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  • News
Pro-Palestine protests in Madrid, 2025 Vuelta
Pro-Palestine protests in Madrid, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

UCI denounces Vuelta Palestine protesters’ “militant actions” and blasts Spanish government for “exploiting sport for political purposes”; Ineos rider says protests’ success “very bad for cycling”; Is Tom Pidcock a Tour contender? + more on the live blog

It’s Monday, it’s raining (again), but at least Ryan Mallon’s back with all the cycling news and views you need to get you ready for the week ahead. That’s a positive, right?
  • by Ryan Mallon
Mon, Sep 15, 2025 09:12
50

SUMMARY

  • “Sport is increasingly being used as a platform to address social issues. But the participants cannot become victims of this debate”: More Vuelta protest reaction, as red jersey Jonas Vingegaard says cancelled Madrid stage a “shame”
  • More Than A Cyclist teams up with West Midlands Fire Service for brilliant new fire engine campaign
  • What do you do when faced with bins blocking the bike lane? Use them to make a protected lane, of course
  • Meanwhile, over in Montréal…
  • From string-spoked wheels and speedy gravel bikes to a £950 storage unit, here’s a first look at the latest gravel-focused tech we have in for review at the road.cc office…
  • Another huge protest hits a bike race, as pro-Palestine cow invades course in attempt to disrupt the Tour of Romania
  • How to deal with pavement and bike lane parking, Spanish style
  • “Our cool box made the Vuelta podium”: Strong Friday evening crit vibes as teams organise DIY cooler-based podium ceremony in car park – complete with Tom Pidcock’s sausage dogs
  • “UK roundabouts are designed to let cars drive through at high speed; pedestrians and cyclists are an afterthought”
  • POLL: Should Tom Pidcock now be considered a real grand tour contender?
  • “Now I can sit in the sun and not need to worry about it”: Pidcock happy to be “free of being on a schedule every day” after Vuelta and admits “third place feels like a win”
  • “There were way more cyclists, but there weren’t way more collisions”
  • “Before, I didn’t enjoy Grand Tours. This is a big deal, it’s a weight off my shoulders”: Tom Pidcock says breakthrough Vuelta third place a “turning point”
  • “The protesters got what they wanted – that’s very bad for cycling”: Ineos rider claims protests “will only get worse” after final Vuelta stage scrapped amid Madrid chaos – “You can’t just pretend nothing is happening”
  • UCI denounces Vuelta Palestine protesters’ “militant actions” and takes swipe at Spanish government for “exploiting sport for political purposes” and hindering race
Pro-Palestine protests in Madrid, 2025 Vuelta
Pro-Palestine protests in Madrid, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)
15 September 2025, 09:12
Jonas Vinegaard and Jay Vine, stage 21, 2025 Vuelta
Jonas Vinegaard and Jay Vine, stage 21, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: ASO/Unipublic /Cxcling/ Antonio Baixauli)

“Sport is increasingly being used as a platform to address social issues. But the participants cannot become victims of this debate”: More Vuelta protest reaction, as red jersey Jonas Vingegaard says cancelled Madrid stage a “shame”

Jonas Vingegaard’s first ever Vuelta a España win, and third career grand tour victory, probably didn’t turn out as he had imagined it (unless the Dane has a wild imagination).

After sealing the deal on Saturday with an imperious ride on Bola del Mundo, the Visma-Lease a Bike leader was denied the opportunity to properly celebrate his first three-week success since the 2023 Tour de France, at least in the traditional, official sense, anyway.

The pro-Palestine protests which engulfed the finishing circuit in Madrid forced both the cancellation of the stage and the official podium ceremony in the centre of the Spanish capital, a perhaps inevitable development Vingegaard later described as a “shame”.

Jonas Vinegaard and Mads Pedersen, stage 21, 2025 Vuelta
Jonas Vinegaard and Mads Pedersen, stage 21, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: ASO/Unipublic /Cxcling/ Antonio Baixauli)
Jonas Vinegaard and Mads Pedersen, stage 21, 2025 Vuelta
Jonas Vinegaard and Mads Pedersen, stage 21, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: ASO/Unipublic /Cxcling/ Antonio Baixauli)

ASO/Unipublic /Cxcling/ Antonio Baixauli

“It’s a pity that such a moment of eternity was taken from us,” Vingegaard said in a statement issued by Visma-Lease a Bike.

“I was looking forward to celebrating this overall win with my team and the fans. Everyone has the right to protest, but it’s a shame that it has to happen here and prevents us from finishing the race.”

Vingegaard’s Visma boss Richard Plugge, meanwhile, echoed his star rider’s sentiments on social media this morning – but warned that more needs to be done to ensure that races won’t be brought to a similar grinding halt in the future.

“Nowadays, sport is increasingly being used as a platform to address social issues,” Plugge wrote.

“We must realise that sport is essentially about connection. It can build bridges and foster mutual understanding. But the participants must be protected: they cannot become victims of this debate.”

🚨 ÚLTIMA HORA | Cientos de activistas por Palestina ocupan la calzada del recorrido en los últimos kilómetros de la última etapa de @lavuelta a la altura de Atocha

🚔 Han tirado las vallas y la Policía intenta reducirlos

🎙️ Informa @AlbertoArauzM pic.twitter.com/ZZxdvIYLSv

— Tiempo de Juego (@tjcope) September 14, 2025

However, Spain’s biggest rider Juan Ayuso – who enjoyed a turbulent Vuelta, punctuated by a rift with UAE Team Emirates, who he’s leaving next season, and two stage wins – was even more forthright.

“There are many sports where Israeli teams compete, and it only seems that the Vuelta is the one being affected,” Ayuso said after protesters tried to block the road and run in front of riders on Saturday.

“I support any protest, but when they enter the road, they lost my respect.”

15 September 2025, 09:12

More Than A Cyclist teams up with West Midlands Fire Service for brilliant new fire engine campaign

When it comes to cycling road safety campaigns, there’s no missing this one.

More Than A Cyclist, the group behind 2023’s visceral ‘Bloody Cyclists’ campaign, has teamed up with West Midlands Fire Service to deck out a fire tender at Hay Mills station with one of their eye-catching, though-provoking images.

 
 
 
 
View this post on Instagram
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by More than a cyclist (@morethanacyclist)

“Stuart is a firefighter. He also rides a bike. Stuart is #morethanacyclist,” the group wrote. “Remember to give people who ride bicycles on the road space when you pass.”

Powerful stuff, as always. For more on More Than A Cyclist, check out our podcast interview with the campaign’s Rob Anderson:

> Seeing the person behind the cyclist: More Than A Cyclist campaign aims to inspire behaviour change with powerful new film

15 September 2025, 09:12

What do you do when faced with bins blocking the bike lane? Use them to make a protected lane, of course

Top thinking here from Minnesota-based cyclist, the Pedalling Professor:

When life gives you lemons…. Make a pop-up separated bike lane!

