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Timmy Mallett pedals up UK’s steepest road; Huge finish line crash causes debate; Bike porn; Cycling in focus at local elections; May the 4th be with you; Climbing Sa Calobra; Forget panniers, wheel a suitcase; Giro countdown + more on the live blog
SUMMARY

Huge finish line crash causes debate..."but it’s easy to say with hindsight" argues rider involved
Yesterday’s opening stage of the 4 Jours de Dunkerque probably would have flown under the radar for all but the most committed racing fan. A race with a smattering of WorldTour talent, but mainly pro and continental teams. However, the sprint finish on day one has been thrust into the spotlight after a frightening crash as the sprinters lunged towards the line.
🇫🇷 @arviddekleijn flies to second place on stage 1 of #4JDD, avoiding danger in a hectic final 🥈 #HumanPoweredHealth pic.twitter.com/GDJLp5VZBb
— Human Powered Health (@HumanPwrdHealth) May 3, 2022
Lotto-Soudal’s Arnaud De Lie thought he saw a gap between Brit Dan McLay and Sam Welsford. Aussie Welsford poked his elbow out to shut the door, only to nudge the surging De Lie into McLay, causing one almighty fall. Ultimately, Welsford was relegated, Arvid De Klijn — who somehow evaded the contact — won, and De Lie crossed the line on his back in sixth (but later abandoned the race with concussion).
So…what to make of it?
Despite some pointing blame at the finish…
As long as organisers break the parcours guidelines and add bends in the final sprint, we’re destined to have sprint deviations. #4JDD
— Benji Naesen (@BenjiNaesen) May 3, 2022
That was disputed by one of the riders involved (and most-badly impacted), McLay, who also stuck up for his rivals too…
1. The finish was pretty straightforward, I’ve not seen many more simple than that and I don’t think the road had much to do with the incident. For the rest of the parcours there was plenty of things we could talk about.
— Dan McLAY (@McLAYDan) May 3, 2022
3. I’m more or less ok incase anyone is interested
— Dan McLAY (@McLAYDan) May 3, 2022
Back at home, others had different views on the incident…
Clear elbow by Welsford. Minor deviation but it did clearly cause the crash. There was a gap, Welsford closed it, if anyone’s at fault it’s Welsford. De Kleijn definitely deserves a relegation for the elbow, though #4JDD
— Jens Dekker (@jens_dekker) May 3, 2022
Another race another serious crash, fortunately seemingly without serious injury. Blame is an interesting topic. ~19/20 crashes are rider error, a mistake in the heat of battle which is only human 1/2
— Dan Martin (@DanMartin86) May 4, 2022
Hardly ever is a crash intentional but the stakes, pressure and desire to win are higher than ever meaning less caution is take = more crashes. Whoever causes the crash will feel terrible. There’s no reason to point the finger 2/2
— Dan Martin (@DanMartin86) May 4, 2022
What do you think?
Bike porn
We are proud to present our new TT1 time trial bike, developed in collaboration with the professional cyclists of the @TeamEmiratesUAE
The new Colnago TT1 will debut racing at the next @giroditalia #ColnagoTT1 #Colnago #LaBicicletta #giro #GiroDItalia #uaeteamemirates #polimi pic.twitter.com/hfxb6FfcS8— Colnago (@Colnagoworld) May 4, 2022
Last chance to ask candidates to stand up for cycling


Cycling UK got in touch with the following message ahead of this week’s local elections…
You’ve only one day left to ask candidates where you live what they’ll do, if elected on Thursday, to get more people cycling.
Cycling UK is asking people to email the candidates for your council to ask whether they support their manifestos for cycling. Cycling UK has contacted every candidate to ask them, but many haven’t committed yet.
Find out where the candidates for your council stand, it only takes a few minutes to ask whether they support our manifesto.
They want your vote on Thursday, so if you want councillors in your area to push for safer cycling and to get more people cycling, email them now to ask them what they’ll do to make that happen.
Cyclists are not funny...Oh, wait...I stand corrected
How realistic is indoor cycling? Climbing Sa Calobra
How close to Ed Laverack’s time can Brad and Dave get?
"It's interesting how different sports apportion blame in crashes": Reader reaction to Four Days of Dunkirk shocker
Frightening finish line crash at Four Days of Dunkirk prompts finger pointing — but British sprinter Dan McLay sticks up for those involved: “neither intended to cause the crash” https://t.co/XSB0S4T3sm #cycling pic.twitter.com/0imwOqutuH
— road.cc (@roadcc) May 4, 2022
Velophaart_95 commented: “It’s interesting how different sports apportion blame in crashes. In this instance the view is ‘it wasn’t intentional, so no action should be taken’……..
