With the threat of the virus continuing to hang over the professional peloton as racing resumes, CCC Team have been forced to withdraw Lukasz Wlsniowski and Szymon Sajnok from their Tirreno–Adriatico squad with suspected coronavirus cases.
A statement said: "Wiśniowski withdrew from stage seven after developing mild symptoms during the stage and underwent a rapid test on Sunday evening which indicated a positive result. Wiśniowski will undergo a PCR test to confirm the result.
"As per CCC Team’s Covid-19 policy, Wiśniowski’s roommate Szymon Sajnok has automatically been withdrawn from racing and will also undergo a PCR test."
All other members of the team and staff underwent rapid testing twice on Sunday evening and Monday morning, with CCC reporting that all these tests came back negative. It means that five remaining CCC riders will line up for the eighth and final stage, a 10.1km individual time trial.
Unlike the Tour de France, RCS Sport - the organisers of the Tirreno–Adriatico and Giro D'Italia - are not enforcing the "two strikes and you're out rule" with coronavirus cases like the Tour de France, instead just asking that those who test positive should immediately isolate.
The Giro's race director Mauro Vegni told La Gazzetta dello Sport: “I’ll test them, I'll check them, but I won’t send the team home. I think that’s correct and respectful towards people who don’t have anything to hide in such a situation.
"Those who test positive certainly aren't bandits. Obviously I will try to protect them from a health point of view, but I’m not going to invalidate the work of a team that has been preparing for a year for a big event.”
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the risk is identified in the risk assessment, its how West Mercia Police decide whats reasonably practicable to mitigate that risk thats then the decision she has made.Theyve decided there isnt anything they can do,and can achieve similar results doing something differently, so have cancelled the close pass operation. fair enough as I say we might not like it but without knowing what the risk assessment says we dont know what mitigating options there might be.
in terms of how the police manage to cope doing other risky things, they primarily get training either to ride motorbikes, drive cars in pursuits,handle angry people or are issued appropriate levels of ppe, all of which are mitigating the risk, what you cant do is just pretend the risk isnt there if youve identified it.
Alternatively, she was spouting bullshit and got called on it.
I wonder which party is in control of that council...
On the police superintendent's comments: What she wants to say is that she doesn't consider the welfare of cyclists to be worth her and her officers' time - a fact which is evident in how many individual forces handle issues involving cycling. What she's now hoping is that the story dies while a spurious "meeting" is arranged.
Front line police work is inherently dangerous. It's laughable to use H&S as an excuse for this.
Yup - clearly it was the bikes which were the problem...
Tooting has always been awful to drive through. The LTNs did make access for ambulances to St Georges Hospital worryingly difficult admittedly.
I took my motorbike for its MOT in Tooting last week and the traffic was terrible. But it has been for years. The worst stretch is the bit between Balham and Tooting Broadway.
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