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Live blog: Swansea cyclist felled by fishing line stretched across seafront bike path; We take a punt on how Giro may play out; Best Twitter reply to study saying cyclists should wear hi-vis with big arrows to avoid close passes + more
SUMMARY

ICYM - our top stories over the bank holiday weekend


Hope you enjoyed the long weekend folks! Here’s a round-up of our top stories (and weird leg photos) from the last few days…
Movistar’s Jose Joaquin Rojas posts picture of his legs mid-Giro d’Italia – and photo goes viral
The best cycling films on Netflix, Sky Cinema and Amazon Prime Video
Just In: Trek Madone SLR 9 Disc – £10,000 aero superbike arrives in for review
This looks important...


It looks like the UK’s most treasured toilet humour magazine Viz is going to blow the lid off the loos of the Tour de France in their latest issue… Britain’s self-proclaimed 3rd or 4th funniest magazine is available from all good newsagents now if you can’t wait to find out.
Olympian who was hit by deer in Richmond Park has his say in blog article


Stuart Hayes shattered his pelvis after being hit by a deer in Richmond Park last week – and was subject to abuse from some dark corners of the Internet after the Friends of Richmond Park Facebook page wrote “cyclist learns the hard way” to report on the incident, suggesting Hayes was at fault for riding too fast. His wife Michelle Dillon has since posted on Twitter to explain that the deer actually ran at Hayes and tried to avoid the deer, while he said himself on a blog post: “I received a lot of lovely messages which I really appreciated, however a charity decided to capitalise on the situation and use me to look like a bad example for cyclists and vent their anger towards all cyclists using Richmond Park. This particular post was all over social media and there were some hurtful comments in there and personal attacks which can really make you feel like crap when your laying in a hospital bed with a broken pelvis. However I tried not to get too wrapped up in it all because I wanted to focus my energy on getting better quickly, now I’m back home I can focus on the more important things and I’m hoping to be back training as soon as I can. Of course I have a lot of rehabilitation ahead of me and I’m sure I will learn a lot from this experience that I can only pass onto others, especially my athletes that I coach. You always learn the most from your own experiences.”
Latest online tabloid article about cyclists being targeted with tacks in the village of Badger could be the most vitriolic yet


A right wing tabloid has took a break from reporting on the love life of the royals and scaring their readership about illegal immigrants to weigh in on a perceived conflict between cyclists and drivers in the Shropshire village of Badger (read our article about it here). The article is titled: “The village leaving lycra louts in a spin: Cycling clubs adore the idyllic lanes that run through an exclusive Shropshire village but one local is so fed up they are laying them with BOOBY TRAPS”.
The article mentions how the village was a ‘peaceful idyllic location’ before a saboteur began laying tacks on the roads, presumably to deter cyclists from riding through. There is confusingly an interview with an anonymous local who claims cyclists are “clogging lanes by riding two or three abreast”, yet in a later paragraph another anonymous resident accuses the cyclists of riding too fast downhill through the village.
Even more alarming is the comments section, in which the most liked ones include gems such as: “We’re that sick of them in the village where I live that we use a mixture of sharp sand and gravel on the bends in the road”, and: “Absolutely, ridiculous to put pins on the road… Should use landmines!”, and: “I want to just push them over and steal their bikes as they have no thought for any other road users.”
We can only hope these particular keyboard warriors don’t have driving licences, as it makes for quite worrying reading.
Want to get faster? Just do your own Grand Tour...
Did my own little gran tour back home in Monaco. Now its time to pin The Numbers on the Jersey again for @TeamDiData here are some stats. 21 days including 5 active rest days rides. Longest ride was 7,5h. 2 travel days. Let the racing begin
Thx to @AlexanderKamp1 for the company pic.twitter.com/cXRnYEnWIm— Michael Valgren Hundahl (@MichaelValgren) May 27, 2019
Michael Valgren clocked up some pretty impressive numbers during a 21-day training block.
The Dane logged a staggering 2,248km with 39,400m of climbing. That resulted in a TSS of 3,776 and a calorie burn of 63,807Kcal.
So, there are some numbers to aim for! It makes us tired just looking at them…
Another two years for Specialized and Deceuninck – Quick-Step sponsorship
Deceuninck – Quick-Step is the most successful team of the season so far and it has confirmed it’ll continue to be supported by Specialized for another two years, taking this partnership through to the 2021 season.


