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"I'm impressed!": Council fills "cavernous" pothole two hours after the Jeremy Vine Show's producer posts video of "horrible cycle crash"; Vollering asks to "delete pictures" after celebrating second place in Tour de France Femmes + more on the live blog

It's Thursday and Adwitiya is back on live blog duty to take you from your nearby cycle lanes to today's hilly stage of Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift...
27 July 2023, 08:39
"I'm impressed!": Council fills "cavernous" pothole just two hours after the Jeremy Vine Show's producer posts video of "horrible cycle crash"
Westminster pothole (Twitter: @rhwilson83)

Credit where credit's due, kudos Westminster City Council.

Ryan Wilson, the producer of the Jeremy Vine Show on BBC Radio 2 had posted a video of him falling off his cycle after hitting a "cavernous" pothole outside John Lewis on Oxford Street on Tuesday 2PM, and asked the council to fix it, so "what happened to him on his way to work didn't happen to other cyclists".

The Council, acting with the briskness previously unseen by most cyclists, proceeded to fill the pothole, which Wilson later called a "beast" (if you're unfamiliar with road.cc pothole lore, a beast is smaller than a potmonster, but just bigger than a pothorror),  in just over two hours.

> "What if a cyclist hits this?": Councillor raises alarm over enormous pothole big enough to stand waist-deep in

Do good things actually happen?

"Thanks again for flagging this with us. We take road safety seriously and can confirm that this pothole has now been filled," wrote Westminster City Council on Twitter the next day, posting a photograph with the time stamp of when the job had been completed.

Wilson, who was left with a bruise on his thigh and a detached rear wheel (hopefully the derailleur and the chain are okay), may not be the most pleased, but his alerting of the council and the council's swift movement in return has definitely impressed other cyclists, including Mike van Erp, better known as Cycling Mikey.

Others however, were a bit more sceptical of the pothole filling. "I assume that is simply a short-term emergency patch as that is going to loosen and come out very quickly with traffic running over it," wrote one person, while another sarcastically wrote: "Give us another text in two weeks when it's as bad as ever and we will come out again and fill it with".

> Council pays cyclist five-figure settlement over "harrowing" pothole crash

Danny Williams, CEO of Active Travel England, meanwhile thanked the cab driver following for "good driving", as he crept to a halt behind the fallen Williams. I know, the minimum, right?

With the non-existent summer being taken over by another spell of relentless rains, we might be in for some more potholes, as if there already weren't enough...

"London's #Cycleway1 route is constantly blighted by potholes. One of the many, many downsides of having a supposed Cycleway route on roads used by heavy motor traffic," wrote Toby Edwards.

> "Same question every winter": Cyclists slam "disgraceful" state of Britain's pothole-covered roads

Hopefully, this incident does mean the good work of fixing the ever-increasing potholes on Britain's roads keeps continuing, and we eventually have less and less of them to fix. Eventually.

27 July 2023, 15:54
Demi Vollering receives a 20 second time penalty for drafting as Ricarda Bauernfeind becomes youngest stage winner at Tour de France Femmes

Not been the best couple of days for Dutch star rider Demi Vollering, has it?

First the awkward victory celebration yesterday, only to be later told that she had actually finished second, over a minute behind the actual stage winner Yara Kastelijn.

And now, after a very visible and blatant drafting controversy in today's stage, she's been hit with a 20 second time penalty, pushing her down from second to seventh in the general classification, 1:03 minutes behind teammate and leader Kopecky and crucially, 11 seconds behind her chief rival van Vleuten.

> Some not so itsy-bitsy drafting going on here...

The whole fiasco happened when with 60km left to go, the SD Worx rider got a rear puncture. As she got off the bike, she started taking her bottles out of the cage, expecting a bike change. However, the mechanic proceeded to perform a rather slow wheel change instead, dropping Vollering behind the peloton.

And then to catch up, she decided to tuck in behind her team car, essentially relaying her towards the back of the peloton with as much minimum effort expended by the rider as possible.

And with something so blatant and obvious, your live blog host had called it that it might be pushing the rules a bit too far, and that Vollering could be set for a time penalty besides a fine as well.

Before the start of the stage today, SD Worx had already lost their sprinter Lorena Wiebes, who was forced to abandon with a sudden sickness.

All in all, not a very ideal day for the Dutch team (apologies everyone for calling them a 'well-oiled victory machine' early in the day and bringing the commentator's curse to life).

