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Muc-Off "bike porn" advert attracts accusations of "inappropriate" and "oversexualised" content; "Behold, the UK's largest bike retailer": Customers unimpressed by Halfords' bike racks; Plapp taps out due to horrific road rash + more on the live blog

Happy Friday everyone! One more live blog until the weekend, Dan Alexander is in the (still very chilly) hotseat for all your updates

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19 January 2024, 14:08
Muc-Off "bike porn" advert attracts accusations of "inappropriate" and "oversexualised" content

Muc-Off's advert for the Scrubber Gloves, the bike cleaning products brand's aptly named gloves for scrubbing bikes clean using your hands, has got lots of attention in the last week, attracting double the likes of any other post on its Instagram this year. Titled 'Hands On Cleaning' the vid shows a gloved-up user, wearing a jumper with the word 'filth' on it, making a series of suggestive cleaning motions to rid a grime-covered bike of its dirt...

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Muc-Off (@mucoff)

 It has attracted criticism from some, with accusations of "oversexualising" content and it being "widely inappropriate, uninclusive and unnecessary".

One comment on the video said: "Tell us your marketing team is all men without telling us your marketing team is all men... seriously?"

Muc-Off "bike porn" advert (Muc-Off/Instagram)

Another commenter added: "Way to go making cycling inclusive. You can do better than this @mucoff there are lots of ways to be funny without making 50 per cent of your audience feel grossed out and unsafe."

"Here we go again with with the heteronormative, masculine, and sexualised narrative that rips apart any notion of cycling being a space for everyone," a third wrote.

Muc-Off "bike porn" advert (Muc-Off/Instagram)

"It's 2024, surely you could come up with a marketing plan that was more inclusive to anyone other than basic men who like to over sexualise everything. Yes it may get the likes and engagement but is this really the target audience that you want your brand to only attract, because it definitely repulses a lot of other audiences who also need to clean their bikes," another suggested.

We've contacted Muc-Off to see if the brand has any reflections on the advert one week on, but hadn't heard back at the time of publication.

Of course, with 9,000 likes, not everyone who commented on the video agreed with the critics, some expressing support for the "bike porn" concept and one comment even suggesting the ad had "sold me on them".

Lancashire-based e-bike manufacturer Static Bikes also got in on the action, saying its bikes are "wet and ready".

Away from the "bike porn" comments, a couple of people were innocently more concerned by the lack of pre-wash to remove grit and dirt from the frame... "all that dirt just sanding the paint down" and another... "imagine just wet sanding your carbon frame"...

Whatever you or I make of the clip, someone at Muc-Off clearly sees the funny side, as we've been reliably informed it's over two years old and has been posted to Muc-Off's Instagram account at least once before. 

In April, we also featured Muc-Off's effort in our April Fool's round-up. No guesses for working out what the bike lube-selling company went for...

> Muc-Off's new lube… for when the bike's tucked up safely in the shed

19 January 2024, 16:36
Near Miss of the Day 887: Bus company launches investigation after driver hits cyclist’s handlebars during overtake
19 January 2024, 14:52
"They just don't make them like Mick Ives anymore": Tributes pour in for British cycling legend who dies aged 84
19 January 2024, 14:44
Seven out of ten people say they never ride a bike, as safer roads – not more cycle lanes – viewed as key to encouraging cycling, new national travel study finds
19 January 2024, 09:00
"Behold, the UK's largest bike retailer... you really are spoiling us": Customers unimpressed by 'wheel-bender' bike racks at major Halfords store

For the uninitiated, this type of bike rack is commonly dubbed the 'wheel-bender' because... well... I'm sure you can work that part out. No support for the frame, hard to lock to, potentially the easiest rack to be removed? I'm willing to die on the 'just give us nice, practical, well-fitted Sheffield Stands' hill.

Unsurprisingly the introduction of a 'wheel-bender' does not go down well...

> "Are you happy to lose customers?": Dismay as Co-op replaces popular bike parking with "two useless wheel benders"

But outside a branch of the UK's largest cycling retailer? You'd be forgiven for expecting something a little bit more inspiring. 