Specialized has been a partner of the Quick-Step team for the past 11 years and Deceuninck – Quick-Step team boss is obviously happy to continue this winning partnership, which has seen Specialized develop several key new bikes like the Tarmac, Roubaix and Venge.
“We are very happy to announce that we have signed for two more years with Specialized. Deceuninck – Quick-Step and Specialized have had a long and beautiful history together. Having a company which listens to, embraces, and builds bikes and equipment to the needs of us and our riders is one of the keys to our success,” says Deceuninck – Quick-Step CEO, Patrick Lefevere.
“We have no doubt we are racing the best bikes in the world and the support that we continually receive from them is unrivalled. They always take on board our thoughts and feedback and use it to develop equipment that is at the cutting edge of cycling technology. We look forward to enjoying many more memorable victories together!”


“We have been very honored to be partners with Deceuninck- Quick-Step and Patrick Lefevere for so many years. Not only has the team achieved iconic victories on Specialized bikes, they have also been a key part of our development process for our bikes and equipment. As we look to the future of our company and our sport, we look to Patrick and his team to be key partners for success, added Scott Jackson, Specialized Road Sports Marketing Manager.
How the bike of Primož Roglič ended up on Movistar's team car (and a Jumbo-Visma rider ended up riding a Movistar bike)
Giro de Italia 2019: Cómo acabó la bici de Roglic en la baca del Movistar | Deportes | EL PAÍS https://t.co/r34J00JPej pic.twitter.com/0o3e9TzpqU
— Carlos Arribas (@carlosarribas) May 27, 2019
This rare sight of a rival team rider’s bike on another team’s car happened thanks originally to a mechanical suffered by Primož Roglič, whose Bianchi is wracked up on the Movistar vehicle in the photo above. The odd sequence of events materialised on stage 15 when Roglič needed a new bike, so teammate Antwan Tolhoek gave him his because the Jumbo-Visma car was way back from the lead group, handing out drinks to riders in the main peloton.
Tolhoek was then left on the side of the road with Roglič’ bike, so Movistar stepped in and gave the stricken rider one of their Canyon bikes to finish the stage. According to El Pais, the Movistar mechanic even swapped the Shimano pedals over for Tolhoek, as the Movistar bike was fitted with Look pedals. Movistar then loaded up the broken Bianchi onto their team car. So there you have it!
No brakes. No brains
And luckily no damage was done on this occasion. Don’t know about you but I would be feeling a little twitchy going downhill with only my foot to slow me down.
⠀
Cycling… downhill… with no brakes… behind a truck…
What could go wrong?
⠀⠀ pic.twitter.com/1LNX2p7UhJ— ⓑιcιcletⓞ (@Bicicleto_ZGZ) May 27, 2019
Yep, still a bit snowey
Some cyclists rode up the Gavia today to check and see if it was really blocked…..it was.
Photo: Saliinvetta pic.twitter.com/COn316PSrV
— Race Radio (@TheRaceRadio) May 27, 2019
“Surely these Giro organisers are just being snowflakes about ‘elf and safety?” thought these intrepid cyclists; however it turned out there was something behind the decision to reroute stage 16 away from the Gavia after all…
Giro latest - Nibali attack sees him gain time on Roglic
.@vincenzonibali @Bahrain_Merida – attack on Mortirolo
Time: 2’18”
Avg Speed: 11.6km/h
Max Speed: 16.4km/h
Avg Power: 450W
Power-to-weight: 6.92W/kg
Max Power: 680W
Gradient: 16%#VelonLive #Giro #cycling pic.twitter.com/JfHX97czNO— Velon CC (@VelonCC) May 28, 2019
Huge power for the Italian as he attacked up the brutal Mortirolo.
With five stages left, how will the Giro play out?
Another absorbing day in the mountains (read our report on Stage 16 here) brought the end game of the 102nd edition of the Giro d’Italia into sharper focus, with four stages left – one of those, on paper, unlikely to see major action in the overall – before Sunday’s relatively short, 17-kilometre time trial in Verona.
Before the weekend, Roglic was many people’s clear favourite for the overall, with the big question being whether any of his rivals would be able to take sufficient time out of him to maintain an advantage on the final day.
As things stand, the question is whether the Slovenian, his confidence rocked by a mechanical problem followed by a crash on the way into Como on Sunday, and losing more time today, will enter that closing stage with a realistic chance of overhauling riders in front of him.
Nibali, now 22 seconds in front of Roglic, would be a realistic target, assuming the Jumbo-Visma rider does not lose more time.
Carapaz, now 2 minutes 9 seconds up on the Slovenian, would be perhaps 30 or 40 seconds out of reach given their comparative results in both the time trials so far in the race, both of which Roglic won.
The other scenario to consider is how Carapaz will fare with the burden of leading a Grand Tour in its final week, a new experience for the Ecuadorian. His Movistar team have so far played a tactical blinder, though, and he has a superdomestique working for him in the shape of Mikel Landa, fourth overall.