[image or embed]

— Pedaling Professor (@pedalingprof.bsky.social) September 13, 2025 at 2:24 PM

Though I reckon something a bit more permanent would be preferable.

(Although it probably still wouldn’t stop the neighbours from leaving their bins in the cycle lane. Is there such a thing as bin segregation? I’ll look into it…)

15 September 2025, 09:12

Meanwhile, over in Montréal…

The Vuelta may have come to an unceremonious halt, but at least there was still some racing on last night, courtesy of the GP Montréal (which wasn’t immune to some anti-Israel protests either, it must be said).

Across the pond, UAE Team Emirates made it win number 85 of the season through Brandon McNulty, equalling the record set by Mark Cavendish and André Greipel’s rampant HTC-Columbia squad back in 2009.

(To put things into perspective, Jonas Vingegaard’s Vuelta win means that Visma-Lease a Bike, UAE’s traditional rivals, currently have 38 wins in 2025.)

 
 
 
 
View this post on Instagram
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Grands Prix Cyclistes (@grandsprixcyclistes)

And, just to underline the squad’s dominance, that record-equalling win came courtesy of a truly authoritative one-two, as McNulty and his world champion teammate Tadej Pogačar (who else) worked over Quinn Simmons on the final two laps.

Pogačar then teed up his American colleague for the victory, the images of the pair cruising across the line, a minute ahead of the rest, the perfect summary of a season of complete and utter dominance.

Well, at least we saw Alaphilippe winning on Friday…

15 September 2025, 09:12

From string-spoked wheels and speedy gravel bikes to a £950 storage unit, here’s a first look at the latest gravel-focused tech we have in for review at the road.cc office…

FiveCoolThings-2025-09-15
FiveCoolThings-2025-09-15 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)
FiveCoolThings-2025-09-15
FiveCoolThings-2025-09-15 (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

> Five cool gravel things coming soon from Cervelo, Scribe, Favero, Zefal and Trimetals

15 September 2025, 09:12

Another huge protest hits a bike race, as pro-Palestine cow invades course in attempt to disrupt the Tour of Romania

Move over Madrid and Montréal, this is how you disrupt a bike race, old-school, bovine-style:

Huge protest in @turulromaniei ! A cow tried to enter in the peloton! 😱🐮 Fortunately no cyclist was injured, you can hear them laughing but that was REALLY close. La vaca Lola. 😂#TurulRomaniei pic.twitter.com/K2woi7ftLm

— Mihai Simion (@faustocoppi60) September 12, 2025

That cow knew what he was doing, patiently waiting for the peloton to arrive before darting across the road. A certain section of the internet must be up in arms…

15 September 2025, 09:12

How to deal with pavement and bike lane parking, Spanish style

The cattle theme continues on the live blog today, thanks to this Guadalajara-based bull – who must be a big active travel campaigner in his spare time:

Watch this video of an angry cyclist dealing with a car that is parked blocking the bike lane.

[image or embed]

— Steven Lucy (@slucy.bsky.social) September 14, 2025 at 2:38 PM

Oi, can’t park there, mate. 

15 September 2025, 09:12

“Our cool box made the Vuelta podium”: Strong Friday evening crit vibes as teams organise DIY cooler-based podium ceremony in car park – complete with Tom Pidcock’s sausage dogs

No official podium ceremony? No problem.

The actual Vuelta podium ceremony with national anthem and featuring Pidcocks two sausage dogs.

I swear this is so much better than the real one 😭 So chaotic haha 😍

(shitty quality to be able to upload sorry)https://t.co/gC5oPMk9Vz pic.twitter.com/RqekOIXvvw

— Olsen (@OlsenCycling) September 14, 2025

The Vuelta organisers may have called off the traditional post-race festivities and packed up the massive stage in front of Madrid’s Plaza de Cibeles, but that wasn’t going to stop the teams and riders cracking open the sparkling wine and celebrating three weeks of tough racing.

So, in proper evening crit-style, everyone headed to a car park to organise their own DIY podium ceremony.

Up went the makeshift sponsor backdrop, adding to the hastily organised local amateur race vibes, and in went three drinks coolers, one suitably bigger than the rest, 1, 2, and 3 scrawled on each:

Vuelta podium coolers
Vuelta podium coolers (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)
Vuelta podium coolers
Vuelta podium coolers (Image Credit: Farrelly Atkinson)

Now that’s what I call a proper podium, none of this fancy nonsense.

“Our cool box made the Vuelta podium,” one Visma-Lease a Bike staff member joked last night.

And while the layout may have been rudimentary, the riders were still treated to a full and proper podium ceremony (without the awkward handshaking with dignitaries, thankfully), as the top three and all the classification winners got their moment in the spotlight. Or should that be headlight?

Even Tom Pidcock’s sausage dogs, Acorn and Chestnut got involved, enjoying their owner’s first taste of grand tour podium success (though I’m sure they were left wondering what the big deal was all about).

 
 
 
 
View this post on Instagram
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Chestnut & Acorn (@thenutsisters)

“This is why we love cycling,” Visma said on Instagram.

True – that was easily the most watchable podium presentation I’ve seen since Geraint Thomas dropped the mic.

Who needs an impressive architectural backdrop when you have a car park and a pop-up stand?

15 September 2025, 09:12

“UK roundabouts are designed to let cars drive through at high speed; pedestrians and cyclists are an afterthought”

Shepherds Hill Roundabout
Shepherds Hill Roundabout (Image Credit: Google)
Shepherds Hill Roundabout
Shepherds Hill Roundabout (Image Credit: Google)

> Residents call for road safety action after cyclist dies in collision on “accident hotspot” roundabout that has seen over 70 crashes in past 25 years

15 September 2025, 09:12
Tom Pidcock, stage 11, 2025 Vuelta, Bilbao
Tom Pidcock, stage 11, 2025 Vuelta, Bilbao (Image Credit: Unipublic / Cxcling / Antonio Baixauli)

POLL: Should Tom Pidcock now be considered a real grand tour contender?

Is the British star now a true three-weeker after his Vuelta podium? Or was his Spanish ride a flash in the pan, and he should stick to stage hunting, the classics, cyclocross, mountain biking, and the rest?

I’ll leave this one to you lot…

Super Survey

15 September 2025, 09:12
zw-101368.jpg
zw-101368 (Image Credit: Zac WiLLIAMS SWpix.com)

“Now I can sit in the sun and not need to worry about it”: Pidcock happy to be “free of being on a schedule every day” after Vuelta and admits “third place feels like a win”

More from Camp Pidcock this afternoon, with Tom telling his Q36.5 team this afternoon that, after three weeks of intense concentration and stress, he now just wants to sit in the sun and not think about plans or schedules for a while, thank you very much.

