Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

news

"Poor countries like the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany?": Chris Boardman leads the way as cyclists school David Frost on claim rich countries don't use bikes; Irn-Bru paint job steals the show ahead of World Championships + more on the live blog

Join Dan Alexander for Wednesday's live blog round-up of everything worth knowing in the cycling world... plus the usual flood of less important stuff, of course...

SUMMARY

No Live Blog item found.

02 August 2023, 07:56
"Poor countries like the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany?": Chris Boardman leads the way as cyclists school David Frost on claim rich countries don't use bikes

David Frost, eh? That's a name I'd gone without hearing for a glorious forgetful spell, until now... Boris Johnson's former chief negotiator for exiting the European Union, who later served in the same PM's cabinet in a role created just for him (that was abolished on his departure) has today got more than a few people questioning if he's ever even travelled to the continent he was negotiating our exit from...

Who's going to tell him? Time for the 'Cycling Avengers' to assemble...

ITV commentator and cycling journalist Ned Boulting reckons: "Of course, as is quite often the case I fear, the truth is almost the perfect opposite of what you claim."

While CyclingMikey was keen to share the view from the Netherlands on Frost's comment: "I'm from the Netherlands, Frostie, and we're doing rather a lot better than the UK thanks. Part of that is because we don't waste as much on cars."

Jon Burke, fresh from schooling Nick Ferrari about LTNs live on LBC, was keen for some more...

In fact, such was the response to Frost's thoughts, he got replies from people in... *deep breath*... the Netherlands, Barcelona, Ireland, Armenia, Switzerland, Sweden, Czech Republic, Germany all united in replies calling 'rubbish'... 

02 August 2023, 09:09
A Frosty response that conveniently avoids mention of bikes

Happy Wednesday, everyone... 

02 August 2023, 15:28
"Locals anywhere else in the world would relish stopping to watch it": More reaction to World Championship road closures going down predictably well
UCI Cycling World Championships Gran Fondo

Thought I'd round up some of the almost 200 comments we've got across Facebook and the website about this story...

> Locals slam "disgrace" of "100-mile diversion" to cross town during UCI Cycling World Championships Gran Fondo

Kevin 'Herbie' Blackburn: "Locals anywhere else in the world would relish stopping to watch it."

Susanne Reid: "Really ashamed to be a Scottish person at the moment. Scotland depends on tourism yet when it inconveniences wee Jimmy for a couple of hours locals are up in arms."

Ollie Craig: "Better headline: Local car owners who have their roads subsidized and use them for free 355 days a year whinge about momentary disruption on a single day so that other people can use the road."

Kris Jackson: "The town that takes about 15 minutes to walk from one end to another, I'm sure they'll survive."

02 August 2023, 15:10
New 'protected' contraflow cycle lane opens on one-way road – and drivers immediately begin parking in it and crashing into bollards
02 August 2023, 14:01
Alpecin-Deceuninck notified of alleged anti-doping violation concerning Robert Stannard

Australian rider Rob Stannard, who twice finished in the top ten of stages at this year's Criterium du Dauphiné, has been provisionally suspended after his Alpecin-Deceuninck team was notified of an alleged 'Anti-Doping Rule Violation' dating back to 2018 and 2019.

There will be questions about how it has taken so long to come to light, but the team says it "respects the decision" made by the UCI and noted the violation came well before Stannard joined the team.

"We respect the decision of the UCI and will conform to this. In the meanwhile, we will further inform us with the rider, his management, and the UCI," a team statement said. "Alpecin-Deceuninck will not be commenting further until we have full clarification from the three parties mentioned above."

02 August 2023, 13:10
Police Service of Northern Ireland spend nearly £50,000 on bike repairs over the past five years

The Derry Journal reports that Northern Ireland's police service spent nearly £50,000 on bike repairs in the past five years.

£47,048.99 was the exact figure between 1 April 2018 and 16 May 2023, with the cost of bike repairs for non-electric bikes during the same period at £33,737, while for e-bikes it was £13,311.99.