“Yet it will continue to happen. The massive pile up in Liège–Bastogne–Liège; no action was taken as to who caused it. There is a lot of reckless riding in cycling which goes unpunished; we can’t be surprised when crashes keep happening.
“Very different in motorsport; they want to know who did what, so action can be taken – even if it was accidental.”
Miller said: “I watched that finish and I straight away thought Welsford was likely to be relegated. The finishing straight had plenty of room. It looked to me that Welsford put out his elbow to block a rider coming through who then couldn’t stay upright. Sprinting, eh. Not for the faint-hearted.”
Peted76 added: “That crash was/is pretty dramatic, a bit touch and go whether Welsford would be relegated and it was reported yesterday that he’d kept the win. He was not celebrating after the line, he was talking and looking concerned. Clearly the decision was overturned and he was relegated.
“I think the only person who ‘deserves’ the win is Dan McLay, who did nothing wrong and was in the lead until Arnaud De Lie tried to squeeze through a very small gap and Sam Welsford closed that gap. Any other result in my eyes is irrelevant. The deviation was wrong, but minor in the scheme of things and elbows are expected.”
66km to go on stage two…fingers crossed for no repeat of yesterday…
"It's never my intention to bring anyone down or cause a crash. Having contact in the sprint at 70kph is hard to control": Sam Welsford comments on yesterday's crash
2/2 Again it wasn’t my intention so I apologise for what happened and sincerely hope all involved are ok.
— Sam Welsford (@sam_welsford) May 3, 2022
May the 4th be with you...
Happy Star Wars day! 👨🚀👾🚀 #MayThe4thBeWithYou pic.twitter.com/XICsWJm106
— Broken Riders (@brokenriders) May 4, 2022
"I pedalled up it fully laden with my panniers, art stuff and me": Timmy Mallett recalls UK steepest road ascent


“I pedalled up it fully laden with my panniers, art stuff and me,” Mallett wrote on Strava. “I even videoed it as I panted… And I managed it! I have officially pedalled up the steepest street in the world.” (Unfortunately Guinness World Records might have something to say about that)
“That’ll do. I am an athlete! Harlech castle is stunning perched on the craggy cliff top. Artists through the years have painted it and so did I today. The lovely team at the castle took photos and pointed me to the rocky but where the view is amazing. It was. I sketched out and tonight I’ll work something up in my hotel room.
“Then I discovered a puncture. In the back tyre. It was tricky getting the small hand pump to make any difference. At which point Joe arrived. Joe lives in Harlech and we headed down the steepest hill to his house to use the big foot pump.
“Clearly I hadn’t got rid of all the thorn via after a cuppa the tyre was going down again. So another new tyre [tube] was needed and I’m so glad Joe was there to lend assistance and encouragement.
“Joe also had as good tip. To head to Ynys for a view like no other. Straight across the water to Portmerion and over to the mountains of Snowdonia. Amazing. Especially as the sun came out and the afternoon was bathed in warm full sunshine. My day is done. I’ll be painting this evening.”
Mallett hammers UK's steepest road
— Timmy Mallett (@TimmyMallett) May 3, 2022
Ffordd Pen Llech…before you ask. An excruciating 230m @ 21 per cent…but all about that 37.5 per cent max gradient. The road was once considered the steepest in the world before those pesky Guinness World Record jobsworths (joke) saw Baldwin Street in New Zealand…
> Utterly brilliant: An interview with Timmy Mallet on all things e-bike
It’s not the first time the legendary entertainer has taken on an epic e-bike challenge. In 2018, he set off from his home town of Maidenhead on a 2,000km ride across Europe to Santiago de Compostela.
“I like the unexpected adventure of cycling. It’s not how far you go, or how fast; it’s how much fun you have along the way,” Mallet explained. Words to live by…
Oh, and of course he’s on Strava too…


It's that time of the year...EF Education-EasyPost release special Giro d'Italia kit
New kit, who dis’ 👌
👌
The Maglia Rosa of #Giroditalia is so iconic so we’ve switched out our traditional pink colours. This limited edition kit will be available on @rapha soon!Maybe you’ll see us in Pink at the Giro 👀👕 pic.twitter.com/WaI41TAOKe
— EF Pro Cycling (@EFprocycling) May 4, 2022
EF Education-EasyPost and Rapha’s annual maglia rosa deviation kit announcement is here (why not give us another bank holiday, eh?)