But one rider for whom the day went more than ideally is Canyon/SRAM's Ricarda Bauernfeind — the 23-year-old German becoming the youngest cyclist to win a stage in Tour de France Femmes, fending off the chasing duo of SD Worx's Marlen Reusser and Movistar's Liane Lippert.

"To be honest, I still cannot believe it. It's just incredible. I had the support from my teammates, from the cars behind and all the partners yeah, everyone helped me and supported us and it was just an incredible team ride I would say," Bauernfeind said in disbelief at the finish line.

She added: "We had to chase the first group because we missed it and my teammates did such a fantastic job and then it was up to me and I tried to attack and it work out."

"I think its also for the team, we waited for the win the whole year and now I did it, or we did it. It's fantastic."

So after that chaotic and eventful day, this is how the standings look, before tomorrow's flat sprint stage, which will be followed by a brutal summit finish and then finally, a time-trial.

27 July 2023, 15:04
Miguel Ángel López claims "no objective evidence of alleged doping", promises to "fight to clear his name" after provisional suspension by UCI
Miguel Ángel López Roka eyewear.jpg

The 29-year-old Colombian, currently riding for UCI Continental team Team Medellín–EPM, has released a press release statement on his social media after he was provisionally suspended by UCI for “use and possession of a prohibited substance” before 2022 Giro d’Italia earlier this week.

López, an explosive climber, who won the Queen stage of Tour de France in 2020, and finished on the podium of both Giro d'Italia and Vuelta a España in 2018, had been sacked by Astana in December after the team claimed that it “had discovered new elements” linking him to alleged doping doctor Marcos Maynar.

However, he has spent 2023 dominating the South American racing scene for Team Medellín – EPM, until it was cut short earlier this week with UCI's decision.

> Miguel Angel Lopez being investigated as part of doping probe in Spain

My Spanish isn't the best, but with the help of Google I can read that he said that he was unaware of "the tests and evidence taken into consideration by the UCI to make this decision".

Miguel Angel Lopez on his way to winning Stage 17 of the 2020 Tour de France (picture credit Alex Whitehead SWpix.com)

Miguel Angel Lopez on his way to winning Stage 17 of the 2020 Tour de France (Alex Whitehead/SWpix.com)

He added: "I would like to state that there is no objective evidence of the alleged doping, that all the results of my analyses and my biological passport are negative, and that the undersigned has never received, used or even requested any prohibited substance, neither in the Giro d'Italia, nor ever throughout my sports career, as was also reported at the time to the ITA [International Testing Agency] with whom I collaborated with as soon as it was required.

"I want to state that I will use all the legal means at my disposal to clear my name, and that I will request, immediately, that the agreed precautionary suspension be lifted, since I understand it to be completely disproportionate, taking into account, in addition, that the facts for which I have been temporarily suspended have been made public, known for more than 9 months.

"Furthermore, the need, origin and urgency of said measure has not yet been explained or reasoned, and the reasons that justify it have not been provided or explained.

"Such a decision by the UCI 10 days after the Glasgow Cycling World Championship is a precautionary suspension that not only damages my honor and damages the presumption of innocence of this cyclist, but it also damages. and harms my entire team, the TEAM MEDELLIN, the Colombian national cycling team, and, ultimately, the good name of the entire international cycling community, by questioning my sports career, without any evidence or adverse analytical results, and without any intervention, detected or found in my possession substance of any kind.

He finished the statement by thanking his fans, family, team and country for the support and "promised to fight to clear his name of any suspicion".

27 July 2023, 14:33
Some not so itsy-bitsy drafting going on here...
Demi Vollering drafting Tour de France Femmes 2023 stage 5 (Eurosport/GCN+)

Demi Vollering behind team car, Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift 2023 stage 5 (Eurosport/GCN+)

Drafting is far from an uncommon thing in pro cycling, nor is it the most frowned upon. Sure, riders do it sometimes, but it's also really easy to spot and penalise, or at least lambast (as we are doing here), both by comissaires and the fans.

Demi Vollering thought she was stopping for a fairly quick bike change with 60km to go in today's stage five, but was instead met with a subsequent slow wheel change by the mechanic. That would make it twice in two days that Vollering has thought she was getting something but instead didn't.

> "Let's delete the pictures": Demi Vollering celebrates victory in Tour de France Femmes... without knowing she came second

Anyway, as a result of the slow wheel change she ended up losing touch with the peloton and had some riding to do to catch up with the group. And when she, presumably along with the team, decided to do a bit of the good ol' naughty drafting behind her team car, right in front of the motorbike carrying the race commissaire, it was certain that they would get a telling off.