The 26-year-old also told the team’s website today that his third place at the Vuelta is the biggest achievement of his career, so far – which is big talk coming from a man who’s won Strade Bianche, Amstel Gold, and on Alpe d’Huez.

“I feel proud. I feel happy. Think the biggest thing is now I’m free of being on a schedule every day, focused on recovering, and now I can sit in the sun and not need to worry about it,” he said.

“It’s probably the biggest achievement of my career so far… this third place feels like a win. But it also makes me believe I could fight for more in the future.”

Tom Pidcock speaking to reporters, stage nine, 2025 Vuelta a España
Tom Pidcock speaking to reporters, stage nine, 2025 Vuelta a España (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)
Tom Pidcock speaking to reporters, stage nine, 2025 Vuelta a España
Tom Pidcock speaking to reporters, stage nine, 2025 Vuelta a España (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

Zac Williams/SWpix.com

And, it’s fair to say, Pidcock’s Vuelta performance has certainly justified the faith placed him by Q36.5, who signed him last winter following the British star’s acrimonious departure from Ineos.

“It’s still a bit surreal to have a rider on the team who now stands amongst the greats of cycling on a grand tour podium,” Q36.5’s general manager Doug Ryder added.

“It’s remarkable we are now one of the teams who have a rider who achieved that podium place after a gruelling three weeks of intense racing.

“Our goal was a top ten, our dream a top five, but a podium is exceeding all our dreams. And all that in only our second grand tour since Q36.5 Pro Cycling Team started three years ago.”

Q36.5 and Tom Pidcock, stage 21, 2025 Vuelta
Q36 (Image Credit: SprintCyclingAgency)
Q36.5 and Tom Pidcock, stage 21, 2025 Vuelta
Q36 (Image Credit: SprintCyclingAgency)

SprintCyclingAgency

He continued: “This has always been a dream in all the teams we have run throughout the years and for many years it seemed an unattainable dream. It’s a privilege to now have built something with all our partners and with our incredibly professional staff members to attract a rider like Tom Pidcock.

“We have been able to create an environment where one of the best riders in the world feels comfortable, valued and supported by some of the most incredible people in the cycling business. This achievement by Tom has lifted the entire team.

“ With the right people, the right environment and the right culture you can attract the best of the best, on and off the bike. That makes me very proud of this team and everyone involved.”

15 September 2025, 09:12

“There were way more cyclists, but there weren’t way more collisions”

Last word on last week’s tube strike cycling revolution in London, from climate scientist David Ho:

📺 At the end of an unprecedented week for cycling in the capital, LCC CEO Tom Fyans caught up with ITV London to chat the impact and if London is ready for more cycling… 👇

[image or embed]

— London Cycling Campaign (@londoncycling.bsky.social) September 13, 2025 at 9:39 AM

“It’s important to point out that framing this as ‘more cyclists = more collisions’ is misleading, because it’s not a linear increase,” Ho said in response to ITV’s interview with Tom Fyans from the London Cycling Campaign.

“There were way more cyclists, but there weren’t way more collisions. Cycling good.”

 

15 September 2025, 09:12
Tom Pidcock, stage 14, 2025 Vuelta
Tom Pidcock, stage 14, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

“Before, I didn’t enjoy Grand Tours. This is a big deal, it’s a weight off my shoulders”: Tom Pidcock says breakthrough Vuelta third place a “turning point”

Is Tom Pidcock now a bona-fide grand tour contender?

For basically the entirety of his career so far, it’s been a case of ‘almost, but not quite’ for the multidisciplinary star when it comes to cycling’s three-week events.

Sure, he’s a perennial contender at most one-day classics. Sure, he can turn up on certain big days, like on Alpe d’Huez at the 2022 Tour de France. But stringing it all together for 21 stages, keeping that focus, reining in those attacking instincts – that all seemed beyond Pidcock.

Case in point: His best overall result at a grand tour before this year was 13th, at the 2023 Tour, where he finished almost 48 minutes down on Jonas Vingegaard. It’s a big leap from there to being a reliable podium contender. His previous best result at any WorldTour stage race was sixth, at last year’s Tour de Suisse.

The Q36.5 leader’s first crack at a grand tour for a new team, May’s Giro d’Italia, went largely as expected, then. A lively start, but no stage wins, fizzled out, and Pidcock faded in the high mountains of the final week, eventually finishing 16th on GC, again three-quarters of an hour behind winner Simon Yates.

Tom Pidcock, stage 20, 2025 Vuelta
Tom Pidcock, stage 20, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)
Tom Pidcock, stage 20, 2025 Vuelta
Tom Pidcock, stage 20, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

Zac Williams/SWpix.com

But at the Vuelta, something changed. The 26-year-old was remarkably consistent, being in the right place at the right time and stepping up a level in the mountains. By the first day, he was fourth overall, after finishing a very impressive second on Valdezcaray behind Vingegaard, outsprinting João Almeida to the line.

A week later in Bilbao – when a stage win was taken from his grasp due to the protests in the Basque city – he moved up to third.

And, despite the best efforts of Jai Hindley, he stayed there. The double Olympic champion’s performances on the summit finishes were impeccable, never conceding more than 40 seconds to Hindley, and that was only on the fearsome Angliru. On basically every other mountain day, he was there or thereabouts.

Riding a more conservative race that he was used to, Pidcock limited his losses when needed, and demonstrated a whole new side of his capabilities, even putting time into Hindley on the shortened time trial in Valladolid, an effort he described as a career best against the clock.

Tom Pidcock, stage 20, 2025 Vuelta
Tom Pidcock, stage 20, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)
Tom Pidcock, stage 20, 2025 Vuelta
Tom Pidcock, stage 20, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

Zac Williams/SWpix.com

To say his final podium place in Madrid – this time just three minutes down on Vingegaard – is a breakthrough is an understatement.

By finishing third at the Vuelta, Pidcock is the first male Olympic mountain bike champion to secure a podium at a grand tour. He’s also the first rider to podium at a three-weeker for second-tier team since Ezequiel Mosquera at the 2010 Vuelta (though the Xacobeo-Galicia rider was later stripped of that result for doping).

And it’s easy to forget, thanks to the wave of British success over the past 15 years, but Pidcock is only the tenth British male to finish on the podium of a grand tour ever.

When it comes to what Tom Pidcock is capable of, it’s fair to say the ceiling is well and truly smashed.

Jonas Vingegaard, Joao Almeida, and Tom Pidcock, stage 21, 2025 Vuelta
Jonas Vingegaard, Joao Almeida, and Tom Pidcock, stage 21, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Unipublic / Cxcling / Antonio Baixauli)
Jonas Vingegaard, Joao Almeida, and Tom Pidcock, stage 21, 2025 Vuelta
Jonas Vingegaard, Joao Almeida, and Tom Pidcock, stage 21, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Unipublic / Cxcling / Antonio Baixauli)

Unipublic / Cxcling / Antonio Baixauli

“I think there’s been so much talk around what I can do in grand tours and expectation – not really coming from myself to be honest, more from other people – this is a big deal, that I’ve shown that I can perform,” the 26-year-old told Cyclingnews after his podium-sealing ride on Bola del Mundo on Saturday.

