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Live blog: Very slightly weird cycling video; Lachlan Morton takes on Three Peaks; Tour de France time trials in decline; Froome says 2020 route is “brutal”; £27 million cash injection announced for cycling schemes in Scotland + more
SUMMARY

Recycling old jokes?
Cycles attached to these railings will be removed. pic.twitter.com/g5zAI4i7qA
— Prof Chris Oliver (@CyclingSurgeon) October 14, 2019
Copenhagen leading the way with cycling infra
A 10m wide bidirectional bike bridge was inaugurated yesterday in #Copenhagen – it will convey more than 20,000 cyclists every day pic.twitter.com/HhvTMWSh0M
— Cycling Embassy DK (@CyclingEmbassy) October 16, 2019
Once again we can only look on in envy as the Danes invest in quality cycling infrastructure left right and centre.
Nicola Sturgeon announces £27 million fund for cycling schemes


At the SNP conference in Aberdeen, Scotland’s First Minister says the cash injection will fund more than 200 schemes to make it easier for people to cycle and walk: “We want people to walk and cycle more too, reducing our carbon footprint and improving our health.
“So I can announce today new investment for local projects the length and breadth of our nation. From Ayr to Aberdeen, a fund of £27 million will support more than 200 schemes to make it easier for people to cycle and to walk.
“That is acting locally as we lead globally in making our contribution to tackling the climate emergency.”
Singer Lloyd Cole has bikes to thank for weight loss
Hard to get used to me with just the one chin again… Thanks @marinbikes #lloydscyclingadventure https://t.co/tU5FN7vAFh
— Lloyd Cole (@Lloyd_Cole) October 15, 2019
The singer songwriter thanked Marin Bikes for his recent transformation.
Froome says 2020 TDF route is "brutal"
“De nombreuses opportunités pour ceux qui visent le classement général.” Le quadruple vainqueur du Tour @chrisfroome s’attend à une course ouverte !
Chris Froome predicts a difficult but open #TDF2020. Here is what he had to say. pic.twitter.com/Aplx4zoqN8
— Tour de France (@LeTour) October 15, 2019
Speaing at the 2020 route unveiling, Froome said it’s “probably the hardest Tour route I’ve seen in the past five or six years”, with a lot of elevation but “plenty of opportunities for the general classification to play out.”
Decline of the time trial: TT kilometres decrease from a peak of 176.5 in 2002 to just 36km in 2020
The number of TT kms per editions over the last editions. pic.twitter.com/ghoua12Vnk
— ProCyclingStats.com (@ProCyclingStats) October 15, 2019
Pro Cycling Stats have reminded us how the time trial has been in steady decline since the turn of the century at the Tour De France, with the routes increasingly favouring big summit finishes and sprint stages with little in between. It means perhaps the days of a rider relying on their time trial performance and hanging on in the mountains are gone, yet on the other hand it means GC contenders are often fresher for the mountains so it’s harder for an individual to split the pack.
What do you reckon… are you glad to see the back of long time trials or should this purest form of racing a bike be more significant in the sport’s biggest race?
The world's most normal video
Absolutely perfectly 100 per cent normal throughout.
Video: ‘Alternative calendar’ sees Lachlan Morton take on the Three Peaks Cyclocross
The latest event on EF Education-First’s ‘alternative calendar’ was the Three Peaks Cyclocross.
Lachlan Morton, the Australian pro who has also raced World Tour events such as Strade Bianche and the Tour of California this season, was the lucky rider.
EF Education First-Drapac riders have been taking part in a number of off-road and ultra-endurance races this season, stemming from the team’s new Rapha sponsorship.
Earlier this year, Morton has won the inaugural GBDURO, a 1,960km four-stage self-supported bike-packing race from Land’s End to John O’Groats.
He described the experience as “unimaginably hard.”
Driver who killed Australian pro cyclist Jason Lowndes to be spared jail
Motorist attempted to send text message 68 seconds before hitting cyclist from behind.