It didn't stop there, as it appeared that Vollering was going for another cheeky attempt at testing the rulebook, the good ol' naughty sticky bottle.

Demi Vollering drafting Tour de France Femmes 2023 (Eurosport/GCN+)

Team SD Worx is certain to receive a fine, but will Vollering, in her bid to snatch the crown of Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift from her rival Annemiek van Vleuten, end up receiving a time penalty too?

> Cheating at the Tour de France — a rich history dating back 120 years

27 July 2023, 13:46
UK Parliament's Transport Committee tells Department for Transport to fix potholes first before starting new road projects
Pothole graffiti (supplied by road.cc reader)

While we are discussing potholes on today's live blog, there's some more good news coming in from Westminster.

Transport journalist Carlton Reid reports for Forbes that an influential group of British MPs has told the Department for Transport (DfT) that “future investment [in major roads] should focus more on maintenance and renewal rather than brand new projects.”

Instead, the Tory-led transport committee recommends "cancelling complex and costly enhancement projects."

In February, the Welsh government decided to halt or amend almost all major road building projects – which forms part of a new transport plan that aims to reduce carbon emissions, improve road safety, and prioritise cycling, walking, and public transport use.

Cycling UK had praised it as "the most significant change in UK roads building policy over the last 20 years", with the charity’s head of campaigns saying the move represented a “marked shift from other UK administrations’ simplistic and outdated views of building more roads as the answer to all transport woes from congestion to poor air quality".

Could we be in for another nationwide transport policy shift? Something tells me this is going to be a bumpy ride...

27 July 2023, 12:49
Lorena Wiebes out of Tour de France Femmes with sickness

Team SD Worx's Dutch sprinter Lorena Wiebes has been forced to abandon Tour de France Femmes after she suddenly started suffering from stomach issues this morning, an hour before the beginning of stage five.

The team has confirmed her departure, right before today's stages with a flat finish and tomorrow's entirely flat stage, perfectly suited to Wiebes' profile as an elite sprinter, who already has a victory in this year's Tour when she beat Jumbo-Visma's Marianne Vos in sprint during stage three.

"Lorena Wiebes is leaving Le Tour Femmes after illness. She’s suffering from stomach issues & consequently can’t start in Onet-Le-Château," said Danny Stam, directeur sportif of the team in a social media post.

"Of course this is a sportive loss for Team SD Worx, ‘cause there were still sprint opportunities but health always prevails," he added.

> Heartbreak for Julie van de Velde as Lorena Wiebes opens 2023 Tour account with resounding sprint win

SD Worx, a well-oiled victory machine has been enjoying a near-perfect season and now, a near-perfect Tour as well. The team has won two of the four stages so far and has the yellow jersey with Lotte Kopecky, as it looks to dethrone Annemiek van Vleuten with its own star Demi Vollering. Even in the races it didn't win, its riders bagged the second position — not as if that would be enough for the Dutch team.

Wiebes, the current European champion has also had a stellar season so far, winning a total of nine races in 2023. Besides the win in stage three, she came second in stage one behind teammate Kopecky when the Belgian had attacked solo and crossed the finish line alone.

27 July 2023, 12:17
The bromance we had all been waiting for: Mads x Jonas

Don't tell anyone but I'm a Pogi fan through and through, but man I can't stop loving these two Danes!

27 July 2023, 12:15
Jo Burt from the road.cc team spent a weekend at the glorious Wild Wales Gravel Fest, and here's him sharing his wonderful experience of never having the right bike!
27 July 2023, 11:45
"Passed my test in 1988, not opened it since": Driver boasts about not knowing Highway Code requires giving space to cyclist

"Yet another argument for five-year retests"?

Or at least that's what some people are calling for following a social media altercation involing road safety advocate Adam Bronkhorst and Colin Gregson, after the former shared a screenshot of a post from an anti-ULEZ Facebook page encouraging motorists to sticky a second licence plate on top of the orginal one as a "way of getting around ULEZ".

While we can discuss how wrong that is in the first place all day long, let's move on to Mr Gregson's replies shall we.

"Great news from Cheshire. The footpath along the River Weaver which has and is multi and equal rights of way has been given priority to PEDESTRIANS. Cyclists have been relegated !!! Majority of them have never heard of a 🔔".

