Carlton Kirby’s Tour de France tales

Liz Nicholls

On 24th November at Borough Hall in Godalming, let the larger-than-life broadcaster and Eurosport commentator entertain you with the highs and lows of Tour de France

Carlton Kirby, AKA The Voice of Cycling, looks forward to sharing backstage tales at the Borough Hall.

Carlton wonders if he might be the last in the line of a certain style of commentator. Cricket’s Henry Blofeld, F1’s Murray Walker, Darts’ Sid Waddell… there was a time when sport was voiced by real characters bringing an extra sense of colour and context to the bare sporting action on screen. Now, Kirby – Eurosport’s Voice of Cycling – feels like an outlier.

“There has been a big shift towards TV employing former athletes – and often they can be quite straight in their approach,” he reflects. “But even in sports where non-athletes are still allowed in the commentary box, there’s a definite shift towards endless statistics and often quite dry technical analysis. I’m not sure that’s what the audience wants. Often, that sense of the wider occasion, all the emotion and fun and randomness involved – all the reasons people love sport – can get lost. But I want to make sure the audience at home get the full picture – I am compelled to mention, say, a very good local sausage shop, even if I have to get it into a manic sprint finish!”

Kirby is coming to the Borough Hall in Godalming for a show on 24th November, where he will share backstage stories from his years commentating on the Tour de France. His career has coincided with the golden age of British cycling, so, naturally, there will be talk of his dealings with the likes of Bradley Wiggins and Mark Cavendish. But the tone of the evening is likely to be set by Kirby’s off-piste experiences, driving round Europe for months on end in the company of terse co-commentator Sean Kelly and getting into scrapes in low-budget hotels.

“I think, even for a lot of cycling fans, covering the Tour de France and other big races seems like some kind of extended holiday. Of course, it IS a magical thing – to be part of the biggest annual sports event on Earth, part of this travelling circus that means so much to everyone at home. But then we are also driving thousands of miles over the three weeks of the race, often late at night, staying in often quite random hotels. It is definitely a job not a holiday. Maybe not a proper job, but a job nonetheless!”

Kirby’s CV also includes an unusually broad range of broadcast gigs, from the Le Mans 24 Hour Race to speed skating and, in the early days of Eurosport, both the Eskimo Olympics and the Rock/Paper, Scissors World Championships. Along with stints on breakfast TV, as a nightclub promoter and on the ‘…and finally’ quirky-news slot on local TV in East Anglia – not to mention a failed audition to present Blue Peter -, it has been a unique path to his current position.

“I do love it. I feel privileged to have called home Mark Cavendish on so many of his record-breaking 35 stage wins at the Tour; to have been involved when British riders have dominated both the Tour and the Olympics.  

“At the show at Godalming, we will celebrate the magic of the Tour and of those British riders but also all the strangeness that comes with it. Wherever we go with the live show, it feels like a gathering of the clans – all the serious bike riders come out but also people who just enjoy looking at the French landscape while snacking on their sofa. All these hundreds of people who have fallen in love with the Tour for different reasons getting together. I can’t wait!” 

Tickets from Radio Days Events.


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