“Okay, I’m a way off winning, but that doesn’t mean I won’t be closer in the future. I think in such a short time period, what we’ve achieved as a team is evident now I’m on the podium. So I can only be happy and positive and look forward to what I will do in the future.”

He continued: “Before, I didn’t enjoy Grand Tours, it was not so much fun. So it is definitely something that has changed that perspective and showed me I can achieve what people closest to me believe I can and my team believes I can. It’s a relief, almost – a weight off my shoulders.”

Tom Pidcock and Jonas Vingegaard, stage 11, 2025 Vuelta, Bilbao
Tom Pidcock and Jonas Vingegaard, stage 11, 2025 Vuelta, Bilbao (Image Credit: Unipublic / Cxcling / Antonio Baixauli)
Tom Pidcock and Jonas Vingegaard, stage 11, 2025 Vuelta, Bilbao
Tom Pidcock and Jonas Vingegaard, stage 11, 2025 Vuelta, Bilbao (Image Credit: Unipublic / Cxcling / Antonio Baixauli)

Unipublic / Cxcling / Antonio Baixauli

Asked whether he found, as he alluded to earlier in the race, GC racing dull, Pidcock said: “I wouldn’t say boring, but it can be tedious, yeah, and monotonous. You have to play safe, and do the boring option, kind of. It’s not as spontaneous and erratic, which is a more enjoyable way to race, so it’s kind of racing safe.”

“Doug [Ryder, Q36.5 team owner] just told me that since 2000, we’re the only ProConti team to stand on the podium in a Grand Tour, so it’s a big deal. And to be a guest team, the 23rd team in the race, it’s a big deal for sure.”

It is a big deal, Tom – and one that could potentially shape his career for years to come.

15 September 2025, 09:12

“The protesters got what they wanted – that’s very bad for cycling”: Ineos rider claims protests “will only get worse” after final Vuelta stage scrapped amid Madrid chaos – “You can’t just pretend nothing is happening”

The Vuelta a España, fittingly for a race that lurched helplessly from one crisis to another for much of its three weeks on the road, concluded in chaos and frustration on the overflowing streets of Madrid.

Three weeks of team time trial blockades, hastily curtailed stages and makeshift finishes, rowdy demonstrations, course invaders, impassable climbs, re-organised routes, and nasty clashes with police all ended with an image we’ve grown accustomed to during this Vuelta: the sight of a finishing straight packed with Palestine flag-waving protesters. And no bike race.

Pro-Palestine protests in Madrid, 2025 Vuelta
Pro-Palestine protests in Madrid, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)
Pro-Palestine protests in Madrid, 2025 Vuelta
Pro-Palestine protests in Madrid, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

Zac Williams/SWpix.com

Despite the NATO-level security measures on show – around 2,000 Guardia Civil and police officers were drafted into Madrid for the grand tour’s finale – the scale of the protests, targeting Israel-Premier Tech’s involvement, simply overwhelmed the race.

With around 58km to go, a group of protesters tried to block the road as the peloton entered the traditional circuit around the Spanish capital, causing several riders to stop. Racing was neutralised, discussions held between riders and organisers.

Then images emerged of clashes between activists and police close to the finish. Then footage of hundreds of protesters streaming onto the course with 8km to go, and at the flamme rouge. Spanish television reported there were 3,000 demonstrators in total.

Madrid’s mayor José Luis Martínez-Almeida told Marca that some of the protesters were carrying thumbtacks and glass, accusing them of “violence”.

“This is one of the saddest afternoons I can remember in Madrid,” he said.

And so we come to the end of La Vuelta for 2025. Protesters stop the final stage. Vingegaard crowned the winner and a fine podium for Pidcock. pic.twitter.com/0MIvJUTNhG

— Brian Smith 𝕆𝕃𝕐 (@BriSmithy) September 14, 2025

A few minutes later, the stage, inevitably, was cancelled, the official podium ceremony scrapped. Jonas Vingegaard, in the dampest of damp squibs, was declared the winner of the 2025 Vuelta, and the teams set about organising their own DIY cooler-based podiums (more on that later).

And now the postmortem begins.

Writing on social media after the stage, the Ineos Grenadiers’ former world champion Michał Kwiatkowski argued that this year’s Vuelta could be a watershed moment for professional cycling – one where protesters have realised they have the upper hand on race organisers seemingly reluctant to act.

“If the UCI and the responsible bodies couldn’t make the right decisions early enough, then long-term it’s very bad for cycling that the protesters managed to get what they wanted,” Kwiatkowski wrote.

Michał Kwiatkowski, stage 20, 2025 Vuelta
Michał Kwiatkowski, stage 20, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Unipublic / Cxcling / Antonio Baixauli)
Michał Kwiatkowski, stage 20, 2025 Vuelta
Michał Kwiatkowski, stage 20, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Unipublic / Cxcling / Antonio Baixauli)

Unipublic / Cxcling / Antonio Baixauli

“You can’t just pretend nothing is happening.

“From now on, it’s clear for everyone that a cycling race can be used as an effective stage for protests and next time it will only get worse, because someone allowed it to happen and looked the other way.

“It’s a shame for the fans who came here to watch a great event. Personally, I would have preferred to know in advance that the race was cancelled rather than being led to believe everything was going to be fine. See you on the road soon cycling fans.”

While Kwiatkowski’s comments earned praise from some in the cycling world – including Demi Vollering, who responded to the Polish rider’s statement with “Well said” – others were keen to place the chaos at this year’s Vuelta into some perspective.

“As much as I love cycling, the Vuelta is not the most important thing in the world,” said Ben. “Unfortunately, there are things bigger than this. Some perspective.”

15 September 2025, 09:12
Pro-Palestine protest, stage 16, 2025 Vuelta
Pro-Palestine protest, stage 16, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

UCI denounces Vuelta Palestine protesters’ “militant actions” and takes swipe at Spanish government for “exploiting sport for political purposes” and hindering race

After the final stage of the Vuelta descended into chaos yesterday, and with concerns being raised in the Spanish press about the Tour de France’s planned start in Barcelona next year, it was only a matter of time before the UCI got involved with a hand-wringing statement.

And it’s a spicy statement at that, the governing body criticising the protesters’ “militant actions” while condemning the Spanish government for “exploiting sport for political purposes” by backing the demonstrators’ stance against Israel-Premier Tech’s participation at the Vuelta.

