"52mph in a 20 zone... Lycra lout cyclists are creating death traps all over Britain."
That is the news sat proudly atop The Telegraph newspaper's front page this morning, the promo for an in-depth analysis of Strava segments across London and the respective speeds reached to achieve their fastest times. However, as many people have since pointed out online, the speeds cited in lots of the paper's examples appear not to be the feat of unsuspecting cycle commuters who should really be ditching the suit and tie for a summer challenging Mark Cavendish at the Tour de France, but rather just the result of dodgy GPS data.
The feature centres around a segment on Chelsea Embankment, Tite St to Chelsea Bridge, where the Telegraph claims a cyclist (who probably "felt that was a commute well spent") had covered the 630-metre segment at 52mph (84km/h), evidence "cyclists are turning UK roads into death traps".
What the feature does not appear to question or fact check is why a London cyclist on their way to work would be faster even than what six-time Olympic champion Sir Chris Hoy says was his fastest ever speed, 80km/h achieved on an optimal indoor velodrome in the keirin, a track cycling event where riders slipstream behind a derny to achieve faster speeds.
On another cited segment the newspaper alleges a cyclist smashed past Lambeth Bridge at 46mph (73km/h), hitting a max speed of 52mph, despite the average speed for their ride being 16mph (25km/h). A third claims a rider, whose power meter (a calibrated device giving an accurate measure of how much power a rider is putting through the pedals) reports he averaged 204w, but had taken the fastest time at a speed of 42mph (67km/h).
According to Bike Calculator, an 80kg cyclist riding a bike weighing eight kilogrammes (on a perfect summer's day with no wind) would have to hold 2,500w to ride the earlier Tite St to Chelsea Bridge segment at 52mph.
As one cyclist on social media responded to the article, "If you can ride through London at 52mph, please contact your local professional bicycling team. They may be interested in your skills."
Others pointed out the "GPS glitches" apparent in the segments used, Chas Pope telling the newspaper: "You might want to check your research on the cycling article you've splashed on your front page. Virtually all of the fast times on the Strava
segments you chose have GPS glitches".
Political reporter at The Guardian, Peter Walker, called the story "my absolute favourite anti-cycling news story of all time".
"But congrats, I suppose, to the Telegraph for opening a new (if entirely fictitious) front against cyclists: being able to travel at 52mph on the flat," he wrote on social media.
The story raises concerns about cyclists racing Strava segments putting pedestrians and other road users in danger, the story coming days after the ride-sharing app reminded the public that it already has a feature to flag segments as "hazardous", removing the leaderboard.
Strava was commenting to road.cc in light of calls from the Royal Parks to remove a segment in Regent's Park following the death of a pedestrian in a collision with a cyclist back in 2022. The rider involved will not face prosecution as the Metropolitan Police deemed there was "insufficient evidence for a real prospect of conviction".
The case, thrust into the spotlight since a recent coroner's inquest, reignited the discussion about cycling, the government now moving forward with introducing tougher legislation to prosecute cyclists who kill or injure through dangerous or careless cycling.
Commenting on the discussion around segments, Strava told us: "We are aware of the tragic cycling incident which occurred in London's Regent's Park in June 2022 and our condolences go to the victim's family.
"At Strava, safety of our active community and those around them is a priority, and we have community standards that note that 'sports happen in dynamic environments that we share with motorists, pedestrians, other people, equestrians, pets and wildlife'. Strava expects those in our community to 'prioritise everyone's safety and enjoyment of our shared resources and respect the law'. The behaviours related to this incident violate Strava's 'community standards'.
"At the end of last week, we received a request from Royal Parks to discuss the cycling route segment where the incident occurred. The ability to flag a cycling route segment as hazardous already exists in Strava. Anyone can report a segment that they would deem as hazardous. If segments are flagged as hazardous, achievements are not awarded for that segment and leaderboards are disabled. Any Strava community member who cycles on that same route segment will receive a warning of the hazards on that segment."
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112 comments
I completely agree!
Oh wait, you mean a member of IPSO...
They are members and abide by the code of practice BUT it's really just a toothless talking shop set up to give the appearance of some sort of regulation. They replaced the press complaints commission but all that really happened was a change of name.
My politically aligned and practically useful recommendation for copies of the Telegraph is that they be used to line Donald Trump's diapers.
I mentioned 'numbers' instead of speed so ipso sent me a response saying 'what numbers do you refer to' so I sent them back a whole list of quotes from the article etc.
