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Pedestrians told to “leave cycle paths free for cyclists” after ‘distracted’ walkers cause two crashes in minutes on same bike lane; Tour de France boss slams “dirty” hotel complaints as Van der Poel “angry” at organisers’ chateau + more on the live blog
SUMMARY

Pedestrians told to “leave cycle paths free for cyclists” after ‘distracted’ walkers cause two crashes in the space of a few minutes on same bike lane
Quick, someone alert the Daily Telegraph, I have a story for them… Oh, wait.
In news that almost certainly won’t get published on the front page of your favourite anti-cycling broadsheet, Gloucestershire’s Police and Crime Commissioner’s office has called on road users to “leave cycle paths free for cyclists”, after two crashes took place within minutes of each other on the same bike lane last week.
Both incidents took place last Wednesday on the protected cycle lane on the Cheltenham Road in Gloucester, and involved pedestrians who stepped out into the path of oncoming cyclists.

The first crash saw a schoolchild walk out in front of a cyclist, leaving the rider with a cut elbow, Gloucestershire Live reports.
And while that cyclist was being attended to by passers-by, another pedestrian, reportedly wearing headphones and using their phone, walked onto the same cycle lane without looking, causing a cyclist to crash into them.
In response to the two back-to-back crashes, Nick Evans, the chair of Gloucestershire’s Road Safety Partnership and the county’s deputy police and crime commissioner, called on all road users to avoid distractions and look out for each other.
“It is tempting to be distracted or let our impatience get the better of us while we’re using the roads, but some consideration and tolerance for others helps avoid injuries and prevents tensions running high,” he said.
“Whether it’s leaving cycle paths free for cyclists, or hard shoulders free for emergency vehicles we all know the rules of the road. Allowing a little extra time, not being distracted by mobile phones and showing consideration for others ultimately helps keep our roads safe.”

Meanwhile, Roger Whyborn, the cabinet member for road safety at Gloucestershire County Council, added: “Road safety is everyone’s responsibility. Whether you are driving, cycling or walking, paying attention to your surroundings and showing consideration for other road users can make a real difference.”
In case you were wondering, yes, the cycle lane on the Cheltenham Road in Gloucester does sound familiar.
That’s the stretch of infrastructure which found itself at the centre of unfounded social media speculation and some conspiracy theories back in 2024, after residents claimed that the new cycle lane was too wide and had made the road too narrow for vehicles, meaning it would need to be dug up again.
However, the false claims were promptly rubbished by the local authority who said there was no such issue, though that didn’t stop some disgruntled locals from claiming that the project, part of the council’s ambitious ‘Gloucestershire Cycle Spine’ cycle lane scheme, “had caused nothing but problems and stress”.

More recently, the scheme sparked another social media debate, when one van driver (on his phone, unsurprisingly) filmed a cyclist “ignoring” the Cheltenham Road cycle path by riding on the road and “holding up traffic”.
However, some local cyclists were on hand to point out that the loose stones used to surface that section of the bike lane may have inspired his choice of route. Or the threat of oblivious pedestrians walking out in front of him, too…
“If we want the race to visit beautiful parts of France and have beautiful stages, sometimes there aren’t five-star hotels everywhere”: Tour de France boss Christian Prudhomme hits back at hotel complaints and insists ASO booking system ensures equality – after Mathieu Van der Poel “super angry” at organisers’ chateau stay
It turns out Christian Prudhomme hasn’t taken too kindly to all the accommodation-related complaints at this year’s Tour de France.
The controversy surrounding the state of some of ASO’s chosen team hotels for the race – sparked by clips and photos of Uno-X Mobility’s dingy but admittedly spacious lodgings in Le Lioran (and some of their riders’ decision to sleep on the balcony instead of their hot, cobweb-infested room) – continued last night, with Alpecin-Premier Tech joining the chorus of sanitary disapproval.
Speaking to Het Nieuwsblad, Alpecin manager Philip Roodhooft, whose team also stayed at the Village Montanha hotel in Le Liora alongside Uno-X and Picnic PostNL, said: “I don’t want to make too much of a fuss about it, and until two days ago the general consensus was that the hotels weren’t too bad this year, but this was still below standard.
“I fully understand that there aren’t many places to stay in this region, but there are certain things that are easy to fix. Make sure it is clean and that there is some decent protection against the sun and insects. And when you see the efforts the riders have to make, air conditioning really should be standard. It is a matter of respect from the organisation towards the riders to do something about it.”

“You surely saw in the photos what the bedrooms looked like,” Mathieu van der Poel’s father Adri, who works for Alpecin at the race, added.
“There were photos of cockroaches. When you see all the investments teams are making, I don’t think this fits the Tour. I understand that we are in a region with limited accommodation, but you still have to ask yourself if there isn’t a different solution. Perhaps the organisation should have stopped by themselves.
“We bring our own mattresses and portable air conditioning units, but there were plenty of other things wrong. Mould, cockroaches, the food for the staff. The team arranges meals for the riders, but not for the support staff.”