Pro-Palestine protests lead to stage 16 of the 2025 Vuelta being shortened
Pro-Palestine protests lead to stage 16 of the 2025 Vuelta being shortened (Image Credit: undefined)
Pro-Palestine protests lead to stage 16 of the 2025 Vuelta being shortened
Pro-Palestine protests lead to stage 16 of the 2025 Vuelta being shortened (Image Credit: undefined)

Zac Williams/SWpix.com

“The Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) expresses its total disapproval of and deep concern about the events that marked the 2025 edition of La Vuelta Ciclista a España, notably the abrupt halt to yesterday’s final stage in Madrid, a direct consequence of a series of incidents linked to pro-Palestinian demonstrations,” the UCI said this afternoon.

“Since the race arrived on Spanish soil, the Vuelta was disrupted almost daily by militant actions: individuals intruding into the peloton, throwing urine, endangering riders, and causing physical harm, with some of them crashing, suffering injuries, and being forced to abandon the race.

“Faced with these incidents, the race organisers reacted quickly and calmly, putting emergency measures in place to ensure the continuity of the event. They acted with exemplary professionalism, respecting the autonomy and independence of sport.

“The repeated acts that affected a significant number of stages constitute a serious violation of the Olympic Charter and the fundamental principles of sport.”

Israel-Premier Tech ride past Palestine flags, stage 11, 2025 Vuelta
Israel-Premier Tech ride past Palestine flags, stage 11, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)
Israel-Premier Tech ride past Palestine flags, stage 11, 2025 Vuelta
Israel-Premier Tech ride past Palestine flags, stage 11, 2025 Vuelta (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

Zac Williams/SWpix.com

The governing body – the one with the real power to deal with the situation on the ground, as many have noted – then turned their attention to Spanish PM Pedro Sánchez, who earlier today called for Israel to be banned from all sports events following the cancelled Madrid stage, arguing that the nation should not be permitted to “whitewash” its “barbarism” in Gaza.

However, according to the UCI Sánchez’s position on Israel-Premier Tech riding the Vuelta is “unacceptable and counterproductive”.

“We also regret the fact that the Spanish Prime Minister and his government have supported actions that could hinder the smooth running of a sporting competition and, in some cases, expressed their admiration for the demonstrators,” the UCI continued.

“This position is contradictory to the Olympic values of unity, mutual respect, and peace. It also calls into question Spain’s ability to host major international sporting events, ensuring that they take place in safe conditions and in accordance with the principles of the Olympic Charter.

“The UCI strongly condemns the exploitation of sport for political purposes in general, and especially coming from a government. Sport must remain autonomous to fulfil its role as a tool for peace. It is unacceptable and counterproductive for our sport to be diverted from its universal mission. Moreover, there are dedicated platforms where countries can discuss their differences.

Pro-Palestine protests lead to stage 16 of the 2025 Vuelta being shortened
Pro-Palestine protests lead to stage 16 of the 2025 Vuelta being shortened (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)
Pro-Palestine protests lead to stage 16 of the 2025 Vuelta being shortened
Pro-Palestine protests lead to stage 16 of the 2025 Vuelta being shortened (Image Credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

Zac Williams/SWpix.com

“As we approach our annual Congress next week, which will be attended by representatives of the Palestinian, Israeli, Russian, and Ukrainian National Federations, we reaffirm our constant call for dialogue and peace. Sport must unite, never divide.

“Finally, we commend the exemplary work of the Spanish law enforcement agencies at the Vuelta, who acted with professionalism in extremely tense conditions.

“We also thank the organisers of the Vuelta for their commitment and resilience in the face of an unprecedented situation. We congratulate Jonas Vingegaard, winner of the general classification of La Vuelta Ciclista a España 2025. Despite the circumstances, he demonstrated remarkable strength and consistency throughout this event.”

I feel like this one might rumble on for a while…

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  • 2025 Vuelta a España, cycling live blog, live blog, road.cc live blog, Tom Pidcock, uci, Vuelta, Vuelta a Espana
Ryan Mallon
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After obtaining a PhD, lecturing, and hosting a history podcast at Queen’s University Belfast, Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s news editor. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.  

50 Comments

50 thoughts on “UCI denounces Vuelta Palestine protesters’ “militant actions” and blasts Spanish government for “exploiting sport for political purposes”; Ineos rider says protests’ success “very bad for cycling”; Is Tom Pidcock a Tour contender? + more on the live blog”

  1. the little onion
    September 15, 2025 at 9:24 am
    0

    Plenty of cycle races have

    Plenty of cycle races have been stopped and disrupted by protests before this – witness the Glasgow Worlds, and the many incidents where French farmers have protested at le Tour, some of which have resulted in people being punched by Bernard Hinault. So this isn’t new.

     

    I suppose the difference here is that the size, frequency and nature of the protests at la Vuelta had a much greater impact.

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    • darnac
      September 15, 2025 at 9:29 am
      0

      Pity Le Blaireau wasn’t there
      Pity Le Blaireau wasn’t there it would have made for exciting TV …

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      • lesterama
        September 15, 2025 at 2:20 pm
        0

        Hinault was made for TV

        Hinault was made for TV

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        • darnac
          September 15, 2025 at 2:43 pm
          0

          Luckily hé was good at
          Luckily hé was good at cycling too!
          .

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  2. Dan Jestico
    September 15, 2025 at 9:26 am
    0

    Depending on your point of

    Depending on your point of view, it could be good for the long-term credibility of professional cycling. If petrochem/ethically bankrupt states with appalling human rights records think twice about getting involved, then cycling’s image will improve and the accusations of climate/social hypocrisy will abate. 

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    • Boopop
      September 15, 2025 at 9:39 am
      0

      Dan Jestico wrote:

      Depending on your point of view, it could be good for the long-term credibility of professional cycling. If petrochem/ethically bankrupt states with appalling human rights records think twice about getting involved, then cycling’s image will improve and the accusations of climate/social hypocrisy will abate. 

      — Dan Jestico

      I got given a Team Ineos cycling cap as the Tour of Britain rolled through. An additional cap is always welcome but I couldn’t imagine wearing one – not only are they a polluting company, they also promote those dangerous large SUVs of theirs. I gave it away within about 30 seconds. I need some sort of anti-car cap!

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      • SimoninSpalding
        September 15, 2025 at 3:39 pm
        0

        Oh come now, surely you are

        Oh come now, surely you are forgetting how cyclist friendly the Ineos Grenadier is, with it’s extra horn to specifically toot at cyclists?

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  3. Gkam84
    September 15, 2025 at 9:37 am
    0

    I read his comments very

    I read his comments very carefully and it sounds to me like he’s calling out the UCI and the ASO for not doing something to stop this from happening….i.e. banning IPT from taking part.