Two years ago it was the Supreme special, then last year the ‘switch out kit’…
> Expert trolling of UCI rules as Rapha and EF Education-Nippo unveil new kit
This year, Vaughters’ boys have gone for a very classy-looking black (with every colour under the sun) number. Kind of how ‘paintings’ by toddlers could look if the spray and pray approach actually worked…we like it…
Your Giro countdown is under the two-day mark…
Ineos boss Jim Ratcliffe's £4.25bn bid to buy Chelsea FC has been rejected, according to reports


Majority shareholder of Ineos, the chemical group that owns the Ineos Grenadiers cycling team, Sir Jim Ratcliffe has been informed his £4.25bn offer for Chelsea Football Club has been rejected, according to reports.
A consortium led by LA Dodgers owner Todd Boehly is believed to be the preferred bidder. “We’ve been rejected out of hand,” Ineos director Tom Crotty told Bloomberg.
On Friday, it was reported that Ratcliffe, and Ineos, were interested in adding the Premier League club to their sporting portfolio, which already includes the aforementioned cycling team, Ligue 1 outfit Nice, Swiss team FC Lausanne, as well as interests in Formula 1, athletics and sailing.
Is there an active travel class divide?
Over on a Dorset active travel group on Facebook a post has attracted a fair few comments. It is titled: Do you think there is a class divide over active travel? You’ve probably heard the line about cycling being a middle class sport before, or that only those with plenty of disposable cash can afford the top-end carbon bikes and Rapha kit…but when a car (and fuel) costs so much, why has the humble bicycle attracted such a reputation? Is there a distinction to be made between ‘sport cycling’ and active travel?
Here are some of the comments:
“Not a class divide more a financial divide. It gives mobility to the less well off.”
“I would say the class or financial divide is real, I generally see far more cyclists and bicycles ridden costing several thousands of pounds. Just last weekend I saw a family of four enjoying a Sunday ride on matching ebikes, what appeared to be Giant Fathom E+ or visually similar. The sub-segment of Lycra-clad enthusiasts being the most obvious example of this. Yes, there are some that embrace the cost effective means of travel that is to be had on two wheels. I in my past have been one of these folks, it was short-lived. Unfortunately the placement of cycle lanes thus far does show a certain bias to user groups.”
“I think this question is too generic and undefined to really get any useful feedback on it”
“Yes, I don’t know how people afford to run cars. Ok my bike was a bit of an investment for me but still cheaper than most second-hand cars and I don’t have to pay out for fuel costs and parking at work. But we weren’t well off growing up so my parents didn’t have regular access to a car until my teens so I grew up a lot more independent than some of my peers and am used to getting about under my own steam.”
“When I grew up on a council estate I cycled as it was an affordable option. Today I cycle because I enjoy it. Very different bikes too. But in each case I cycled.”
"This whole trip is a pain in the ass": Bauke Mollema gets into the Giro spirit
🤩It’s getting crowded…
🤩La piazza si sta affollando…
🤩La gente se aglomera en la plaza…#Giro pic.twitter.com/NXRGG0bltT
— Giro d’Italia (@giroditalia) May 4, 2022
The crowds are building in Budapest for the team presentation…
But, one man who’s a bit pissed off to be in attendance is Bauke Mollema. The Trek-Segafredo climber called the Hungarian Grande Partenza a “pain in the ass” this afternoon while speaking to the media.
“I don’t really have a Giro feeling yet. I’ve only been there a day. After the team presentation later today, I expect to have a bit more feeling. During a round of free riding here we did not meet many cyclists. I didn’t feel very safe here in the traffic,” he said.
“This whole trip is a pain in the ass, I find it quite disturbing that we don’t start in Italy and have to fly after only three days. The rest day is also not a real rest day, because you have to travel. Flying Sunday evening would have been nicer, but we don’t do that until Monday morning. I am happy when we are in Italy.”
Tell us how you really feel, Bauke…
4 May 2022, 08:09
4 May 2022, 08:09
4 May 2022, 08:09
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Latest Comments
You seem to be completely oblivious to the main difference between this and a Quad Lock (and a bunch of others) - that this type of mount does not necessitate any type of patches or covers with proprietary locking mechanisms to be stuck on your phone to actually work. For example I rate that feature highly, and therefore for me e.g. Quad Lock is far inferior compared to the SKS mount.
I’m sorry, where did the article say cassette? “…and five sprockets at the back…” Every bike had the potential problem of bent (or broken axles, held together by the force of the quick release) not just Trek. We had to fix them!
So its 3% accurate, its single sided, its going to wear out, it looks hideous, its a kickstarter that you may never receive, and it costs more than the wave of spider based power meters on AliExpress (including the GeoID PM500, which is a rebadged version of the highly rated Magene PS505). I'm out....
Surely the more logical solution for preventing shoplifters getting away would be to remove the shops.
That's one option, and let's hope that's exactly the case. Otherwise they might wake up to a very unpleasant surprise.