Mathieu himself, meanwhile, was said to be “super angry” when he discovered that the Tour organisers were staying in a chateau just down the road. Perhaps he could have slept in his Lambo, instead?
In any case, Tour chief Prudhomme has defended ASO’s booking system for the race, the organisers responsible for booking and distributing the hotel rooms for the entire race, securing around 1,900 beds for the entire three weeks.
As part of that system, ASO tries to dish out the rooms equally based on quality, though in some parts of France that balance can be skewed at times.

“If we want the race to visit beautiful parts of France and have beautiful stages, it means that sometimes there aren’t five-star hotels everywhere,” Prudhomme told French radio station ICI.
“We’re the only ones who can guarantee equality amongst the teams at the Tour,” he added, noting that leaving squads to book their own hotels would give an advantage to the richest teams.
“At the end of the Tour, all the teams will have the same number of hotel stars.”
‘Alright Tadej, completely kill off the Tour, but make it look fun’
Who cares if he’s annihilating the best riders in the world anytime the road heads upwards, or that he’s sucked any semblance of suspense out of the GC before the Tour hits its halfway mark? His hair’s yellow and he can do wheelies, so everything’s fine. It’s… fine.
On Blue Bayou (on a bike)
Here on the live blog, we love a tangential reference to cycling. And they don’t get much more tangential than this:
Singer Linda Ronstadt barefoot in a bike shop in 1978
Happy #BicycleBirthday, Linda!
Born July 15, 1946— Cool Bike Art (@coolbikeart1.bsky.social) July 15, 2026 at 10:39 AM
To be fair, she did record a tune called Bicycle Song with her early band the Stone Poneys, so the connections are adding up. Anyway, happy birthday to cyclist Linda Ronstadt!
“The machines we are seizing are not bicycles”
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@mdavidford I think that's called Entrapment!
@mdavidford I think that's called Entrapment!
"Hello mate - are you on the M40?" "Yes" "OK - just to let you know you can expect a prosecution for using your phone while driving..."
How unaware was this driver? There should be almost nothing to distract a driver on motorways... Or was he on his phone...? "Police ring van driver blocking emergency response" https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/videos/cjwgwv1wznzo
Have they considered having hydration breaks? /s
@Mr Blackbird I also can’t understand why any cycling fans would boo Pogacar They're not so much fans as morons. Wasn't MvdP booed even in the Low Countries, his home turf, because he kept winning? These are the same type of despicable people as those who riot and destroy on any pretext?
£158?!! I understand that it's premium, but I've got a decent bar bag that cost me £20 10 years ago, and is still only £25 now. It's got attachment points for accessories, uses a pretty stable foam-block+strap approach and uses a cradle to hold the bar roll, so is hugely versatile - pop flipflops, poles, a baguette, whatever in the cradle and the bar roll still fits. For me, I truly can't see how £158 is justified, even if it's a delightful bag!
So much of cycling safety outcomes is just dictated by luck. We're constantly put into dangerous situations that are only OK because there was no bad luck involved. This is why cyclists don't ride in door zones. This is why cyclists want you to always give them space when you are waiting to overtake and when you overtake. This is why the police need to act on bad driving when its reported and doesn't result in an accident, because that exact same driving does result in accidents when someones luck runs out. I can't count the number of times I am forced into the door zone of parked cars because drivers will not yield to a cyclist. They don't give a shit that I have 2 young children on the back. This is why it boils my piss when you see stories about drivers being given lenient sentences for bad driving because "it was a one off". "It was an accident". No, it was a pattern of dangerous driving that was finally rewarded with hurting someone.
No shit Sherlock. Come to that a push bike is worse for the environment and climate change than walking, and staying at home sitting in a chair breathing as lightly as possible is better for the environment than either. A car is worse for the environment than an ebike. Many people who for a wide variety of reasons feel they can't give up their cars for a push bike do feel able to give up their cars, or at least effect a major reduction in their usage, by employing an ebike. Should we encourage this more environmentally friendly lifestyle (one which incidentally is much better for us as cyclists because it reduces the number of cars on the road) or self righteously and snobbishly say it's all greenwashing and you have to do exactly what we do or nothing?

4 thoughts on “Pedestrians told to “leave cycle paths free for cyclists” after ‘distracted’ walkers cause two crashes in minutes on same bike lane; Tour de France boss slams “dirty” hotel complaints as Van der Poel “angry” at organisers’ chateau + more on the live blog”
How unaware was this driver?
There should be almost nothing to distract a driver on motorways…
Or was he on his phone…?
“Police ring van driver blocking emergency response”
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/videos/cjwgwv1wznzo
“Hello mate – are you on the M40?”
“Yes”
“OK – just to let you know you can expect a prosecution for using your phone while driving…”
@mdavidford
I think that’s called Entrapment!
@mdavidford
I think that’s called Entrapment!