Nibali – twice a Giro champion, and also a winner of the Tour de France and Vuelta – knows how to bide his time, however, as witnessed in the 2016 race when a victory on Stage 19 set him up to take the maglia rosa on the penultimate day.
It could well be that the race will only be settled in that final time trial in Verona – but right now, if we were putting money on it, we’d guess the tussle would be between Nibali and Carapaz, with Roglic having to settle for aiming for a hat-trick of victories against the clock.
Then again, this is the Giro – and as we saw last year, anything is possible in the closing days.
Study claiming wearing hi-vis with big arrow on the back means more room from passing drivers gets slated on Twitter
Our story earlier today about a study in Canada that claimed cyclists wearing hi-vis gear with an arrow on the back get more space from overtaking drivers stirred up a bit of a response on Twitter … including this well-illustrated point from Ernie Marples.
Yeah, sure… pic.twitter.com/133sTC7cZf
— Ernie Marples (@ErnieMarples) May 28, 2019
Fishing line stretched across popular Swansea bike path causes cyclist to fall from bike
A cyclist in Swansea has described how he came off his bike after riding into a fishing line stretched across a popular cycle route – and warned that had a child ridden into it, the consequences could have been much more serious.
Jonathan Ace, 38, told Wales Online that his cycle helmet was cracked and he was left with “a banging headache” after the incident on the city’s promenade this morning.
He said: “I was just out for a general bike ride but fortunately at the time I was having water so I wasn’t going flat out.
“It cracked my helmet and I was only going between 10 and 12mph. It’s frightening if I had been going about 18 or 20mph it could have been a different story.
“The wire hit me on my chest and pushed me off the bike. There was fishing braid wrapped around my bike afterwards and it was all caught in the pedals and wheels.
“I’ve got scratch marks on the bike too. I had a banging headache after it and thought ‘shall I just go home?’ but I decided to just carry on.”
“The wire would have been neck height on a child,” he added. “It’s stupid. I don’t understand what these people get out of it.
“I’ve fallen off to the side of the bike but if had been a child then they would have flipped over like a somersault.
“Where is the sense in these people doing it?”
South Wales Police have been notified of the incident.
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Latest Comments
@mitsky Just checking the figures and apparently the 2026 average cost is £58,000 per year per prisoner; worth noting that is only the direct cost, you then have to factor in ten years of lost tax income from the prisoner, ten years that the prisoner is making no contribution to society as a worker or as a consumer, plus the fact that if they were the primary breadwinner very likely the costs will include benefits for their family as well. None of which should be a reason for keeping violent recidivists out of prison of course, nor drug/drink drivers who kill, but it is a factor worth considering for lower-level offences.
@Surreyrider I ride in Surrey a fair bit and absolutely many do look like that but the point is they all *think* they're driving perfectly reasonably (as one discovers when remonstrating with someone who's skimmed one by 30cm, "I gave you masses of room") so deterrent penalties have little effect. That's why we need to strike at the root cause and actually train drivers properly and test them stringently (and more than once over the course of a potential 70+ years of driving, it's absolutely absurd that competence and knowledge in what for most people is the activity in their life that will run the biggest risk of killing people you never have to have your qualifications renewed).
@mitsky Imprisonment currently costs over £50k p.a. per prisoner and obviously that will rise over the course of a ten-year stretch with inflation. Regarding culpability and mitigating sentences etc, of course I'm not against condign punishment for drivers who kill (and cyclists on the tiny, tiny handful of occasions when this happens), including prison as appropriate; I was objecting to the ridiculous and oft-repeated demand of MM that drivers who kill cyclists must get ten years, "no excuses, no exceptions".
Hey, but their wool blend cycling adjacent t-shirts are/were fantastic.
@Surreyrider Still the boss. Ride one, you'll see why
@Smoggysteve "Most would happily ride on the roads and be treated with respect by drivers". But people aren't - and as far as I can see they won't be. Not until there is a lot less driving and it's slower around cyclists, and far more people driving have "skin in the game" eg. they sometimes cycle and their friends and family do also. That's what leads to the model - which is perhaps most advanced in NL - where cycling, walking and driving are all seen as separate normal transport modes. Their needs, vulnerabilities and any dangers to others are considered. And *that* leads to "mix / share when possible, separate when necessary". But "possible" is "where your 10-year old would be safe to cycle unsupervised" - so very few motor vehicles, going slow! And AFAICS everybody - even "existing cyclists" - is happy with the result. (I dunno about a few pro cyclists - but don't they tend to have training camps in different counties anyway?)