And no, apparently it's not even a leftover relic from past decades that has never been upgraded and everyone's forgotten about it, but a relatively recent addition...

One wheel torture device replaced by another. As Bike Rogers explained in another post "it strikes of doing the bare minimum". Anyway, not Halfords' only live blog appearance in recent times, click here for another cracker...

> "All the right parts, but not necessarily in the right places": Halfords' questionable bike set-up ridiculed 

Or, if you're craving your next dodgy bike rack fix...

> Worst bike racks — from the useless to utterly unusable places to park your bicycle

19 January 2024, 11:51
Altrincham's the place to be...

road.cc reader Bob got in touch to share the good news from Altrincham... "Proper Sheffield bike racks, near the front door, protected from cars." No wonder the Sunday Times awarded it best place to live 2022...

Halfords Altrincham (Google Maps)

There's hope...

19 January 2024, 11:13
"Ethical bike thief" re-steals nicked hire bikes and returns them to docking stations

An undercover vigilante, dubbed 'Batman', is re-stealing stolen bike share bicycles and returning them to docking stations in Toronto, blogTo reports.

The "ethical bike thief" is fed up with spotting stolen hire bikes all over the city, key signs being the lights not flashing, a "chewed up" appearance, and it being stashed in a strange place, such as one he spotted in some bushes, swooping in and returning it to a docking station.

"I can't save them all because they're either in use or locked up," the ethical bike thief said. "Like anything, once you keep an eye out for it, you'll start to notice them."

Thoughts? 

19 January 2024, 10:31
"We have been fighting so many headwinds for the last three or four years, that it's come to the point where we really can't carry on": Women's Tour owner and Tour of Britain organiser SweetSpot goes into liquidation
The Women's Tour climbs Black Mountain in 2022 (SWpix.com)

Yet another blow for British-based pro races as the owner of the Women's Tour and organiser of the Tour of Britain, SweetSpot, has entered liquidation. The news reported in the Guardian by Jeremy Whittle via an interview with chief executive Hugh Roberts is that the promoter has appointed KRE corporate recovery to deal with its creditors after entering voluntary liquidation, with liabilities likely to extend significantly past £1m.

2023 Tour of Britain stage seven (Simon Wilkinson/SWpix.com)

[Simon Wilkinson/SWpix.com]

British Cycling had rescinded the group's naming rights to the Tour of Britain due to a dispute over unpaid fees, claimed to be in the region of £750,000, while there has also been a suggestion of legal action from the Isle of Wight's council following the cancellation of the final stages in 2022 due to the death of the Queen.

Chief exec Roberts also admitted the estimated £1m outstanding debt could be higher, with a creditors list including local police forces and in-race service suppliers.

2023 Tour of Britain stage three, Olav Kooij wins again (SWpix.com/Simon Wilkinson)

[Simon Wilkinson/SWpix.com]

"Liquidation started to become a possibility back in July," Roberts said, suggesting that spiralling costs, the impact of Covid cancelling races, the Queen's death cancelling stages, and British Cycling's stance on the fees dispute had all contributed.

"Because we were already under a lot of pressure financially with the Tour of Britain. There was a potential title sponsor keen to be involved, with the men's Tour and the women's Tour, so we went ahead with the race, because that encouraged other sponsors to get involved."

Nothing came from those negotiations, creating a "real struggle".

"The reality of us having to decide to do what has actually ­happened came into focus," he said. "It's the end of an era. It's 20 years of hard work that have come to this. We have been fighting so many headwinds for the last three or four years, that it's come to the point where we really can't carry on in the current climate and the current business environment that we find ourselves in.

"The conditions that were set for us to extract ourselves from the position with British Cycling were too onerous. British Cycling wanted to still receive the full licence fee that they felt they were due in 2022. Despite the Queen dying in the middle of the race and all our other partners showing a little bit of financial sympathy to us they were insisting that the fee they felt they were owed should be paid in full.

"That, along with Covid, with not having a race from September 2019 to September 2021, the debt taken on board to keep the whole thing afloat. Local council bankruptcies, belt-tightening all over the place – that does not augur well for events that rely on government support.

