Jacques Goddet

Jacques Goddet
Jacques Goddet in 1962
Born(1905-06-21)21 June 1905
Died15 December 2000(2000-12-15) (aged 95)
Paris, France
NationalityFrench
OccupationSports journalist
TitleDirector of the Tour de France
Term1935 – 1986
PredecessorHenri Desgrange
SuccessorFélix Lévitan
Jacques Goddet Memorial at Tourmalet

Jacques Goddet (French pronunciation: [ʒak ɡɔdɛ]; 21 June 1905 – 15 December 2000) was a French sports journalist and director of the Tour de France road cycling race from 1936 to 1986.

Goddet was born and died in Paris. His father, Victor Goddet, was co-founder and finance director of L'Auto, the newspaper that organised the first Tour in 1903. When Jacques Goddet had ended his studies in 1931, he became editor-in-chief of L'Auto. He covered the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.

In 1924 Jacques Goddet went to work for his father's paper in the rue du faubourg-Montmartre, Paris. Four years later he followed his first Tour de France and sat spellbound as he watched riders struggle for more than 16 hours on cols "that were no more than mediocre earth paths, muddy, stony". Goddet returned the following year and followed every Tour until 1989, with the exceptions of 1932 when he went to the Los Angeles Olympics and 1981 when he was too ill.[1]

He became chief reporter at L'Auto and took over organisation of the race when the director, Henri Desgrange, became too ill to continue in 1936.[1]

In association football, Goddet is credited as one of the fathers of the idea for the Intercontinental Cup,[2] and one of the earliest proponents, in the 1970s, that the competition should be enlarged to encompass not only European and South American but also Asian, African and North-Central American club champions, in a form of a FIFA-endorsed Club World Cup.[3][4]

  1. ^ a b Goddet, Jacques (1991), L'Équipée Belle, Robert Laffont, France
  2. ^ Tribuna de Imprensa, Brazilian newspaper, ed. 2675, page. 8, of 23/October/1958. In Portuguese.
  3. ^ "Una copa mundial de clubs con los campeones de Europa, Asia, Africa, Sudamerica y America Central" [A Club World Cup with the European, Asian, African, South American and Central American champions] (PDF). El Mundo Deportivo (in Spanish). 29 November 1973. p. 4. Retrieved 6 March 2013.
  4. ^ "Una idea para los cinco campeones de cada continente" [An idea for the five continental champions] (PDF). El Mundo Deportivo (in Spanish). 5 June 1975. p. 13. Retrieved 6 March 2013.