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Live blog: Bristol teen completes gap year round-the-world ride, Zwift L’Etape du Tour Training Club, lorry tailgate near-dooring, Brailsford smashes Strade Bianche Gran Fondo, tributes to Kelly Catlin + more
SUMMARY

In case you missed it: Ban on electric scooters on UK roads could end, says minister
Transport minister Jesse Norman says that an effective ban on using electric scooters on UK roads could end – potentially opening the way for scooter-sharing firms to enter the British market. More here.
ICYMI: Mattel releases Kristina Vogel Barbie doll to mark International Women's Day
Olympic champion track cyclist Kristina Vogel, who was left paralysed from the chest down after a training crash last June, has been honoured with a Barbie doll in her likeness for International Women’s Day. More here.
ICYMI - Pope Francis says road cycling shows value of teamwork – but warns about sport’s dark side
Pope Francis says that road cycling provides an example of the value of teamwork – but has warned that the pursuit of “prestige and profit” can lead riders astray. More here.
Cycling pays tributes to World Champion cyclist Kelly Catlin, who died aged 23
The UCI is deeply saddened by the loss of three-time team pursuit UCI World Champion, Kelly Catlin. Our thoughts go out to her family, teammates, and friends. pic.twitter.com/OS551BLWeN
— UCI (@UCI_cycling) March 11, 2019
The impact this article has on me resonates strongly. I hope that we can find better resources for Olympians and athletes alike. Most are struggling to pursue something they’re passionate in but also something that’ll pay the bills.
— Mirai Nagasu (@mirai_nagasu) March 11, 2019
This is tragic.
If you’re suffering from depression, reach out. There’s nothing harder than getting through that darkness. But you can, and when you do the world looks entirely different. All you need is the strength to ask for help.
tel:1-800-273-8255 https://t.co/n7RkybyxYc— Ken Olin (@kenolin1) March 11, 2019
The U.S. cycling community suffered a devastating loss with the passing of Kelly Catlin, USA Cycling National Team member.
Read full statement here: https://t.co/R5jltUh5KF pic.twitter.com/GJU6mlHGq0
— USA Cycling (@usacycling) March 10, 2019
Catlin’s father Mark told VeloNews that the cause of her death on Friday night was suicide. We’ll have a full story and obituary on the site later this morning.
Popular climb in Lanzarote closed to cyclists... because of too many cyclists
Tourists who visit the Canarian island for the epic cycling rather than the Irish bars and discount cigarettes have recently been disappointed to find that one of the most famous climbs has been closed to cyclists for the forseeable… because of too many cyclists. According to Spanish news website Lancelot Digital the narrow climb up Femés mountain meant that tailbacks of cars were being formed due to high numbers of cyclists ascending and descending it. The report says some locals have complained the road is particularly dangerous, although according to our sources on the island many are still riding the climb anyway. Translating the comments in the Lancelot Digital article reveals some familiar anti-cyclist sentiment, although refreshingly a majority call for widening of the roads and better cycle tracks “because the islanders should be thinking more carefully about the kind of clientele they want to attract to Lanzarote” says one…
La Dusty Vita
Quickly becoming one of our favourite races to watch is Strade Bianche.
The race uses the gravel roads of Tuscany, winding their way through the hills and taking the riders to the finish in Sienna.
It is a truly stunning race to watch, although riding it might be a bit different…
Julian Alaphilippe's Strada Bianche winning S-Works Tarmac Disc
Here’s Julian Alaphilippe’s Strada Bianche winning S-Works Tarmac Disc, covered in dust and in need of a good wash!
He was riding the Tarmac, the all-round model in Specialized’s range, with disc brakes and 50mm carbon fibre rims shod with 26mm wide tyres.
View this post on InstagramA post shared by Deceuninck – Quick-Step Team (@deceuninck_quickstepteam) on
Even after winning the race he still had enough energy to attempt some front wheel stoppies on his way back to the team bus, whilst being chased by fans wanting a selfie!
View this post on InstagramThere he goes, our hero of the day @alafpolak #stradebianche #TheWolfpack
A post shared by Deceuninck – Quick-Step Team (@deceuninck_quickstepteam) on
Dave Brailsford smashes the Gran Fondo Strade Bianche, averaging almost 21mph over the bumpy 138km ride
While most of his top pro riders are in the thick of Paris-Nice, Team Sky’s head honcho took to the white gravel in Tuscany, competing in the Gran Fondo Strade Bianche that took place the day after Julian Alaphilippe of Quick-Step won the pro race. It was another mightily impressive ride from Brailsford, who posted the evidence to Strava – according to Strava’s power estimates (make of that what you will) he put out an average of 280 watts and rode at just under 21mph to complete the course in a little over four hours… that’s with a puncture 9km out from the finish. He’ll have no option but to sign himself up on the team at this rate!
What's this... decent London infra??
Just another new modal filter in Waltham Forest. Welcome to calm Capworth Street! @wfcycling @WeSupportWFMH @TwoWheelsGoodUK @Labourstone pic.twitter.com/2xfAwz4GCX
— Kee (@RouteW15) March 10, 2019
More of the same please!