"British Cycling say they have a plan [for the men's Tour of Britain] but I don’t know what it is. There was no room to negotiate. We were not even given the grounds to appeal."

British Cycling said it is "making every possible effort to  ensure that the Tour of Britain and a UCI Women's World Tour stage race take place in 2024 and beyond, and will be in a position to provide further details in the coming weeks". 

19 January 2024, 10:25
A winter ascent of Mont Ventoux
19 January 2024, 10:20
Tour Down Under any other business: Luke Plapp abandons due to horrendous road rash

Before the stage Luke Plapp's team put out this update...

Translation: It f-ing hurts and have you tried sleeping in Australia during summer missing half the skin off your back? Can feel those sheets sticking from here, Luke, rest up... 

> "That's going to sting for a while": Jayco-AlUla's Luke Plapp with some of the worst road rash we've seen... but still manages to complete stage three of Tour Down Under

19 January 2024, 09:55
Pro cycling's new dominant sprinter? Tougher tests ahead but Sam Welsford and Bora-Hansgrohe showing promise in Oz

Sam Welsford. 2024 couldn't have started much better for Bora's flying Aussie. Home race. Three sprints. Three wins, the third of which coming today on his 28th birthday. A lead-out working like clockwork. Happy days. 

There has been bullishness coming out of the Bora camp all week, Welsford praising the race-dominating leadout abilities of Danny van Poppel, Ryan Mullen and Co. 

"With those guys leading me out it’s almost hard not to get it right [...] with Danny and Ryan in front of you, you can turn your brain off, and they'll do the whole thing for you," the Aussie explained.

Sam Welsford Tour Down Under (Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

Van Poppel also compared Welsford, in some quotes that made eye-catching headlines earlier this week, to Marcel Kittel or André Greipel... "a powerhouse", adding that: "He's a totally different type of sprinter to Bennett – I was waiting for a fast sprinter. Sam Bennett is a good friend of mine, but in the end it's business and we want to win." Ouch.

> "I was waiting for a fast sprinter": Lead-out supremo Danny van Poppel offers savage analysis of Sam Bennett as "New Sam" Welsford opens Bora account at Tour Down Under

Bora, Welsford and his leadout are saying, and more importantly doing, all the right things. Will 2024 be the year he takes a step forward and becomes pro cycling's dominant sprinter? Lorena Wiebes, Jasper Philipsen and a few others will have something to say about that, but the signs are positive, at least for some big wins, Welsford expected to head to the Giro in May (and mouth-watering potential clashes with Wout van Aert/Olav Kooij for Jumbo, Jonathan Milan, Fabio Jakobsen, Ewan and Juan Sebastián Molano), his second Grand Tour after a debut Tour de France last year that only brought one top-ten finish.

A seemingly off Caleb Ewan, Phil Bauhaus, Elia Viviani and Biniam Girmay probably isn't the toughest competition for a dialled in and firing Bora machine either. Tougher tests ahead, but a near perfect 2024 so far.

We're yet to decide if having four arms will help or hinder his chances...

Sam Welsford Tour Down Under (Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

[Zac Williams/SWpix.com]

Dan is the road.cc news editor and joined in 2020 having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Dan has been at road.cc for four years and mainly writes news and tech articles as well as the occasional feature. He has hopefully kept you entertained on the live blog too.

Never fast enough to take things on the bike too seriously, when he's not working you'll find him exploring the south of England by two wheels at a leisurely weekend pace, or enjoying his favourite Scottish roads when visiting family. Sometimes he'll even load up the bags and ride up the whole way, he's a bit strange like that.

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49 comments

Avatar
OnYerBike replied to chrisonabike | 11 months ago
2 likes

Just make sure you don't accidentally secure your bike to the "fork" of the rack!

(or the "handlebars" but they look to be high enough that you wouldn't do so accidentally.)

Avatar
brooksby | 11 months ago
2 likes

It would be interesting for road.cc to approach Halfords for comment - is it that they (Halfords) are a bit rubbish, or is it down the shopping centre freeholder?

My money would probably be on, "It's a decision left to the individual manager"

Avatar
mattw replied to brooksby | 11 months ago
0 likes

Since it's a capital installation, I doubt it.