I got the impression that nothing will be done if they can't connect 'numbers' with 'speed' which I also mentioned.
That doesn't fill me with hope!
Congratulations Nazigraph! You have now achieved Hyper-Junk Press status, and may hold your head up high when meeting your mentors at DM, DE, Sun etc.
It's not "Dodgy GPS data". It's not GPS data at all: The fast rides are all virtual rides that haven't been flagged as such. There's a workout called "London City Trip" on the Tacx app, and all but one of the top 10 rides on the "Tite St to Chelsea Bridge" segment follow this route exactly (24.7km long). Just goes to show that Tacx is a bit generous with the virtual speed. I doubt it's been done maliciously or to win KOMs. It's just people haven't figured out that they need to flag these rides as virtual to Strava.
Imagine studying journalism and then the high point of your career is writing for the Torygraph and just making up shit so that angry pensioners can moan about it.
Do Telegraph journalists study journalism? From the general standard of the paper, and certainly the op-ed sections, I assumed that the only necessary qualification was that daddy was at school or university with one of the senior management.
So, either the Telegraph journalists are either:
- so ignorant of human physiques and aerodynamics that they think that cyclists can actually do 52mph on the flat
- so prejudiced that they believe that dangerous cyclists must be doing something dangerous at all times
- so cynical that they know it isn't in any way true, but publish it anyway.
Which one is it?
All five (There will be at least two more that I haven't thought of yet).
Or number 4: They are a typical journalist who does zero research. Read ANY article in a mainstream paper or website you have a little bit of knowledge on and I absolutley guarantee you, you'll find at leats two factual errors.
It's too bad when this laziness results in changing public opinion.
I am sure that if the wind is strong enough 52 mph on the flat is doable. The journalist was probably just assuming the cyclist was aided by a tornado or microburst.
Great, can't bloody win!
Schrödinger's cyclist...
We are simultaneously too slow and causing drivers to overtake dangerously and also too fast and risking the lives of every child in the country.
I tried for years to go over 50mph down mountains in the Alps on my loaded touring bike not really believing it was possible. I found the place where I thought I might actually do it - an 18% gradient 2km long almost straight stretch of road in Austria on the eastern side of the climb to Kuhtai at a place called Greisen. With a lot of frantic pedalling, breathing and gear shifting I took my chance. My old-style bike computer using a magnet on the wheel recorded 54.2mph max speed. A one off.
Shame on the Telegraph though - no cyclist has ever done that speed in central London and the editor knows it. Motorists on the other hand can be witnessed doing that speed alarmingly often. A 6.3l bi-turbo struggles to drive slower than 52mph, and there are plenty of vehicles with engines like that with such excess power on London streets.
Cause of Pedestrian Deaths 2022 UK
cars 258, LGVs 42, bus/ coach 20, motorbikes 11, BICYCLES 0
Shouldn't that read as "BICYCLES 1" given that the death in 2022 is what has prompted this who-haa?
it doesnt get counted in those stats, as the she died 2 months later, it was something else the Telegraph moaned about in their reporting claiming the real figure of cyclists causing deaths must therefore be much bigger and was being hidden
But that cn apply to vehicles too - and they already caused 258 deaths that year.
Absolutely, but the clowns at the Telegraph don't consider that a problem.
Driver swerved to avoid 52mph cyclist
It doesn't count. That's an electric car /s
What a bunch of grasses. I bet they also took those cyclists' photos without their consent, too.
nah they photoshopped them, if they were doing 52mph theyd look much blurrier
A couple of days ago I was riding at 27 m.p.h. in a 20 m.p.h. zone (freewheeling down a steep hill.)* when I was overtaken by a taxi like I was standing still. I'm pretty sure they were doing at least 52 m.p.h.
*on my way to work
But taxis drivers are professionals. They know what they are doing and they drive responsibly. Anyway the taxi probably had somewhere important to go. Some people actually need to work, not like bone-idle lefty slacker cyclists messing around in their silly lycra on their childish bicycles all day. Maybe if you actually got a job and did some real work for a change you'd be able to afford proper transportation too.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Breathe
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Deeper breath
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Cyclists; Holding drivers up whilst riding dangerously fast, since the 1800s.
Just like that time the Alliance of British Drivers (no me either) gotcha'd cyclists using Strava data. Just that the data they chose came from the Tour of Britain....
https://www.reddit.com/r/ukbike/comments/49p1p0/association_of_british_d...
52mph!! Sluggard. I once reached 134.9 mph according to my GPS. Even topped 80mph walking
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