Who else would love a month in Calpe?
Madison Genesis held their annual team training camp in Calpe this year and it’s easy to see why. The wall-to-wall sunshine beats the weather that we’ve been having here!
Anyone for a holiday?
Come join us for road.cc's Bath rideout, 22nd March
We’ve still got some FREE places left for the road.cc rideout on Friday 22nd March… join us for a chat, cake, beer, pizza… oh and a lovely scenic ride too. We’ve also got Stans NoTubes visiting to convert a lucky few volunteers to tubeless, tasty giveaways from Namedsport and the routes are provided by Komoot. See you there!
A different kind of near-dooring - cyclist almost hit as lorry driver opens trailer
We’ve featured near-doorings in our Near Miss of the Day series before, but here’s an unusual one, involving a lorry driver opening his trailer.
The footage was recorded by road.cc reader Bob, who said: “This looks quite innocent until you think what would have happened had I not given that lorry a wide berth, luckily nothing was coming the other way or I might not be here to tell the tale.
“Also the lorry is parked on double yellow lines and the pavement. No wonder our pavements are a mess.”
Bristol teen who had bike stolen in Australia set to complete record-breaking round-the-world ride
A Bristol teenager whose bike was stolen when he was in Australia is reportedly on course new record for being the youngest person to cycle around the world solo and unassisted.
Charlie Condell, aged 18, decided to use his gap year to circumnavigate the globe on two wheels, setting off on 6 July last year.
The Guardian reports that he was due to return to his starting point – Bristol’s iconic Clifton Suspension Bridge – today after visiting 20 countries on his 18,000-mile journey.
“I’ve loved so many different aspects of this trip,” the Guardian reports him as saying. “From the beautiful mountains to the pristine beaches, the people, the culture and the food. I’ve loved growing as a person.”
He was 103 days into his journey when he discovered that his bike, camping equipment, passport and other kit had been stolen in Townsville, Queensland, but vowed to carry on and with the theft making headlines around the world was able to source a new bike and other gear.
Reflecting on his ride, he said: “I think that there are a few reasons why people cycle, There are certain special things that everyone can share in common. That ranges from reaching a summit, to simply just pushing a big gear down a piece of perfect road.
“When you can find one of these moments, with the perfect scenery, and bliss everywhere, that’s when one feels truly special. It reminds us why we first rode – not for the KOMs or any of that stuff, just simply for the pleasure of riding your bike.”
How many bottom bracket standards?
S**t loads, that’s how many! Although in amongst them all I’m still unable to source a 103mm square taper Shimano BB-UN55 Bottom Bracket for my trusty Trek 1.2, anyone got any pointers??
Paris-Nice: Dylan Groenewegen wins stage 2
@GroenewegenD devance @ivan_cortina et @PhilippeGilbert sur la ligne et conserve son #MaillotJaune.
Dylan Groenewegen beats Ivan Garcia Cortina and Philippe Gilbert ans keeps the yellow jersey on his shoulders. pic.twitter.com/vnaUPq7U2Q
— Paris-Nice (@ParisNice) March 11, 2019
The Dutch Team Jumbo–Visma rider maintained his overall lead and made it back-to-back stage wins on the second day of Paris-Nice.
Zwift launches L'Etape du Tour Training Club
Virtual cycling platform Zwift has launched L’Etape du Tour training club aimed at preparing riders for this year’s edition of the cyclosportive – although with places capped at 30,000 compared to 15,000 entries for the event itself, they’re expecting people not riding in France to use it for their own summer goals.
Head here to sign up. Here’s what Zwift says:
16 weeks. 4 distinct training phases. Limited to 30,000 riders, this exclusive training club specifically targets the demands of the 2019 L’Etape du Tour. World Tour coach, Kevin Poulton, is the mastermind behind the plan’s many workouts and rides.
Finish individual workouts between March and July 21st—the date of the 2019 L’Etape du Tour—to unlock items based on your progress. Get to 100% completion for five unique items. Your avatar’s style is about to skyrocket.
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8 Comments
Latest Comments
@robgodd The poor guy himself suffered a traumatic brain injury and his skull was so badly shattered a significant portion of it had to be removed - do me a favour, have a look around cycling helmet manufacturers and see if any of them claim the foam hats they produce will protect against or even mitigate that level of injury. I'll wait if you like, but I can save us both the time and tell you what you'll find: none of them. Not a single one of them will. Because they don't, and they *can't* based on simple physics. Once the point of failure in a material is reached all(or as near as makes no odds) of the additional force beyond that necessary threshhold transfers through to the object beneath. Since bicycle helmets are rated for forces roughly equivalent to being dropped straight down from a stationary start 1.5m above a hard surface. Now, I'm not an expert in vehicle crash investigation, but I'm *fairly* sure that any impact or series of impacts powerful enough to render a quarder of your skull into gravel, put you in a weeks-long coma, give you massive amnesia, and leave you with ongoing symptoms of traumatic brain injury are a little bit, a teeny-weeny amount, a little smidgeon-widgeon more than what bike helmets are rated for. That's why none of the companies that make them claim they will help in such circumstances: because they know it would be a lie, and that unlike uninformed punters, carbrained journalists, or "medical professionals" who think wearing a helmet would save you from a broken arm(an actual scenario encountered by a mate, who's nurse at the A&E tutted and harrumphed her way through his whole treatment due to his lack of helmet despite his bonce having come through *being hit by a car* - another scenario bike helmets are worthless in - completely unscathed), the lawyers for those companies know their business and understand that if you lie in advertising you will get sued into the ground.
