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All’s right with the hill-climbing world as British national championships won on rim brakes (despite Andrew Feather’s 5.4kg disc build); British pro runs super speedy 1:12 half marathon + more on the live blog
SUMMARY

"Wonder if I’ll be able to walk again before the season starts": British pro runs super speedy 1:12 half marathon
Not quite Tom Dumoulin levels of pro cyclist goes running very quickly, but incredibly impressive nonetheless.
Weekend round-up: Van Rysel recall, Sadiq Khan's bike-parking policy questioned + more
Here’s a quick round-up of everything you might have missed over the weekend, most notably perhaps Van Rysel reacting to DT Swiss and Swiss Side’s summer recall over wheel delamination fears by recalling two RCR Pro road bike models featuring the wheels in question.


The notice communicating the recall stated affected RCR PRO Ultegra & RCR PRO Dura Ace Bikes’ riders have a risk of “serious falls and injuries” due to delamination issues with affected Swiss Side HADRON2 Classic 500 and HADRON2 Ultimate 500 wheelsets.
Elsewhere, it was reported new rules announced by the government and the Mayor of London to support housebuilding in the capital include reduced requirements for the building of cycle parking.


It has been suggested Sadiq Khan’s emergency rules on affordable London housing “reduce requirements for cycle parking” and allow financial “contributions” instead of building bike racks.
Last night, our latest Bike at Bedtime featured Gregario, the Italian brand which won the ‘Best New Builder’ award at Bespoked 2025, boasting that it’s the first manufacturer to create a truly monocoque custom carbon-fibre frame, thanks to a patented variable geometry mould.


And finally, if that wasn’t enough for your bike fix, Stu has been getting to grips with the Genesis Croix De Fer 30 and has penned some thoughts in a review, concluding it’s a “versatile and capable adventure gravel machine that’s still nimble enough for some fun”.
"A really good place to start the Olympic journey": Great Britain finish second in medals table at UCI Track Cycling World Championships


The culmination of the Track World Championships this weekend saw Great Britain continue to rack up the medals in Santiago, finishing second in the overall table behind the impressive Dutch squad. There were gold medals for Josh Tarling in the points race, madison duo Katie Archibald and Maddie Leach, and Josh Charlton and Anna Morris in their respective individual pursuits.


Sprint coach and seven-time Olympic champion Sir Jason Kenny told the BBC TV cameras on the ground in Chile that things could have been even better but the medal haul represents “a really good place to start the Olympic journey”.
“We’ve missed out on some medals that we felt we could have been competitive for, but we’ve come away with a really good haul with some new medallists, so it’s really exciting,” he said. “The fact that we were on the podium more than ever shows that we were competitive across the board, and it’s really positive.”
“Next year’s World Championships will go towards Olympic qualification so things will start getting really serious, and I think given the age profile of the team — and the fact that we are so competitive in so many events — is a really good place to start the Olympic journey.”
Sprint hopefuls Emma Finucane and Matthew Richardson both ended the World Championships without a rainbow jersey, Finucane admitting she was “gutted” after a quarter-final sprint error saw her out of contention there. She showed plenty of resilience to land a silver in the keirin on the final day of competition, while Richardson also took silver (his in the men’s sprint) after coming up against an imperious Harrie Lavreysen, the Dutch powerhouse’s seventh consecutive world title in the event and taking his career world-title haul to a staggering 20.


However, perhaps the most popular win of the weekend came in the men’s elimination race, Elia Viviani winning a rainbow jersey in the final race of his career before retirement and sparking incredible scenes at the Velódromo Peñalolén.