    But anyone who thinks that a stage being cancelled is something new, only has to look at Tour Féminin de l’Ardeche last week, where stage 2 was cancelled because of the “Block Everything” protests, against the government and it’s spending cuts. Everyone up in arms about La Vuelta and calls for the country to be stripped of all racing, banned….etc have very short memories OR are willfully choosing to ignore everything else because it’s Israel and no-one can say anything bad against the almighty “country”. Infact, in America, you have to be careful, they will remove your passport and visa if you do…. Crazy to think that Zionism has infected the top ranks of most countries and people can’t see that with their own eyes. 

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  4. The_Ewan
    September 15, 2025 at 11:29 am
    0

    IPT exists specifically to

    IPT exists specifically to sportswash Israel’s image, and that is a political action. 

    Cycling can either decide it wants to weigh in on contentious politics, and deal with the legitimate push back of people engaging with their political actions, or refuse the dirty money.

    What isn’t reasonable or sustainable is pretending that you can include a team like IPT and then complain that it’s protestors who have “made it political” and that you weren’t doing anything other than enjoying riding bikes.

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    • VoiceOfLondon
      September 15, 2025 at 12:44 pm
      0

      If you’d have said that ‘UAE,

      If you’d have said that ‘UAE, Bahrain Victourius and IPT exist specifically to sportswash their image, and that is a political action’, I’d have said that was a balanced argument, but as you didn’t I imagine you’re just another terrorist apologist waving a Palestinian flag.

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      • Clem Fandango
        September 15, 2025 at 1:34 pm
        0

        If you’d have said that IPT

        If you’d have said that IPT are not the only team sponsored by a questionable regime, I’d have considered that a balanced argument.  But as you didn’t, I imagine you are a just another gammon faced fascist apologist waving a St Georeg’s flag.

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        • chrisonabike
          September 15, 2025 at 2:06 pm
          0

          Clem Fandango wrote:

          […] waving a St Georeg’s flag.

          — Clem Fandango

          Wait – what? More immigrants and their dubious saints?

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          • Clem Fandango
            September 15, 2025 at 2:45 pm
            0

            He’s teh patron saint of

            He’s the patron saint of dyslexics.  Back off.

      • Crazyhorse
        September 15, 2025 at 1:41 pm
        0

        Nice try. But Israel is

        Nice try. But Israel is losing support every day they continue to starve children to death. It is foolish of any sport to believe it can cut itself off from the outside world. 

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        • dreamlx10
          September 15, 2025 at 2:28 pm
          0

          Crazyhorse wrote:

          “every day they continue to starve children to death”

          According to Hamas

          — Crazyhorse

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          • Rendel Harris
            September 15, 2025 at 3:43 pm
            0

            dreamlx10]

            [quote=Crazyhorse]

            “every day they continue to starve children to death”

            According to Hamas

            — dreamlx10

            … and the United Nations, the World Health Organisation, UNICEF, Médecins Sans Frontières, Oxfam, Amnesty International, Save the Children, B’Tselem, Christian Aid, Jewish Network for Palestine, Physicians for Human Rights Israel…

          • SimoninSpalding
            September 15, 2025 at 3:50 pm
            0

            dreamlx10 wrote:

            “every day they continue to starve children to death”

            According to Hamas

            — dreamlx10

            — Crazyhorse

            And Medecins Sans Frontieres, Unicef, Christian Aid, Oxfam…

            On the other hand, as far as I can see it is only the people responsible for blockading food and aid to Gaza that deny there is any starvation.

        • MaxiMinimalist
          September 15, 2025 at 3:51 pm
          0

          It’s foolish of any pro
          It’s foolish of any pro-Palestine protester to believe disrupting a pro cycling race can have an impact on the current situation in Gaza. Sánchez, the Spanish PM, congratulated the protesters for their fight* in favor of human rights. This confirms that this chaotic Vuelta took place thanks to the Spanish authorities laissez-faireism.

          *selective fight, one may be allowed to think

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          • chrisonabike
            September 15, 2025 at 5:00 pm
            0

            MaxiMinimalist wrote:

            It’s foolish of any pro-Palestine protester anyone apart from Donald Trump to believe disrupting a pro cycling race they can have an impact on the current situation in Gaza and he could probably only persuade Netenyahu to give him a concession on some utterly devastated depopulated seafront property to develop

            — MaxiMinimalist

            FTFY?

      • a1white
        September 15, 2025 at 2:19 pm
        0

        VoiceOfLondon wrote:

        If you’d have said that ‘UAE, Bahrain Victourius and IPT exist specifically to sportswash their image, and that is a political action’, I’d have said that was a balanced argument, but as you didn’t I imagine you’re just another terrorist apologist waving a Palestinian flag.

        — VoiceOfLondon

        Who the hell appointed you the Voice Of London?

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      • SimoninSpalding
        September 15, 2025 at 3:41 pm
        0

        I assume you would like to

        I assume you would like to see Russian teams readmitted to cycling too, Putin isn’t so bad, just a bit misunderstood (so Nige and Don say).

        I have little time for the UAE or Bahrain regimes, or the damage they do to the environment through their oil exports, but to be comlpetely fair they are not *currently* engaged in genocide.

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        • mdavidford
          September 15, 2025 at 4:36 pm
          0

          SimoninSpalding wrote:

          I have little time for the UAE or Bahrain regimes, or the damage they do to the environment through their oil exports, but to be comlpetely fair they are not *currently* directly and openly engaged in genocide.

          — SimoninSpalding

          A lot of people in Sudan might have something to say on the matter, however…

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        • ErnieC
          September 16, 2025 at 1:18 am
          0

          SimoninSpalding wrote:

          I assume you would like to see Russian teams readmitted to cycling too, Putin isn’t so bad, just a bit misunderstood (so Nige and Don say).

          I have little time for the UAE or Bahrain regimes, or the damage they do to the environment through their oil exports, but to be comlpetely fair they are not *currently* engaged in genocide.

          — SimoninSpalding

          To be completely fair they actually are actively involved in genocide or indirectly financing or supporting genocide. 

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      • Rendel Harris
        September 15, 2025 at 5:03 pm
        0

        VoiceOfLondon wrote:

        I imagine you’re just another terrorist apologist waving a Palestinian flag.

        — VoiceOfLondon

        Are you genuinely incapable of understanding that one can be appalled at the actions of Hamas on October 7th and fully support the perpetrators of those actions being brought to justice and at the same time be appalled at children queueing up for a cup of water and a handful of flour being shot dead by the Israeli military? If not it says a lot more about you than it does about anybody else. Palestine and the Palestinian people are not Hamas (they only have about 30% support even in Gaza) and showing support and solidarity for the Palestinian people is not supporting Hamas.

        Log In or Register to post comments
        • Eton Rifle
          September 15, 2025 at 5:23 pm
          0

          Rendel Harris wrote:

          I imagine you’re just another terrorist apologist waving a Palestinian flag.

