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Live blog: Angry letter and petition as amateur trade teams rail against UCI decision excluding them from Track World Cup; Two cyclists Chase the Sun from Thames Estuary to Bristol Channel – then ride all the way back + more
SUMMARY

ICYMI - some top stories from the weekend


If you haven’t been following cycling-related matters over the weekend, here’s some things you may have missed…
Egan Bernal wins Tour de Suisse to give Ineos potential Tour de France leadership headache
81-year-old becomes oldest woman to cycle from Land’s End to John O’Groats
Robert Hazeldean crowdfunding hits goal – but will it be enough?
Think LEJOG sounds tough? How about GBDURO 2019, a 2000km off-road version that's just four stages long...
The inaugural GBDURO is ran by The Racing Collective, and involves four totally unsupported stages in which riders have to go on and off-road over some punishing terrain, with over 10,000m of climbing on stage 1. Lachlan Morton of the EF Education pro team was the first to finished the 630km opening stage, forgoing a rest stop in Bristol after the first day and doing the whole 630km in one go. Here are the four stages:
Stage 1 – Land’s End to Ysbyty Cynfyn 630km // 10,900m
Stage 2 – Ysbyty Cynfyn to Garrigill 470km // 8,500m
Stage 3 – Garrigill to Fort Augustus 480km // 7,100m
Stage 4 – Fort Augustus to John O’Groats 380km // 4,200m
The route is newly developed and is known as the GBDIVIDE, created by a number of well-known stalwarts in the bikepacking community. There are no prizes as such, with the rider finishing the four stages in the lowest aggregate time receiving nothing more than some major kudos. Riders have to finish by 2nd July, meaning all competitors will need to ride over 200km a day to make it to the finisher’s party. You can follow the progress of all riders on the Dotwatcher website here, and find out more about GBDURO 2019 on the Racing Collective website.
Madison Genesis no more - team to fold after 2019 season ends
An iconic team of the domestic circuit with some of the kindest people I’ve met. British Cycling will miss @MadisonGenesis. Thank you for all you’ve done https://t.co/UmubnHJPVn
— Mark Cavendish (@MarkCavendish) June 24, 2019
An open letter reads: “It is with a great regret that we are announcing Madison Genesis will cease racing at the end of this season. In this open letter to everyone that has supported us over the last seven years, we want to offer an explanation and use it as an opportunity to show our gratitude to our fans and sponsors that made the dream a reality.
Who would have thought back in 2012, that an unknown team could go on to create so many incredible, lasting memories? We started out with a recently retired Roger Hammond at the helm in 2012 and achieved everything we wanted and more. With too many highlights to mention, a nod must be given to winning the Tour Series in 2015 and of course helping Connor Swift to his National Road Race title in July last year.
The team will continue to race until the end of the season, with a main goal very much being to ride at and be a force at the Tour of Britain in September. There will be plenty more opportunities to see Madison Genesis this year, not least of all the team ride out in Wales next month.
As a team, we would just like to take this opportunity to thank everyone for helping to make the last seven years truly unforgettable. Fans, riders, sponsors, mechanics, soigneurs, helpers, journalists, photographers, videographers and anyone in between, thank you for joining us on our journey.
See you on the road.
The Madison Genesis Team
Risky...
Peter Sagan has a wobble while attempting to get his shades clean, with a Dimension Data rider to his left looking a tad concerned. Priorities and all…
That feeling when a truck flies past you at breakneck speed? This is a pretty good way of demonstrating it...
What cyclists experience when a large vehicle passes them without proper distance/speed reduction…pic.twitter.com/ol0paLynK2
— Cycling Professor (@fietsprofessor) June 23, 2019
An unlikely source, but this vape cloud appears to give a pretty good idea of the turbulence felt when a big vehicle passes too close at speed.
Christoph Strasser wins record 6th Race Across America title; Team Backstedt take 8-person win
Read the full story here.
Crash forces James MacDonald to abandon 24-hour distance record attempt
James MacDonald’s bid to set a new 24-hour distance record for riding in a velodrome came to grief on Sunday after he crashed on some water he had dropped on the boards of the Geraint Thomas Velodrome in Newport.
The British rider was on course to break the record of 941.873km currently held by Austria’s Christoph Strasser – who coincidentally has just won a record sixth Race Across America title.
MacDonald, 48 carried on riding for a further five hours but was behind the pace and was forced to abandon, reports Reuters.
He said: “Well 20 months of preparation pretty much ended on the back straight after slipping on the water I’d spilled earlier.
“Did try for the 1,000km record but after the savage pace of the 24 and the injuries it was all too much.”
“I’d like to thank everyone who made this happen. Too many to list now. Need some rest. Thanks for all the amazing support both in Newport and online, it’s been a mad mad day!”
"Brutally destructive": Huub Wattbike publish open letter to UCI over their decision to exclude amateur teams from Track World Cup
An open letter to the @UCI_cycling President, @DLappartient #LongLiveDerbados pic.twitter.com/crBHrIcEeq
— Huub | Wattbike Test Team (@HuubWattbike) June 24, 2019
Huub-Wattbike will no longer be able to compete in the Track Cycling World Cup, an event they won in December, thanks to the UCI’s changes that excludes amateur teams from taking part.
In an lengthy open letter to UCI president David Lappartient they’ve now uploaded on social media, Huub Wattbike say: “As a multiple World Cup winning trade team which has broken records and developed world champions, the announced changes have sever implications for us and will ultimately kill off the existence of trade teams completely.
…”Furthermore and putting our personal situation aside, we feel the changes are brutally destructive to the sport we know and love and in this letter we want to argue why.”
The team then ask for an explanation, how athletes are supposed to develop outside of the national system and how riders, employees and sponsors of trade teams will be compensated. We’ll updated if we catch wind of a statement from the UCI on the matter.
Scotland's largest e-bike share scheme launches in the Forth Valley