The Battle of Ypres April 1915. The German infantry division advanced using das Brumptstadt Fahrarden. The slow speed kept them behind the cloud of chlorine gas as it drifted towards the Commonwealth trenches. The offensive cleaved a two mile gap in the Western Front. The use of cycles was copied by the Japanese as they invaded Singapore and Burmah. By then war technology had embraced wider low pressure tyres, carbon frames and hydration gels. The German forces decided not to incorporate cycling as part of Operation Session, as bike theft in London and the South East was rife and would have caused huge casualties. Ironically superior advancement of tyre technology led to a British victory at El Alamein. This technology played a key part in the US Marines victory at Iwo Jima.
The appropriate response to Google pissing on your cereal is not a fancy new sugar that removes the taste of urine. Stop using Google products where you can. Firefox browser and DuckDuckGo search engine have had noticeable upticks in market share by explicitly NOT pushing AI.
my thoughts exactly...I wonder how that approach is working, with motor vehicle drivers...🤔
I do not wish to diminish the personal tragedy, but one never hear calls for pedestrians or even hikers to wear clothing with integrated lightening rods.
RE Andy Burnam / Heidi Alexander - this is the best thing in many ways - set an example (even if currently it leads to lots of online name-calling). And imagine some of the political alternatives! The folks in the apparently second-placed party seem incredibly unlikely to be doing so. And even the current "new Greens" seem less interested in ... y'know, environmental things. OTOH I wish Heidi could be bolder. And I fear that like anyone ambitious enough to get to the top (exception B Johnson - well, I guess there was the Corbyn bicycle...) Burnam will be trimming his transport policy sails to fit the wind (should that be "bunker-fuel-burning engines"?)
@mattsccm Bull bars aren't banned, they just have to conform to regulations so they are deformable or have plates that allow crumple give on contact, rather than rigid steel bars that can smash into pedestrians and cyclists with no give at all, catch them and drag them under the wheels. If you think that's a problem, do one. Why should who is responsible for a collision remove the responsibility of people driving a tonne of machinery on the road from having safety features to at least mitigate some of the effects of a collision?
I'd be willing to bet that's lazy use of stock photography rather than deliberate misinformation, but the result is still the same.
@smallbeer You obviously don't realise how many bulls there are wandering around Chelsea, in and out of the china shops, that he needs to protect his Range Rover from.
I agree, it's bloody 'elf and safety overreach, can't help some people, I put some meat, sorry, neat decoration on the front of mine and the polis were round poking their noses in like that (mind you, that was a mistake...) (etc)
8 thoughts on “Live blog: Bristol teen completes gap year round-the-world ride, Zwift L’Etape du Tour Training Club, lorry tailgate near-dooring, Brailsford smashes Strade Bianche Gran Fondo, tributes to Kelly Catlin + more”
Kind of makes Playa Blanca a
Kind of makes Playa Blanca a pretty bad choice as a cycling holiday destination. In fact, it rules out so much of the south of the island, you’re better off going somewhere else altogether.
I wonder if Brailsford has
I wonder if Brailsford has any of the jiffy bags left over? Impressive stuff from him though.
Rick_Rude wrote:
I’m not sure he deals with the paperclips and envelopes etc. nice of you to consider it though. What do you need them for? I think there’s some in the cupboard at work, if you send your address I can get some out to you…
its a busy road from playa
its a busy road from playa blanca and the quickest route to other parts of the island. Throw in a couple of hairpins near the top 12% average gradient for 1 km then its not surprising. I normally pull over in a lay by near the top to let traffic go and also for my own safety. Best climb is Tabayesco for length and solitude, stay in puerto del carmen and opens up the whole island
Rather than banning bikes
Rather than banning bikes from that road, they ought to be looking into why it’s so busy with cars. The LZ-2 should to be the route of choice for through traffic.
Dave, seeing as Dr Richard is
Dave, seeing as Dr Richard is on long term sick, do you know who the testosterone patches were for?
Velovoyeur wrote:
Dave and his crew have been through quite a lot of undue speculation and seemingly passed with flying colours. I’m not sure your warrior skills from behind that keyboard are likely to make a Columbo-esque discovery.
Just one more question, when another article here refers to an athlete taking her own life, do you not think it crass to be brinking up the good doctor’s apparent mental health issues?
Jack, I’ve got a boxed
Jack, I’ve got a boxed titanium spindled Hope ST BB in BSC/103mm flavour with sealed bearings and you can have a choice of red or blue cups, how much would you like to offer me?