          — Rendel Harris

          Are you genuinely incapable of understanding that one can be appalled at the actions of Hamas on October 7th and fully support the perpetrators of those actions being brought to justice and at the same time be appalled at children queueing up for a cup of water and a handful of flour being shot dead by the Israeli military? If not it says a lot more about you than it does about anybody else. Palestine and the Palestinian people are not Hamas (they only have about 30% support even in Gaza) and showing support and solidarity for the Palestinian people is not supporting Hamas.

          — VoiceOfLondon

          Don’t be silly, Rendel. In the weird, Manichean world of the far right, you have to pick a side and support it UNCONDITIONALLY.

          This footballification of politics has already destroyed meaningful political discourse in the USA and it will do the same here in the UK of we are not careful.

          Log In or Register to post comments
          • chrisonabike
            September 15, 2025 at 7:26 pm
            0

            Eton Rifle wrote:

            Don’t be silly, Rendel. In the weird, Manichean world of the far right, you have to pick a side and support it UNCONDITIONALLY.

            — Eton Rifle

            Well, autocratic types tend to major on demanding loyalty! But given the current topic I’d note that the other side can be equally as tribal / prone to purity tests. But also “The Judean People’s Front vs. The People’s Front of Judea”.

    • panda
      September 15, 2025 at 4:10 pm
      0

      Was / is that Adams’

      Was / is that Adams’ motivation?  He’s acting in a private capacity with his own money, so this isn’t state-sponsored.  

      Obviously, there’s a fine line between vanity project with a patriotic edge, vanity project with a commercial rationale which doesn’t obviously stack up (INEOS Grenadiers / MUFC), doing something that looks commercially stupid to get your net worth out of a country where it might be vulnerable to regime change (I’m sure you can guess) and outright going to a PR agency and asking what can be done to boost a poor image (“do lots of charitable things with your dirty money so people love you!”).

      Whatever anyone thinks about Israel’s response to the Oct7 attacks, Adams put money into cycling long before then.  From what I’ve read, his view on Israel’s response is implied, but the UCI have not specifically asked the question “Look, we know you consider yourself an ambassador at large for Israel, but specifically do you condone *this*? because if so, we’re going to have to have a re-think on your team’s license to operate.”  [Yes, there are lots of other sports team owners who should be asked similar questions, and I find it remarkable that Eurovision haven’t taken a stronger line.]

      If what *does* prompt the UCI to ask that question is protests disrupting events, then I think we can look forward to a lot more disrupted events so I can see all sides of this one.  

      My 2c: The UCI are quietly hoping Adams will let discretion be the better part of valour, put some money into ESCROW to keep the team going for a while and walk away.  I doubt he will do that without being told, so the TdF Grand Depart in Barcelona next year will be …. interesting.

      Log In or Register to post comments
      • chrisonabike
        September 15, 2025 at 4:52 pm
        0

        Not saying this is the case
        Not saying this is the case here but there are plenty of examples where states held in less esteem internationally (indeed – sanctioned) conduct state operations through “friends”. Business done by Putin’s friends among the oligarchs and others would be an example.

        Probably all states utilise this more- or- less, whether more directly requested or more at the initiative of the individuals.

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      • The_Ewan
        September 17, 2025 at 12:27 pm
        0

        panda wrote:

        Was / is that Adams’ motivation?

        — panda

        In a word, yes. He’s not subtle about this and it isn’t a secret.

        Log In or Register to post comments
  5. kingleo
    September 15, 2025 at 11:30 am
    0

    Spain has destroyed its

    Spain has destroyed its holiday business, and now they are destroying their sport.

    Log In or Register to post comments
    • lesterama
      September 15, 2025 at 12:55 pm
      0

      Israel has destroyed its

      Israel has destroyed its holiday business, and now they are destroying our sport.

      (Not just Israel, btw, but their actions in Gaza are beyond extreme.)

      Log In or Register to post comments
      • dreamlx10
        September 15, 2025 at 2:27 pm
        0

        (No subject)

        Log In or Register to post comments
    • Zebulebu
      September 15, 2025 at 4:40 pm
      0

      Has it? Blimey, that was
      Has it? Blimey, that was quick – I only came back from holiday there on Friday! Must have just got through the airport in time…

      Log In or Register to post comments
  6. james-o
    September 15, 2025 at 12:13 pm
    0

    “You can’t just pretend

    “You can’t just pretend nothing is happening.

    “From now on, it’s clear for everyone that a cycling race can be used as an effective stage for protests and next time it will only get worse, because someone allowed it to happen and looked the other way.”

    He could be talking about the cause of the protests there. And that is why protest happens – people won’t look the other way. 

    Log In or Register to post comments
  7. mdavidford
    September 15, 2025 at 1:48 pm
    0

    Suggesting the cow is

    Suggesting the cow is protesting about Palestine is silly.

    It clearly has some other beef entirely.

    Log In or Register to post comments
    • Rendel Harris
      September 15, 2025 at 5:01 pm
      0

      mdavidford wrote:

      Suggesting the cow is protesting about Palestine is silly.

      It clearly has some other beef entirely.

      — mdavidford

      It’s important to get these things right when so much is at steak. As Mr.B.Simpson would say, don’t have a cow, man.

      Log In or Register to post comments
      • kevgravelkev
        September 15, 2025 at 9:24 pm
        0

        Rendel Harris wrote:

        Suggesting the cow is protesting about Palestine is silly.

        It clearly has some other beef entirely.

        — Rendel Harris

        It’s important to get these things right when so much is at steak. As Mr.B.Simpson would say, don’t have a cow, man.

        — mdavidford

        This is getting udderly ridiculous.

        Log In or Register to post comments
        • darnac
          September 16, 2025 at 7:15 am
          0

          I’m on thé horns of a dilemma
          I’m on thé horns of a dilemma concerning thé situation

          Log In or Register to post comments
  8. mitsky
    September 15, 2025 at 2:41 pm
    0

    With regards to the bins in

    With regards to the bins in the cycle lane, it might be better to lay them down on their side rather than upright as that would provide just a bit more segregation.
    Either lengthwise along the road, or sideways.

    Log In or Register to post comments
  9. mitsky
    September 15, 2025 at 2:41 pm
    0

    Worth doing a bit about this:

    Worth doing a bit about this:

    “On patrol with the company recovering stolen bikes“

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cz9jn5jn204o

    Log In or Register to post comments
  10. panda
    September 15, 2025 at 3:44 pm
    0

    Isn’t Guadalajara in Mexico?

    Isn’t Guadalajara in Mexico?

    Full marks to the bull though, and that’s without full traction!

    Log In or Register to post comments
    • the little onion
      September 15, 2025 at 4:23 pm
      0

      There’s more than one

      There’s more than one Guadalajara. Just like there is a London in Ontario.

      Log In or Register to post comments
    • Rendel Harris
      September 15, 2025 at 4:23 pm
      0

      panda wrote:

      Isn’t Guadalajara in Mexico?

      — panda

      It’s a city in Mexico but also a province in Spain which contains the municipality of Tendilla, from which the video comes.

