Taylor talking during warmup

What does soigneur mean?
It鈥檚 from a French term. It鈥檚 either 鈥渢o care for鈥 or 鈥渃aretaker.鈥

Who are some other non-riding members of the team?
For a race like the Tour de France you have five mechanics, five soigneurs, two sport directors, a PR officer, team chiropractor, team chef, one or two team doctors and then assistants hanging around. Your sponsor coordinator will be there as well.聽 There are nine riders, and you can have 20 staff running around.

What does your job entail?
On race day I get up at 6 a.m. and make sure we have enough bottles for before and after the race. I make sure all the cars are gassed up and that the start of the race, the feed zone, the end, and the hotel are in the GPS for all of the vehicles. I make lunch for everyone. Then I make sure all the boys had breakfast and that everyone is checked in and updating their U.S. Anti-Doping whereabouts forms. I put bottles on their bikes, tell them what the race is like, what the weather is like, and what type of clothing to wear. Then I go to the feed zone, hold up this little bag (two bottles, bars, gels, pastries, stuff to eat), and drive like a maniac to the finish, where I have a recovery shake, their lunch, and towels to clean up with. From there I shoot back to the hotel, do an hour massage for any of the eight riders, drive them to dinner, and take all their laundry. Then I make all the food and bottles for the next day. People will be like, 鈥淥h, yeah, you are in the Pyrenees? It will be awesome.鈥 Yeah, I drove by at 80 miles an hour to a grocery store that was open for four more minutes. I had to pry the door open, run through, scoop stuff into a cart and beg in my terrible French to let me buy the groceries needed for my guy who was gluten intolerant. That鈥檚 the job鈥攖rying to find gluten-free muesli in the middle of rural France.

What training do you have for this position?
Most soigneurs are massage therapists. I鈥檓 a bit different, because I鈥檓 a physical therapist as well. I鈥檓 also an EMT and am a Strength and Conditioning trainer. There are only about five people full-time in the U.S. who do this job.

How do you handle and manage the stress?
I was in the military for some time, and you deal with some pretty fun stuff there. After that, everything has been pretty easy going. Like, you are trapped on the side of a French highway, but no one is shooting at you. So it鈥檚 not too bad. Your job is to make the riders lives as easy as possible. If you are stressed, then you are stressing them.

What is the best part of your job?
It is just one big un-politically correct rolling circus that we run. You put a bunch of young, testosterone-laden men together in a closed environment, and it鈥檚 frat-boy time. The best part now, because I work with development cyclists [18-22 years old], is preparing these guys for the big leagues. They know I鈥檓 there for them and can talk to them about how to become a pro. You have to be realistic with them. And I tell them about financial stuff鈥攚hat to do, what to invest in. Don鈥檛 go buy a BMW convertible with your first contract.

What about doping?
I view it as stealing money from clean athletes. There is a U.S. cyclist who raced domestically and was under investigation by USA cycling. He鈥檚 since been banned but basically won or was second in a lot of domestic races. Teams that I worked for have lost to him. By doing that, he cost us tens of thousands of dollars in prize money.聽 I lost money personally and all my coworkers did. And on top of that, if he wasn鈥檛 there, then people on my team would have finished higher, which would have helped the sponsorship of the team or might have helped those riders get jobs on bigger and better teams. He literally changed the outcome of people鈥檚 lives.

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