"New cycling offences are pointless," argues Cycle Law Scotland lawyer


A lawyer from Cycle Law Scotland has questioned incoming ‘dangerous cycling’ laws in a column published in The Scotsman. As we reported last month, the Labour government is set to introduce new ‘dangerous cycling’ laws which would bring punishments for cyclists who kill or injure by dangerous or careless riding in line with those for drivers.
Writing in the Scottish newspaper, lawyer Thomas Mitchell argued: “Singling out the cyclist as a scapegoat for the public’s anger and frustration at the rising death toll on our roads is not, in my view, the right way to go.”
He went on to suggest supporters of the legislation, such as Conservative MP Iain Duncan Smith, may be wrong to believe the new offences would create parity with offences for drivers.
“I believe that is fundamentally wrong,” Mitchell continued. “We shouldn’t be seeking to create parity between a vulnerable road user group and a powerful one. The law needs to protect the vulnerable and be a safety net to account for the inequity that exists when a vehicle and bicycle collide.
“One could point out that the same needs to be true of pedestrian versus cycling incidents, but the collision statistics simply don’t support that argument. We already have offences of careless and dangerous cycling. Adding these harsher offences and punishments may deter people from cycling, which is not what the government wants.
“Whilst it is not in vogue to criticise the motorist, the simple fact remains that people who drive cars kill far more pedestrians and cyclists than any other road user group; nearly 2,500 between 2019-2023, over 200 times the number of deaths involving a cyclist.
“Why isn’t the government focusing on cutting down the number of these deaths, rather than aiming at the low-hanging fruit and chastising the humble cyclist? From a road safety standpoint, I believe these new offences will do virtually nothing to contribute to less deaths on our roads and therefore, their introduction remains largely pointless.”
Read the full column here.
Something tells me that's probably not the photo that's meant to go with that article...


I hope your weekend went better than Jason Manford's
Anyone in the comments section want to own up to having done this before?
Just arrived on holiday in Wales and managed to put my own back window through!
Handlebar of one of the kids’ bikes went straight through it!
After the massive high of last night’s show, life clearly decided to give me a quick kick in the arsebone to keep my feet on the ground! pic.twitter.com/C2sY95eKUX— Jason Manford (@JasonManford) October 25, 2025
Cyclists accuse politicians of "riding crest of populist wave" after MP claims new one-way system is "clogging up roads" and ruining town


Veteran completes fifth year of riding 100 miles on a vintage WW2-era bicycle to raise funds for the Royal British Legion's Poppy Appeal
While the hill climbers were up in Matlock thrashing their lightweight bikes up a short, sharp berg, Tim Bishop was completing his fifth straight year of riding 100 miles on a vintage WW2 bicycle to raise money for the Poppy Appeal. No disc brakes here, either…
Bishop rode 107 laps around the Caerleon one-way system on the WW2-era bicycle and received support from the local cycling community who came out on slightly more modern steeds to help.
The Caerleon and District Royal British Legion’s JustGiving page is currently nearing £1,000 of the £3,000 target.
"Biggest expansion in years": Zwift's New York map gets 31km bigger


If the home trainer has tempted you these past few weeks, Zwift has some news it is excited to share. The virtual training platform has announced a 31km expansion to its New York City map, the one set 100 years in the future with a “futuristic network of glass sky roads around Central Park”.
Well, now it also heads outside of Manhatten, taking in Times Square, over Brooklyn Bridge and into Prospect Park.




“31km makes this Zwift’s biggest map expansion in five years,” the marketing team tells us, before somewhat predictably dropping… “The Big Apple just for bigger”.
There will be 15 new routes to explore with this (12 ride, three run) and Zwift plans to add an additional five to be unlocked over the coming months.
Chinese bikes and components galore, 21mm tyres and rim brakes FTW: some of the most intriguing bikes and set-ups from the 2025 National Hill Climb Championships


Lidl acquires majority stake in Lidl-Trek


Supermarket giant Lidl has bought a majority stake in Lidl-Trek cycling team following the “successful conclusion” of the previous contract between Lidl and Trek. In a statement released this afternoon, the team confirmed Trek would retain a “significant stake” in the team and remains a co-owner and technical partner, but Lidl is now the majority stakeholder.


There’s no shortage of ambition, Lidl-Trek saying they want to become the most successful team in the sport. Thomas Rohregger, Lidl’s head of brand partnerships and head of cycling, said the brand acquiring a majority stake is a “monumental moment”.
“We approached this project with immense respect for the legacy that Lidl-Trek has built, and we are now formally and jointly committing to the next chapter,” he said. “The partnership is based on the strategic goal of transferring Lidl’s organizational excellence to Lidl-Trek and combining the expertise of both co-owners to achieve our ambitious goals. The combined resources and expertise are intended to accelerate the team’s performance development in the coming seasons.”
Taxi driver who left cyclist paralysed after jumping red light avoids jail