I don't know what's going on, but Bronkhorst seemed to get it and replied saying that pedestrians have always had priority, and that drivers have to give priority to cyclists on the roads.

"Since when do drivers have to give priority to cyclistsbon roads???" asked Gregson.

Bronkhorst said: "Since it’s written in the Highway Code. Are you saying you don’t know the Highway Code?"

The glorious reply from Gregson to this was, if you can believe it: "Passed my test in 1988. not opened it since. oh and its merely a "code" its not actually legally binding. No one ever gets prosecuted for breaking the highway code."

> Most drivers still don't know Highway Code changes, poll shows

Brilliant. Another driver who let alone is unaware of the Highway Code changes, but hasn't even bothered to open it since 1988. Just brilliant.

Or as this tweet put it better...

27 July 2023, 11:15
Tour de France 2023 green jersey Jasper Philipsen vs bunch of kids

Kudos to the kids for sticking to their lines, lest Philipsen deviate...

27 July 2023, 10:52
Motorbike riders slammed for pushing and clipping Tour de France Femmes rider, after Jumbo-Visma claim race-ending crash was caused by moto
Motorbike rider pushes Kathrin Hammes during stage four, 2023 Tour de Fance Femmes (GCN)

> Motorbike riders slammed for pushing and clipping Tour de France Femmes rider, after Jumbo-Visma claim race-ending crash was caused by moto

“If you can’t pass safely, don’t pass. We need better education for some motorbike riders,” riders’ union president Adam Hansen said, after one of the motorbike riders was fined 200 Swiss Francs for the dodgy manoeuvre.

27 July 2023, 10:06
"Let's delete the pictures": Demi Vollering celebrates victory in Tour de France Femmes... without knowing she came second
Demi Vollering thought she won stage four of Tour de France Femmes 2023 (Eurosport/GCN+)

Demi Vollering has done a Jasper Philipsen. And by that, I don't mean his recent, ahem, heroics in the green jersey at the Tour de France, but the embarrassing scenes when he celebrated after crossing the finish line in last year's Tour, without knowing that Wout van Aert had already won the stage.

Vollering's oopsie moment came in yesterday's stage four of Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift. Yara Kastelijn had already taken the stage victory in a brave solo breakaway in one of the longer races on the women's calendar over a minute before the bunch sprinted to the finish.

> Poor Jasper: Philipsen celebrates... second place

The prolific Dutch rider from the prolific Dutch Team SD Worx, looked slightly unsure, but still went ahead and posed for the photos as she outsprinted Uno-X's Anouska Koster. However, the photos would later come back to haunt her (well, second is not terribly bad is it), and she half-jokingly asked to delete the photos after the race.

"I had no clue what was in front of me,” Vollering told Cycling Weekly at the finish line. "I caught up Anouska Koster, and she was the only one I could see, so I thought I had everybody. I didn’t know Kastelijn was still in front."

"I didn’t know if someone from the group was out [front], you know? So I thought I’d celebrate anyway and then we have at least the pictures. If I didn’t win, then we can always delete them. So let’s delete them,” she said with a smile.

Vollering now sits 43 seconds behind teammate Lotte Kopecky in second position in the general classification, with a eight second lead over Lidl-Trek's Elisa Longo Borghini and Movistar's Annemiek van Vleuten.

She was hoping to gain more seconds on her rivals, and was disappointed at not getting the stage win. "Of course, it's nice [to gain some seconds], but I had hoped for more today," she said. "I hoped I could do a bit more in the end on the last climb, but I couldn't make a difference anymore after such a long race."

I'm sorry, but you know how the internet works. Once it's there, there's no going back... At least she did have some fantastic company to enjoy after the race.

27 July 2023, 09:45
Tour de France Femmes 2023 - what bikes are the women riding?
2023 Women's tour fe france femmes cover ASO canyon

Among the 22 teams competing in the 2023 Women's Tour de France, familiar bike brands take centre stage. From Bianchi to Trek, Canyon to Giant, the women's peloton boasts an array of top-tier bike manufacturers, which for many is the highlight of the racing season, bringing the pro women racing to everyone's screens.

> Tour de France Femmes 2023 - what bikes are the women riding?

Bonus points to anyone who guesses correctly what equipment Team Canyon-SRAM Racing uses!

27 July 2023, 09:31
Who's at fault???

This video doing the rounds on social media since yesterday, everyone seems to be having an opinion. Cycling Mikey called it a "very stupid piece of cycling", while others have pointed out that the van driver did not have his indicator on, which have raised questions like whether or not a signal is required to drive around to the left if the road ahead is left-only.