The figures were revealed following a Freedom of Information request.

02 August 2023, 13:31
Sausage roll power
02 August 2023, 12:53
"Sad!": Biniam Girmay's Eritream teammate comments on visa denial reports
Intermarche-Circus-Wanty's Biniam Girmaye on a TT bike (Zac Williams/SWpix)

> Biniam Girmay reportedly refused UK visa, as Eritrean star pulls out of Glasgow world championships citing injury

We're awaiting a comment from the Home Office about the big story of the day ahead of the World Championships. Merhawi Kudus simply wrote: "Sad!" in reply to the rumours. 

Hopefully more info on this one soon...

02 August 2023, 11:36
Biniam Girmay reportedly refused UK visa, as Eritrean star pulls out of Glasgow world championships citing injury
02 August 2023, 10:33
Potholes, road rash, stray dogs, bee stings, cracked rim... Transcontinental suffering
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Jesko (@jesko_werthern)

Yesterday Christoph Strasser finished Transcontinental first having spent just 34 hours off his bike in nine days. Further back and this is the reality for the other riders, Jesko Werthern penning these words on his suffering...

Oh Albania, your roads might be the worst I've ever seen, but your people are ever so great. Every time I've done it, there was a point in the Transcontinental where I felt like the race was trying to break me. If you're stubborn enough to push through that point, you get rewarded. Today might have been that day.

The alarm goes and I cannot walk. The road rash burns like fire and makes me literally limp onto the bike after taking a painkiller and waiting another half hour. Pedalling works, most Albanian dogs are sleepy or scared, only a big one seriously chases me. In a small village the road bends downwards, a little girl waves at me from over a wall, I wave back and see the big bump in the road too late.

A badly timed bunny hop attempt, an audible crack, I look down and can immediately see that the wobble has increased. As long as it's rolling, no excuse to stop. Sketchy bridge just before CP3, bee sting, eggs with rice and onto the parcour. One happy rider found a backpack full of food.

A TCR off-road parcour is never easy, but doing that nursing a cracked rim, two seeing wounds, with barely functioning hands, while the thermometer shows 44 degrees (38 in the shadow, only there is not much shadow) and you get an experience that is definitely up there with the most insane things I've done.

It's all relative though. I meet a rider that has been walking for 41 kilometres with a failed tubeless system and Sara did the whole thing without food, because she lost her backpack... Maybe I didn't have such a bad day after all. 

02 August 2023, 10:11
LEJOAP: Retired vicar takes on Land's End to John O'Groats for fourth time

Full credit to Jo for the headline, superb stuff, and a proper feel-good news story for your Wednesday...

Peter Langford, an 89-year-old retired vicar from Suffolk is hoping to become the oldest man to cycle the famous 1,100-mile route. It will be his fourth time, having completed the challenge aged 75, 80 and 85, and he'll be raising money for two homelessness charities along the way...

"I'm getting more confident that I will actually be able to manage it," he told the BBC. "Devon and Cornwall are far, far, the hardest part of the whole route — much harder than Scotland — because the hills are so steep and you get them over and over again.

"'I've been doing about 120 miles a week but recently I thought I should do a few long rides together. Last week I did 50 miles on Monday and 50 miles on Tuesday and I felt perfectly alright afterwards."

Mr Langford will set off on 22 August, four days after his 90th birthday, hoping to finish a month later on 21 September.

"You achieve these things in your head — more than with your knees and if you're darned determined."

02 August 2023, 09:22
Irn-Bru paint job steals the show ahead of World Championships
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Bex (@reca_becca)

10/10 for this paint job from Fatcreations near Chichester, ready to be used by Aimi Kenyon up in Scotland at the World Championships...

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by aimi (@aimi__kenyon)

02 August 2023, 08:51
Tech news: Details of the new Specialized Tarmac SL8 leaked; Money-no-object upgrades to create the ultimate featherweight bike; Demi Vollering's Tour de France-winning SL7

Loads of cool stuff up on the site at the minute from our tech team... 