> Taxi driver who left cyclist paralysed after jumping red light avoids jail
All's right with the hill-climbing world as British national championships won on rim brakes (despite Andrew Feather's 5.4kg disc build)


Don’t fear, live blog readers — this isn’t the bit where we have to tell you our beloved national hill climb championships was won by a rider using disc brakes. Andrew Feather, fresh off beating Tadej Pogačar in the Slovenian’s own back yard, raced his admittedly rather gorgeous custom 5.4kg disc brake SWI Leve to a third place finish, but it was Harry MacFarlane who defended his national title on Bank Road in Matlock.
There was something of a surprise in the women’s race, Illi Gardner looking to win her fourth consecutive title but beaten by two seconds by Rachel Galler.
Between them Feather and Gardner have seven national hill-climbing titles, but MacFarlane and Galler fared better on the short, explosive effort Bank Road’s 800m double-digit thrash required, both worthy winners of their crowns.
In the open event, MacFarlane’s margin of victory was a comprehensive five seconds over Kieran Wynne-Cattanach, Feather in third a further half a second back. Madeleine Heywood completed the women’s podium, while newly crowned junior road race world champ Harry Hudson won the junior open event and Ruby Isaac the junior women’s. Even more impressive is that Hudson’s 2.20.8 would have seen him finish fifth, just .4 seconds off the main open podium. The future’s bright.
On the bike front, we took you through MacFarlane’s ride in Tech of the Week, the now two-time champ, building a 4.8kg hill-climbing machine for the big day, complete with his name cut out of the frame and plenty of weight trimming touches.


That included a bonded stem and handlebar. Not an integrated cockpit. A separate stem and bar fused together by a carbon expert, as well as a prototype hexagonal chainring, AliExpress lights that weight less than a gramme each, a “Frankenstein saddle”, and 770g wheels.