Levenshulme Bee Network named ‘Community Project of the Year’
Levenshulme Bee Network has been handed the ‘Community Project of the Year’ award at the 2019 Healthy Streets Summit.
Residents in the Levenshulme Bee Network group have led proposals to reduce the amount of through-traffic and to encourage walking and cycling.
Greater Manchester Commissioner for Cycling and Walking, Chris Boardman said: “This project is an excellent example of what happens when residents lead the way and are given the opportunity to design their neighbourhood in a way that best serves their needs. With the support of the council, this project will enable local people to move around more easily and safely without cars, and that benefits everybody.”
There is a £2.5m budge for the project, chiefly provided through the Greater Manchester Mayor’s Challenge Fund, plus a £100,000 contribution from Manchester City Council.
Gust of wind foils 100-mile wheelie – but 56-year-old cyclist still manages to set new world record
Rich Flanagan rode 50.5 miles to set his third wheelie world record.
Dave Rayner Fund awarded charitable status – renamed The Rayner Foundation
The Dave Rayner Fund has been awarded charitable status by the Charity Commission and will now be known as The Rayner Foundation.
The Dave Rayner Fund supports young riders taking their first steps towards a professional career.
It is named in memory of Dave Rayner, a professional cyclist who was one of the few British cyclists in the late 1980s and the early 1990s to flourish in a cycling team outside the UK.
Rayner rode for the Dutch Buckler team for two years competing in most of the major races on the international cycling calendar, only injury preventing him from a ride in the Tour de France.
During a night out in Bradford in 1994 with friends and his wife Serena, whom he had married just five weeks earlier, Rayner was the victim of an assault that led to his death four days later.
The Dave Rayner fund was set up in 1995 by his teammates and friends. Through its annual dinner and other activities, the fund has so far raised over £1,000,000 to provide financial support for young riders to travel abroad, set up home and safely function on a day-to-day basis.
Riders to have benefited in the past include David Millar, Adam Yates, Owain Doull, Hannah Barnes and Tao Geoghegan Hart.
Speaking on behalf of the Rayner Fund Committee, founder member (and current team manager for the British U23 team) Keith Lambert said:
“Being awarded charitable status has been a brilliant achievement and will ensure we can further enable riders to progress in the sport of competitive cycling, whether that is on the bike or off it.
“The assistance we are able to provide is financial, but it also takes the form of advice, mentoring and mental support to inspire, empower and support the next generation of athletes so they can achieve to the best of their ability.
“We hope this fantastic boost for the fund will help us to encourage more women and riders from underrepresented groups to engage in the sport.”
Cycle lane kerb intended to stop Southend drivers cutting corner removed for safety reasons
Locals say pedestrians, cyclists and motorists are all hitting raised kerb intended to protect cyclists.
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Latest Comments
Agree re speed limiting. Why is there no mention of 25km/hr limit in the article?
Does anyone know if ‘the police’ even read all these Roadcc road safety articles? Does anyone send them all to the relevant authorities on a daily basis? …if not we’re all wasting our breath.
@KiwiMike The pannier carrying capacity is similar 18kg vs 15kg. The quote was about carrying panniers not the deck. That aside I agree they are not really comparable but for different reasons: - the Tubus Duo is made of chromoly steel which won't crack anywhere near as easily as an aluminium rack - and to demonstrate Tubus' belief in their products they offer a 30-year guarantee vs the Old Man Mountain's "reasonable lifetime of the product" warranty which is entirely up to OMM whatever that means.
If you crash, obvs. If a weld fails or a boss cracks five years hence, chances are they’ll warranty it.
That’s … really not even comparable. In therms of weight capacity, mounting, top stowage, light mounting, etc. As per article, you can get the mass a fair way rearward of the axle using the OMM rack.
@Rendel Harris Hmm.... I stand corrected. I still think Obree had a /lot/ more talent. And Jan-Willem today clearly has dropped in levels, relative to those he's racing against.