With 120 bikes in its fleet available across the town of Falkirk and beyond, Forth Bike is now the biggest electric bike share scheme in Scotland. Full story on eBikeTips.
UCI amateur track team ban - now BEAT Cycling Club have started a petition to get the decision reversed
Our open letter to the @UCI_cycling, regarding the recently announced changes to track cycling. Join our fight: sign the petition and keep us on track! https://t.co/xntngWkUky pic.twitter.com/bU5nta2UG2
— BEAT Cycling Club (@beatcyclingclub) June 24, 2019
Joining Huub Wattbike in penning an open letter to voice their displeasure to the UCI, the team have also started a petition that’s got over 300 signatures in less than an hour. You can read their letter and sign the petition here.
Two cyclists did Saturday's 200-mile+ Chase the Sun ride from the Thames Estuary to the Bristol Channel - then rode back!
This is a decent weekend’s riding by anyone’s standards – two members of Kent-based Sheppey Velo, based in the town in Kent from where the annual Chase the Sun ride starts at sunrise on the longest Saturday of the year with the aim of reaching Burnham-on-Sea in Somerset by sunset, did the ride to the Bristol Channel … then got back on their bikes the following morning to head all the way back to the start point on the Thames Estuary.
Chapeau to Steve Evans and Sean Reid and a shout-out to anyone who completed the coast-to-coast ride, which perhaps doesn’t get the same attention as some other events of a similar nature when the daylight is at its longest.
Check that elevation gain, too!




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"All that's required is an to roads policing" - that's a big all... Although no doubt the "idiots just keep coming" aspect does apply: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cz9lel2wz93o "Man charged after car crashes through bowling alley" - luckily they only skittled over skittles.
Almost any change to roads and streets is accompanied by a period of heightened danger, and in the UK "look out for cyclists" will need to be learned... practically. And over the time it takes for cyclists to become a regular feature. OTOH once (if...) good designs are in and frequent enough such that drivers encounter them AND the cyclists on them regularly (another big if) I don't think they should be much more difficult than a footway to deal with. These things are all over NL - don't have the collision stats but they should. (NL isn't perfect but collecting info on the safety of designs to feed back into better designs as required is part of the "sustainable safety" philosophy - if they're really a killer I think they'd be altering these.)
I'm in the happy position of agreeing with everybody here! I've never considered a bike with a stand, yet I'm impressed by the ingenuity and adaptability of this axle. I tow a Yak Bob with a Robert Axle, employing my El Cheapo Vitus gravel bike and I just have to be very careful where I stop. Hedges are generally a dead loss, and I seek walls, telegraph poles and signposts and generally lean the widest part of the Bob against it. One very awkward task is removing the two steel pins which lock the trailer arms onto the special mounting slots on the Robert axle, and when you have one out, the sodding weight in the trailer can twist the whole caboodle and bend the Bob fitting before you can get the other out and unhitch. I doubt if a stand would help with that. You can imagine that this combo is a real pain when you have to get it over the bridge at railway stations, and it nearly resulted in Merseyrail nearly parting me and the trailer on the platform from the bike on the train. It's a long story for another time. Another axle example recently featured on here, with a 12mm front axle bearing the Herculean weight limit of a monster American front rack.
This has nothing to do with the type of bike - it's the type of behaviour that's the problem. Banning the sale of such bikes will not curtail the behaviour. They'll just find another type of vehicle and continue to drive dangerously as there's such a lack of enforcement. I'd sooner see them ban the bally. But really, all that's required is an improvement to roads policing.
The EAPC Bill is welcome, but full of holes. What's to stop an overpowered but temporarily limited e-bike being sold and subsequently delimited? This is often a trivial process.
@KiwiMike Yeah, in my over four decades of riding all over Europe I've never 'been for a ride in the countryside'. That must be it. Or, and I know this is a wild concept, you just accept that I just voiced my personal experiences and never missed a kickstand, like I wrote. Anyway, what's the big horror of laying your bike on its side for the very few occasions where there is nothing to lean your bike against?
They may have looked, but did they see?
Ds2025: where they are going wrong is that they are crushing the motorbike rather than the person sat on top of it. If they did the latter this issue would be solved in less than 24 hours.
I came this way today with the car boot sale in operation. There was a marshal at the entrance, who stopped a car turning right across the cycleway as I was approaching. So that certainly works. I think it necessary for the marshal to be there, I couldn't say if the driver would have turned if he hadn't been there but you always have to suspect the worst. Unfortunately there is no marshal at the exit, and there was certainly a car stopped across the cycleway as I was approaching it. But he pulled onto the road before I reached it, and the following car stayed off the cycleway as I went through. Ideally there should have been a marshal there too. On the whole, though, it's a really high standard piece of infrastructure. Just a pity it doesn't extend a bit further.
“absolute carnage” So right! Just look at the bodies piled up, blood running in the gutters and injured people limping away. It's a bit of a problem with a road, delaying some people for minutes at a time: it isn't carnage, let alone 'absolute carnage'. Anyone who exaggerates so ridiculously really shouldn't be allowed to comment in public, unless they want to demonstrate their idiocy to all and sundry.
1 thought on “Live blog: Angry letter and petition as amateur trade teams rail against UCI decision excluding them from Track World Cup; Two cyclists Chase the Sun from Thames Estuary to Bristol Channel – then ride all the way back + more”
Just nipping out for a 425
Just nipping out for a 425 mile bike ride.. see you later…