> “The craziest bike build you’ve never seen”: A 4.8kg hill-climbing dream
Galler, Gardner and Hudson were also all representing good ol’ rim brakes too so it’s good to see they ain’t dead yet. We’ll have a tech round-up and gallery to bring you a bit later on too which we’ll of course share on the blog as well. Stay tuned.
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Indeed - and before *that* Abellio who had the franchise for Scotrail had bikes ("Bike and Go") at (a few) stations. At the time I didn't understand this, not being cognizant of the Dutch OV Fiets system which presumably this was based on. Unfortunately I don't think many others understood it either. Given the small numbers of people braving Scotland's unfriendly and inconvenient cycling environments it was a case of "too soon for the location". Didn't help that these were unpowered public hire bikes (so robust and heavy * ) and some of the places they were offered are hilly. Plus there's the UK expectation of people cycling on the road accelerating like a motor vehicle and flowing with the traffic. * Ones I tried were something like the Batavus Personal bike with all the trimmings, racks etc. They had been sensibly given them a large number of gears (7) for a hire bike and who knows what you could carry. But even just carrying me they were ponderous.
Yes, clearly it would have been preferable for him never to have ridden a bike and driven everywhere, then he could have ended up an obese, bitter and spiteful specimen stuffing his face with crisps and fizzy pop sitting in front of his keyboard in mummy's basement leaving stupid comments on other people's obituaries. That would have been a much better use of a life.
"The Voi bikes have been much more successful than their predecessor, the Just Eat Cycles run by Serco which ended in 2021." The predecessor to VOI bikes in Edinburgh was not - as your version says - Voi bikes.
Wow. It takes a very miserable person to come to a cycling website, read an obituary of a very sweet, smart, kind man, and think that it's a good opportunity to post some sarcastic drivel, with a smiley no less. I bet your mom is real proud of you. Good luck with your weird little personal vendetta, I guess.
@Dodonline "better off adding capacity to roads" is a well-documented means to increase the volume of traffic overall. If they are built, people drive on them. Take a look at Los Angeles or the US highway system.
@Jitensha Oni I see no misogyny in that abstract. Many communities around the world, particularly those focused on religious faith, demand that women act and dress in what others might see as outdated, unnecessary and restrictive ways. E-bikes might have benefits for such women.
@cooji The attempts I made in infant school at drawing a house were more realistic and convincing than the above image.
@quiff Women in intensely faith-based communities perhaps still have to fulfil "traditional domestic responsibilities" and to dress in more traditionally feminine ways, so cycling is not seen as good for them.
@MaxiMinimalist Ah, the Reform commenter arrives.
This is all welcome but to manage expectations: The road budget will always be bigger, but to a first approximation that's where all the money goes (never mind all the auto advertising and lobbying). Spend per person per year: i think the new money would take England to about £15.8 I think NL spends around 30 euros. That's now, having already transformed their transport (they've recategorised their streets and roads to be monofunctional, they've a nationwide *network* of cycle routes not just a notional one, public transport is very good and integrated with cycling etc.) So what about here previously? Scotland I believe was at £40. London (and Wales now) mid twenties. UK average: was about £10 Most UK places excluding London / Wales: £1
17 thoughts on “All’s right with the hill-climbing world as British national championships won on rim brakes (despite Andrew Feather’s 5.4kg disc build); British pro runs super speedy 1:12 half marathon + more on the live blog”
“Cyclists attacked by axe
“Cyclists attacked by axe-wielding bike thieves“
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cjw9vgp72yeo
A nerd writes: according to
A nerd writes: according to my admittedly back-of-fag-packet calculation, MacFarlane’s 400g advantage would equate to around 0.4% and he beat Feather by 4% so we can’t say it was rim brakes what won it – he would still have won with discs.
You haven’t factored in the
You haven’t factored in the weight of all those holes in the brake rotors, though.
And don’t forget the
And don’t forget the rotational inertia of the holes.
Apparently that can lead to
Apparently that can lead to frame-dragging! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frame-dragging
Thanks for pointing that out.
Thanks for pointing that out. I didn’t even consider that the rotating holes could be producing magnetic fields. And imagine for a moment the impact on the bike and rider were those fields contra-rotating…
Ah I may have misunderstood.
Ah I may have misunderstood. Rotating holes don’t themselves generate magnetic fields, but they can twist and amplify existing magnetic fields in their surrounding plasma through processes like the Blandford-Znajek process, apparently. Did you consider the weight of the plasma?
I think my Garmin is LED
I think my Garmin is LED
Pub bike wrote:
Before or after re-injection?
Decisionmaker 1: This Thomas
Decisionmaker 1: This Thomas Mitchell appears to make a coherent argument with relevant points. Do you think this should be taken into account as part of the consultation?
Decisionmaker 2: Oh no, don’t worry; he’s ‘cyclists’ not ‘people’. We don’t need to give that any weight.
Ugh.
Ugh.
“… when a vehicle and bicycle collide.”
So bikes have become autonomous now too??
And
“Why isn’t the government focusing on cutting down the number of these deaths, rather than aiming at the low-hanging fruit and chastising the humble cyclist?”
I’m not sure going after cyclists is the low hanging fruit (ie, the quick win with good results in terms of reducing the major source of danger on our roads).
I’d consider that to be “the easy option”.
Wouldn’t it be going after dangerous driving that would be the low hanging fruit?
mitsky wrote:
Your mistake is assuming that their aim is to reduce road danger, when it’s actually to gain political popularity – from that perspective, demonising cyclists is low-hanging fruit.
True but given the source of
True but given the source of that statement I figured that it was incorrectly worded.
Cyclists are also an
Cyclists are also an additional source of income. What they don’t pay in road tax and gas will go to fines written up by zealous contracted traffick warders.
mitsky wrote:
So bikes have become autonomous now too??— mitsky
No, but they and other vehicles do still collide. This is the outcome, not the agency.
I’m not sure going after cyclists is the low hanging fruit (ie, the quick win with good results in terms of reducing the major source of danger on our roads).
I’d consider that to be “the easy option”.
Wouldn’t it be going after dangerous driving that would be the low hanging fruit?— mitsky
It all depends on perspective. If the fruit you are picking is the anticipated kudos of doing something/not doing nothing, then the populist whataboutery chants aimed at fixing cyclists point to your orchard.
The author is making a favourable point. I do think we can overdo the linguistic pedantry.
TBF, my car and bike collided
TBF, my car and bike collided. Was putting bike into van, and I didn’t park it well while opening the van door and it rolled into the driver’s door. No damage to either vehicle, but technically, it was a vehicle / cycle collision 🙂
I would like to see a review
I would like to see a review of 1g lights.