2023 Specialized Tarmac SL8 leak - 1

> Specialized Tarmac SL8: leaked details of "the world's fastest race bike" appear online

The tip over to August means hill-climbing season is just around the corner, if you've found a winning lottery ticket down the back of the sofa here's what you could do to make the ultimate featherweight bike...

2023 lightest bike components

> The lightest road bike frames and components in the world — money-no-object upgrades to create the ultimate featherweight bike

And before we get all the weight and watt-saving claims from Spesh about the new SL8 it's worth remembering the SL7 is still doing alright... and by alright I mean being ridden to Tour de France victory by Demi Vollering...

2023 Tour de France Femmes Avec Zwift Demi Vollering A.S.O.-Thomas Maheux - 1 (5)

> Check out the Specialized S-Works Tarmac SL7 that Demi Vollering rode to Tour de France Femmes victory

Dan is the road.cc news editor and has spent the past four years writing stories and features, as well as (hopefully) keeping you entertained on the live blog. 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 joined road.cc in 2020. Come the weekend you'll find him labouring up a hill, probably with a mouth full of jelly babies, or making a bonk-induced trip to a south of England petrol station... in search of more jelly babies.

Add new comment

68 comments

Avatar
wycombewheeler replied to KDee | 9 months ago
0 likes

KDee wrote:

My typical commute to work here in NL is now something like this (note I'm currently working at a production facility that's not in a city/town centre:

  • Walk or ride to railway station
  • 2 trains
  • Ride on hire bike from station to office

Distance covered approx 55km in about 1 hr 10 mins at a cost of 28.85 euros return including OV fiets bike hire...that's what poverty looks like 

That's pretty pricey rail travel (52c/km), I thought the UK was uncommonly expensive. But I have examples of Exeter to London - £60/ 250km = 24p/mile and the utterly incredible £6 from London to Newhaven 79km or 7.6p/km. I suppose that's because anyone travelling to the poor countries in the EU via the ferry can't afford more. 

Avatar
KDee replied to wycombewheeler | 9 months ago
0 likes

Your calculation is off, but that's because my comment wasn't totally clear.

It's about 55km each way, so about 26c/km.

Avatar
levestane | 9 months ago
15 likes

There does seem to be an increasing amount of using the Trumpian approach; don't let facts stand in the way of a good sound bite.

Avatar
chrisonabike replied to levestane | 9 months ago
1 like

Been a trend for years now.

Politics is about what works.  Trump turned up and wowed lots of people like the pied piper and using a style which was hardly unknown but that he'd taken much further than others at that time in the US.  No-one could ignore that.

Doesn't mean demagogues will always succeed but politicians are always going to copy "what works".  Like Blair with Thatcher, Cameron with Blair, lots of folks over here with the partisan brawler style (as modelled by e.g. Trump) and recently Starmer chasing after Sunak when it looked like "too much, too soon" for the some of the electorate over ULEZ / LTNs.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to levestane | 9 months ago
4 likes

levestane wrote:

There does seem to be an increasing amount of using the Trumpian approach; don't let facts stand in the way of a good sound bite.

I can't recall any decent sound bites coming from Trump unless you mean things like 'covfefe' or 'bigly' - he always sounds like a blustering idiot.

Avatar
eburtthebike | 9 months ago
12 likes

David Frost, Rishi Sunak and Mark Harper are just three of the out-of-touch tories who think that they are going to win the next election by getting drivers to vote for them, all because they narrowly won Ruislip on a single issue.

Deluded: but then, that is one definition of a tory.

Avatar
Miller | 9 months ago
12 likes

Frost is thick as mince but just one of many Tory brexiters who looked like absolute fools across the table from well briefed EU negotiators.

Avatar
brooksby replied to Miller | 9 months ago
5 likes

Miller wrote:

Frost is thick as mince but just one of many Tory brexiters who looked like absolute fools across the table from well briefed EU negotiators.

Like, IIRC, David Davies who turned up to Brexit negotiations without any files or paperwork cos he just knew he was on the side of right...

Pages

Latest Comments