We have fewer nobs than Altrincham, but ours are fine:

https://www.google.com/maps/@53.1243834,-1.259089,3a,37.3y,27.33h,91.54t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sZ5LZN_pFU1Mv13SWdGlp5A!2e0!7i16384!8i8192?entry=ttu

Avatar
Safety | 11 months ago
2 likes

Poor Luke Plapp. For road rash that bad I'd recommend Viagra. It won't take the pain away but will stop the sheets sticking to you.

Seriously though just shows how tough the pros are.

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DoomeFrog replied to Safety | 11 months ago
0 likes

Don't wish to blow one's own trumpet but I will.

I stacked it on a downhill on the Isle of Wight one visit. Broke my bike frame, spent half the day in A&E, road rash all down one side (it bloody hurts peeling off the remains of the clothing).

Hired a bike the next day to finish our tour of the island. It was surprising how I was able to get back into the groove even with my kit sticking to my bandages.

Avatar
wtjs replied to Safety | 11 months ago
2 likes

Seriously though just shows how tough the pros are

They are! I squirm even now thinking about the heroic Dutch rider some years ago, who carried on with the Tour after being bounced onto barbed wire by a team/ press car

Avatar
john_smith replied to wtjs | 11 months ago
2 likes

Johnny Hoogerland. Who hates the fact that people only remember him for the barbed wire episode.

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Velophaart_95 replied to Safety | 11 months ago
1 like

Tough - or stupid? A lot of the time it's the latter.....The sport is stuck in a time warp in regards to injuries......

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PRSboy | 11 months ago
4 likes

Wow, that ascent of Ventoux looks absolutely breathtaking!

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brooksby replied to PRSboy | 11 months ago
0 likes

PRSboy wrote:

Wow, that ascent of Ventoux looks absolutely breathtaking!

In the sense that you are gasping for breath? 

Avatar
PRSboy replied to brooksby | 11 months ago
1 like

Probably, but hopefully the astonishing views and peace would have compensated!  Bet it was quite fresh up top too...

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redimp replied to PRSboy | 11 months ago
3 likes

The descent might be a tad sketchy

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mattw | 11 months ago
4 likes

At Halfords I just take the bike in; it's a bike shop.

But they should be leading with accessible parking.

Avatar
NickSprink | 11 months ago
3 likes

TBF seeing that Halfords is usually in an out of town warehouse type place, they will be a tennant, and probably have little say about things like that, are dependent on what the landlord does/allows.

On the other hand if I'm in a Halfords looking at bike stuff it is an emergency situation, and if I have a bike with me it will be my brompton, which I will take into the shop anyway.

Avatar
wycombewheeler replied to NickSprink | 11 months ago
0 likes

NickSprink wrote:

TBF seeing that Halfords is usually in an out of town warehouse type place, they will be a tennant, and probably have little say about things like that, are dependent on what the landlord does/allows.

On the other hand if I'm in a Halfords looking at bike stuff it is an emergency situation, and if I have a bike with me it will be my brompton, which I will take into the shop anyway.

taken my road bike when needed several times, but I'm sure I've also managed to lock my bike outside as well. (not to a wheel bender).

Avatar
davebrads | 11 months ago
3 likes

My nearest Halfords doesn't even have a bike rack of any sort. I sent Halfords a message on Facebook a couple of years ago and I got a standard "we'll look into it" reply, but nothing further.

Avatar
Rendel Harris | 11 months ago
7 likes

I'm not much of a lad for the old conspiracy theories, but when a retailer dependent on selling bikes (often presumably replacements for stolen ones) and doing bike repairs offers the type of bike storage that is most likely to get your bike stolen or damaged…

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Bigtwin | 11 months ago
4 likes

This is actually a good news story.  A very visible reminder NEVER EVER to take your bike to Haulfrauds!

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ktache replied to Bigtwin | 11 months ago
3 likes

I take my bicycle into Halfords when I wish to buy bicycle stuff from them. I think they don't charge for click and collect above a certain price, unlike Evans. Their £1 reflective slap bands are excellent and do not seem to have been a victim of rish!'s runaway inflation.

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