@quiff as an Edinburgh resident I can confidently say he's speaking without moving his lips in one sense: - while as I noted in a separate comment there *is* now some real separated cycle infra, all the examples i can think of have *at least as much space* for pedestrians. The rest of the "cycle infra" is essentially similar to the situation in the rest of the UK: eg. bus lanes*, cycle lanes and shared use paths (eg. "build" infra by sticking up a sign). Edinburgh is one of the places with a moderately extensive network of former railways which have been converted to "shared use" paths (completely motor traffic few). However though shared they are not narrow by UK standards. And this is all effectively a "free extra" for all non- motorised users, not like the "sign a cycle path" where pedestrians do lose space. I think this all comes from the "popular understanding" of cycling in which ultimately cyclists are the "other". They don't fit "motor vehicle" or "pedestrian" (including wheelchairs on the very rare occasions people think about that). Thus "cyclists are cheating" in multiple ways! They shouldn't get their own space as "there aren't enough" of them. And "they can just use the road / path". But being able to *choose* "on the road" or "on the footway" (shared use path) is clearly unfair - nobody else gets to do that! BUT of course even if they did pick just one of road OR pedestrian space it's still not fair anyway because they're "too slow" for the road (don't pay "road tax" etc...) and "far too fast" for pedestrians... * Though some existing cyclists may appreciate them when there are few buses, buses and bikes are a very poor mix for several reasons.
Whilst a shame for any employees, their bib shorts had the worst chamois pad I’d ever encountered, utter waste of my money. Even though they were Strava challenge discount purchases, still a waste of money.
Thanks, just going to have to suck it up. Got next week off and will take the easy, if expensive option...
@ktache Just go for the TNT Sports only package, £30.99 for a month. Alternatively have you considered experimenting with a VPN for a few pounds, allowing you to sign up for a free stream abroad, e.g. SBS Australia which streams the Tour live? If I didn't have a kind mate's login that's what I'd do!
15 thoughts on “Live blog: Swansea cyclist felled by fishing line stretched across seafront bike path; We take a punt on how Giro may play out; Best Twitter reply to study saying cyclists should wear hi-vis with big arrows to avoid close passes + more”
OMG! I hadn’t realised that
OMG!
I hadn’t realised that Viz was still in publication!!
On the Badger story – I
On the Badger story – I wonder how the anonymous DM commenter intends to manufacture landmines that only explode for lighter things? Pretty sure a landmine would be set off by a car lng before a bicycle…
Can I suggest that you don’t
Can I suggest that you don’t leave the Daily Mail comments columns to Daily Mail readers.
The good old DM, never fails.
The good old DM, never fails. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7076021/One-fed-local-laying-Shropshire-lanes-booby-traps-send-Lycra-louts-sprawling.html#reader-comments
As a cyclist, reading DM
As a cyclist, reading DM articles and comments relating to cycling is a form of self-harm. Just don’t go there.
Quote:
Well, I’m sorry that your idyllic village has such a continuous traffic problem that overtaking cyclists is a perpetual issue. Living with all those fumes and noise would make anyone angry.
rkemb wrote:
I read this article the other day – apparently speeding cyclists are impeding the flow of traffic and causing delays. It’s a Daily Fail classic.
I wonder how seriously the
I wonder how seriously the police will be taking the fishing line incident in Swansea? As the rider points out, the consequences could have been death, so will it be filed under attempted murder, and as a hate crime. Will the Mail be reporting it, and if they do, how will they blame the cyclist?
burtthebike wrote:
Was it a ‘stringing fishing line to try and catch a cyclist’ incident or was it some taunt who’d been fishing and left their cr@p everywhere? Any park with lakes ends up with fishing line strung everywhere, is Swansea prom the same? (sea fishing)
brooksby wrote:
There’s noone sea fishing where that incident took place, the beach is flat so the tide range is massive. People only tend to fish at the mariner or mumbles where there’s a sea wall, and both are at opposite ends of the long bay.
Most likely its a washed up commercial fishing line that some idiot decided to string between two trees.
Scoob_84 wrote:
FTFY
Quote:
I’m sure this was posted
I’m sure this was posted before about hi viz
https://waronthemotorist.wordpress.com/tag/bollards/
I’m confused; what’s the
I’m confused; what’s the difference between Viz and Hi-viz?
Isn’t Hi-Viz the latest one
Isn’t Hi-Viz the latest one on top of the pile?