I cycled a lot on the continent and have done fir many years. I've never been close passed, and only once had a scary overtake by an oncoming vehicle. Im close passed almost daily in the UK and dangerous overtakes are common. Some serious driver education is needed here, not to mention presumed liability legislation.
@TrainWalkWheel at least one person on here seems to have better understanding of these than I do but AFAICS the model is even less likely to lead to good outcomes than happened with eg. a certain UK bus company. The one notorious for moving into an area, putting the existing providers out of business by running more services for pence and losing money, then - having captured the market - jacking up the price and dropping services. At least in that case the intention was presumably to deliver a self-sustaining service in the end (albeit perhaps a worse, overpriced one). But AFAIK mass bike share itself has never made money directly. So one wonders what the end plan is if any one of these market-share-capture firms actually won? (Presumably that isn't important and it's all about trading / financial shenanigans in some way. I doubt they could hold the local authority to ransom for the extra cash...)
Alas it's another part of "because cars / 'change', we can't just copy a well-proven design eg. from NL" On top of this is the UK "not invented here" making it up / no expertise or standard designs AND a "we must fit cyclists in around existing road space" causing strange contorted layouts. So what happens is we get things like bi-directional cycle *lanes* (not separated cycle paths) because cheapest / easiest to patch in. So that means that pedestrians don't have a space to wait *after* crossing the cycle space and *before* they have to deal with the road. (It also puts another block in the way of cycling convenience at traffic lights - say at a T-junction - because unlike NL the lights then apply to cyclists going straight on, whereas in NL that would be an informal cycle path crossing for pedestrians with no lights applying to the cycle path part - so cyclists just keep rolling).
In 2019, Shanghai and other Chinese major cities implemented strict regulations and clean-up operations tp remove millopns of abondoned dockless bicycles that had created public nuisances and blocked pavements. One can't blame local authorities for taking actions in order to stop a messy situation triggered by unruly users.
9 thoughts on “Live blog: Very slightly weird cycling video; Lachlan Morton takes on Three Peaks; Tour de France time trials in decline; Froome says 2020 route is “brutal”; £27 million cash injection announced for cycling schemes in Scotland + more”
I like a TT in a grand tour,
I like a TT in a grand tour, I think an hour and a half at max effort should be included, anything less misses the point.
I hope that the route being brutal doesn’t neutralise the contenders racing too much.
Bring back TT’s else grand
Bring back TT’s else grand tours will be won only by people with the physique of children or normal sized people with a serious danger of developing eating disorders only. Not good for the health of riders, not good for variety or the principle of a grand tour being won by the best all round rider. Bring back some balance!!
But…maybe consider replacing the TT tech with ‘normal’ kit. Let the riders ride on their normal bikes and use their normal helmets etc. Let it be more a test of strength than a test of who has practiced to hold an unnatural position the longest.
Personally I prefer a TT stage to a long, boring flat stage tbh. The best riders start last and so there is a constant build up of anticipation and pressure as the times keep falling and so on.
So next year’s Tour is
So next year’s Tour is designed for a grimpeur who can’t time-trial that well?
My tenner is on Bardet.
I would love to see a proper
I would love to see a proper 50km time trial in the tour again. When the stages become too brutal it does tend to neutralise the racing or turn it into a war of attrition with little attacking
France must have a TDF winner
France must have a TDF winner! This is the latest attempt.
I thought Nicola Sturgeon
I thought Nicola Sturgeon despised Westminster, but she doesn’t seem above adopting their imbecilic tactics. Just like them, she announces a massive investment into cycling, £27m over the whole of Scotland; 200 schemes. I think we can safely assume that £27m divided by 200 is sweet fa, and all the schemes are a few dabs of white paint and a sign or two.
Add a couple of zeros Nicola and stop pissing about.
burtthebike wrote:
It’s a fair point, 27m won’t go far, literally, that’s about 12miles of dedicated cycleway..
As a biologist I particularly
As a biologist I particularly enjoyed the Krebs cycle gag. Never learned it though.
At long last, that video of
At long last, that video of my commute has found a wider audience…