      Log In or Register to post comments
      • Jetmans Dad
        September 16, 2025 at 8:58 am
        0

        Given Mexico was colonised by

        Given Mexico was colonised by the Spanish, I would guess the one was named after the other?

        Log In or Register to post comments
        • Rendel Harris
          September 16, 2025 at 9:31 am
          0

          Jetmans Dad wrote:

          Given Mexico was colonised by the Spanish, I would guess the one was named after the other?

          — Jetmans Dad

          Indeed, the chap who conquered that part of Mexico (name escapes me) came from Guadalajara in Spain so when they founded the city it was named after his home region in his honour.

          Log In or Register to post comments
  11. alexuk
    September 15, 2025 at 9:13 pm
    0

    Wow – I’m amazed to find

    Wow – I’m amazed to find myself agreeing with the UCI. Good on them. Politicians are always the bane of life’s existence. That and terrorist states with their selfish and ignorant sympathisers.

    Log In or Register to post comments
  12. cmedred
    September 15, 2025 at 9:22 pm
    0

    Some perspective? So what

    Some perspective? So what happens next year when protesters demanded all Jewish riders be banned from the race unless they denounce Israel?

    Log In or Register to post comments
    • the little onion
      September 16, 2025 at 7:11 am
      0

      cmedred wrote:

      Some perspective? So what happens next year when protesters demanded all Jewish riders be banned from the race unless they denounce Israel?

      — cmedred

      then, at that point, we denounce the protesters’ racism. Which is not a charge that could reasonably be laid at this point.

      Log In or Register to post comments
    • Rendel Harris
      September 16, 2025 at 7:29 am
      0

      cmedred wrote:

      Some perspective? So what happens next year when protesters demanded all Jewish riders be banned from the race unless they denounce Israel?

      — cmedred

      And what about when they ask for all black, Asian and homosexual riders to be banned as well? What about, what about, what about…shall we address the here and now issues, which are grave and vexing enough for all parties, without making up future ones?

      Log In or Register to post comments
  13. Paul J
    September 15, 2025 at 10:18 pm
    0

    It is just a disgrace that

    It is just a disgrace that people are trying to drag politics into the family of olympic sports – just ask any Russian. Disrupting the Vuelta to protest the presence of the I.G. Farben – Third Reich team will not achieve anything for the unfortunate Jews in Germany.

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Latest Comments

GravelIsNothingNew 2 hours ago

Generic …like virtually all new carbon road and gravel bikes. …it no longer looks like a Bianchi, nor a Specialissima. Mainstreaming in the bike industry is rife, as if everyone needs an aero race bike, despite the fact that 90% of customers don’t. …Small frame makers rejoice! Carbon is on its way out.

in: Bianchi’s updated Specialissima is its lightest ever, with aero gains designed to make it “the ultimate all-rounder”
Backladder 6 hours ago

@mdavidford Barreling suggests he was travelling at speed whereas he had just started riding and was making a turn so his balance might not have been good enough to have slowed and adjusted his line.

in: Michael Gove vs the disgruntled camera cyclist: Sometimes optics matter more than being in the right
mdavidford 6 hours ago

Not sure what relevance what he'd just done previously has to the question.

in: Michael Gove vs the disgruntled camera cyclist: Sometimes optics matter more than being in the right
chrisonabike 7 hours ago

Shurely an internal investigation *might* have taken place, which if it did, and if it came to the conclusion there had been any wrongdoing (two big ifs) "unfortunately the officer being investigated has retired and so there's no further action we can take"?

in: “He didn’t give a s**t”: New York police officer drives into bike lane and hits cyclist… before claiming rider “came out of nowhere”
Bikebeer77 8 hours ago

I suppose in the good old USA you're grateful if the officer doesn't shoot you, especially if you have an attitude they don't like. I assume the victim wasn't a person of colour?

in: “He didn’t give a s**t”: New York police officer drives into bike lane and hits cyclist… before claiming rider “came out of nowhere”
momove 8 hours ago

Only one line in the article has information on the womens races, saying the 2027 Tour de France Femmes will have highlights broadcast. In the absence of other information I assume other women's grand tours and other years won't have highlights shown? There was no link to the announcement in the article but I'm off to find out. It would have been nice for road.cc to be clear about this though.

in: Channel 5 to show daily Tour de France highlights – plus live free-to-air coverage of next year’s UK Grand Départ
wtjs 8 hours ago

The cyclist also told Streetsblog NYC that he frequently files complaints about illegal parking by police officers in the area, including on cycle lanes, but says “they just close them out” Yep, that sounds like Lancashire Constabulary. They refuse to act on any close-passing report and have never, as far as FoI requests are able to establish, prosecuted any driver for close passing. They certainly didn't act on or respond in any way to this report, because LancsFilth is as bent as a Nine Pound note: ttps://upride.cc/incident/kn21axh_lancspolice_closepass/ Neither did they act on or respond in any way to this more recent report https://upride.cc/incident/px12dmy_stagecoach40_closepass/ They refuse to act against Marcus Wright and his eponymous joinery company Transit HN21 VXB now without VED for over two years and without MOT for almost 1 year, despite being seen regularly around Garstang and regularly reported by me, being listed at Companies House and even showing a photo of the offending vehicle on the business Facebook page. The police in general, OpSnap Lancs and Wyre NPT refuse to act against driver RLJs, mobile phone offences, white line offences and so on, and are a bunch of inept, useless lying tossers. Therefore, I do not agree with 60somethingetc's rose-tinted spectacles view of UK police - Lancashire would have immediately binned any report like that in the NYC case above, and the totally useless PCC would simply write: this is a matter for the police and I cannot interfere. Thank goodness the PCCs have also been binned, although I doubt anything better will appear in their place. What with Charing Cross police station and the tragic Nowak handcuffing case, the Met's Carrick and Couzens cases etc. etc. - the IOPC is going to need more officers than the combined strength of all the police forces they claim to regulate.

in: “He didn’t give a s**t”: New York police officer drives into bike lane and hits cyclist… before claiming rider “came out of nowhere”
yodhrin 10 hours ago

@60somethingcyclist Hahah, oh wow, I miss being this naive about the cops here.

in: “He didn’t give a s**t”: New York police officer drives into bike lane and hits cyclist… before claiming rider “came out of nowhere”
60somethingcyclist 10 hours ago

@Mr Blackbird "our streets have become a freak show" - like his party.

in: A perineul problem: Organisers of World Naked Bike Ride remind bare-bottomed London participants to use seat covers on shared bikes following cleanliness concerns
60somethingcyclist 10 hours ago

This is disgraceful. If this had been a UK Police officer he'd be prosecuted and disciplined; quite possibly losing his job.

in: “He didn’t give a s**t”: New York police officer drives into bike lane and hits cyclist… before claiming rider “came out of nowhere”

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