Street trees being overblown does seem like a reasonable thing to be concerned about. Particularly this time of year.
Apologies JOHN5880.
At least the good folk of Clevedon can see that £ 425 k to reverse some painting and chuck away a few bollards was, relatively speaking, a bargain. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cp9rv0nxv54o
Concerns over street trees are often overblown. Many older trees are not species that would now be planted as street trees, which also points to the fact that many large trees are actually at or near the end of their reasonable life. Trees are important. Street trees can perform multiple roles (though those roles are not often maximised). However, not all trees perform well as street trees. Street trees should serve the use of the street. If they don't, they should be replaced appropriately.
Presumably, CycloWatt must know this—and have a plan to avoid or address these issues?

























17 thoughts on “Timmy Mallett pedals up UK’s steepest road; Huge finish line crash causes debate; Bike porn; Cycling in focus at local elections; May the 4th be with you; Climbing Sa Calobra; Forget panniers, wheel a suitcase; Giro countdown + more on the live blog”
That crash was/is pretty
That crash was/is pretty dramatic, a bit touch and go whether Welsford would be relegated and it was reported yesterday that he’d kept the win. He was not celebrating after the line, he was talking and looking concerned. Clearly the desicion was overturned and he was relegated.
I think the only person who ‘deserves’ the win is Dan McLay, who did nothing wrong and was in the lead until Arnaud De Lie tried to squeeze through a very small gap and Sam Welsford closed that gap. Any other result in my eyes is irrelevant. The deviation was wrong, but minor in the scheme of things and elbows are expected. First big crash of the year?.. lets hope they are few and far between.
peted76 wrote:
Been a few other big ones sadly … not least the one involving Alaphilippe at Liege-Bastogne-Liege.
I watched that finish and I
I watched that finish and I straight away thought Welsford was likely to be relegated. The finishing straight had plenty of room. It looked to me that Welsford put out his elbow to block a rider coming through who then couldn’t stay upright. Sprinting, eh. Not for the faint hearted.
It’s interesting how
It’s interesting how different sports apportion blame in crashes. In this instance the view is ‘it wasn’t intentional, so no action should be taken’……..
Yet it will continue to happen. The massive pile up in Liege-Bastogne-Liege; no action was taken as to who caused it. There is a lot of reckless riding in cycling which goes unpunished; we can’t be surprised when crashes keep happening.
Very different in motorsport; they want to know who did what, so action can be taken – even if it was accidental.
Given the emphasis being
Given the emphasis being placed on local UK elections at the moment, youd be forgiven for thinking the whole country was going to the polls on Thursday, instead less than half of all councils in England are holding any election at all. The contrast is most obvious when you see the actual election map.
Of course all 32 London boroughs are voting…so you know obviously it becomes a nationwide impacting election of critical importance
Not forgetting all councils
Not forgetting all councils in Wales and Scotland, and the NI Assembly…
Even combined the number of
Even combined the number of council seats Wales,Scotland & NI are electing for, doesnt even make 2/3rds of the total in England up for election, and in England they are electing less than 1/4qtr of all possible seats.
All the same, complaining
All the same, complaining that the emphasis on the local UK elections is London-centric might come across as a little anglocentric and dismissive to those in the other nations, all of whose seats are up for election.
There’s a steeper one in
There’s a steeper one in Bamford, Peak District now it’s been tarmaced.
Needs to be urban though for
Needs to be “urban” though for the record.
Join the rebel alliance
Join the rebel alliance
https://twitter.com/tomflood1/status/1521822797818912768
We meet the first Friday of every month in the parish hall to discuss our apparent control of councils nationwide. Please bring cake.
Mallet puts the hammer down!
Mallet puts the hammer down!
Star Wars day?
Star Wars day?
Pffft – Motorhead Day on Sunday. It’s the eighth of May. The eighth of May.
Ha, I’ve done the suitcase
Ha, I’ve done the suitcase thing! Moving my son into college, we took a train. It only runs once a day and arrives around 4 AM (very small town.) When we arrived, we tried Uber, Lyft, and taxis, and got nothing, so we started walking the 2.5 miles to his place with two bicycles, two very heavy large suitcases, and one smaller one. This was slow going, so we tried cycling it. It worked okay, but the wheeled suitcases would follow nicely for a minute or so, then get unstable and flip, especially on crappy concrete roads. Still, it was faster than walking.
Presumably the caption on
Presumably the caption on that suitcase cycling video (“Participating in this activity could result in you or others getting hurt”) relates to the driver using the phone while driving?
i thought it was listening to
i thought it was listening to the soundtrack on it.
Bike porn – is that what
Bike porn – is that what Green MPs are watching, in the house of commons?