So here's something to discuss for you lot, whose fault and what should or shouldn't be done in such a situation...

Adwitiya joined road.cc in 2023 as a news writer after graduating with a masters in journalism from Cardiff University. His dissertation focused on active travel, which soon threw him into the deep end of covering everything related to the two-wheeled tool, and now cycling is as big a part of his life as guitars and football. He has previously covered local and national politics for Voice Wales, and also likes to writes about science, tech and the environment, if he can find the time. Living right next to the Taff trail in the Welsh capital, you can find him trying to tackle the brutal climbs in the valleys.

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48 comments

Avatar
BIRMINGHAMisaDUMP | 9 months ago
1 like

Don't cycle up the inside of a turning vehicle. 

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Stephankernow | 9 months ago
1 like

If you live and cycle in rural areas sadly potholes like this are the norm. They are deadly especially in the dark or lf its been raining.
The maintenance in rural areas needs to be addressed.

Avatar
amartin | 9 months ago
0 likes

SD Worx are quickly turning into the Team Sky of the WWT. From the cynical ploy to neutralise a Giro stage with a tactical nature break to the sheer arrogance of assuming to have won a stage to now blatant cheating (and getting away with it). Fortunately the other teams keep it fair and interesting.

Avatar
ktache | 9 months ago
3 likes

Positive story about cyclists on South Today. Cape Verde team preparing for the World's in the New Forest. Volcanic islands so I'm guessing they can climb.

Not one local frothing about cycling too fast, or immigrants...

Avatar
mark1a replied to ktache | 9 months ago
2 likes

ktache wrote:

Positive story about cyclists on South Today. Cape Verde team preparing for the World's in the New Forest. Volcanic islands so I'm guessing they can climb.

Not one local frothing about cycling too fast, or immigrants...

Yeah I saw that, it was great. I've ridden round there a bit so I was left wondering whether they'd had some attitude from the 2 legged residents just like everyone else has. "I suppose you think you're the Cape Verde national team do you? Oh..."

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giff77 | 9 months ago
0 likes

Really Adwitiya. Do you really need to toss a bone over the wall and then watch the ensuing scrap???

Avatar
HoldingOn | 9 months ago
3 likes

Quote:

UK Parliament's Transport Committee tells Department for Transport to fix potholes first before starting new road projects

Has Jeremy Vine's Producer managed to not just fix one pothole, but all the potholes?

Avatar
Hirsute | 9 months ago
18 likes

All on the cyclist.

Filtering is allowed but you do need good judgement and up the inside of the van at a corner is not one of them.

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OnYerBike | 9 months ago
13 likes

"Firstly I am glad both parties are OK"

Cyclist clearly at fault there (how is there even debate?) but let's be honest: only one of the parties might have been not OK

Avatar
giff77 replied to OnYerBike | 9 months ago
1 like

This is the thing that does my box in. The media reports a collision between a motorist and a cyclist and is at pains to let us know that the driver was not injured while showing an image of a bike underneath a SUV. I can accept the report stating it is understood that the driver had a medical episode but to say that there was no injury is just mind blowing. 

Avatar
brooksby | 9 months ago
9 likes

Couple of interesting Grauniad articles today:

National Highways accused of ‘systemic failure’ on cycling provision in England

Freedom of information responses on design standards suggest cyclists being ‘endangered’ on shared-use paths

https://www.theguardian.com/news/2023/jul/27/national-highways-accused-o...

France has had the guts to crack down on SUV drivers. Why doesn’t Britain?

These hulking vehicles are lethal to pedestrians, disastrous for the environment and have no place on our city streets

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/jul/27/france-crack-down-...

Avatar
brooksby replied to brooksby | 9 months ago
8 likes

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giff77 replied to brooksby | 9 months ago
1 like

Mate. You've totally made my day. 

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chrisonabike replied to brooksby | 9 months ago
1 like

Mangling the language, could that be a "wankpanther"?  (which is possibly the mainland Spanish pronounciation of "wankpanzer" IIRC)

Avatar
chrisonabike | 9 months ago
10 likes

RE: who's at fault:

Before getting to that this is (mostly) how the aftermath should be done.  Dunno if they actually made contact but driver 1) notices cyclist going down and immediately stops* 2) gets out to check and checks they're OK 3) this doesn't turn into a shouting match, let alone an assault 4) someone takes responsibility - it's a little unclear but it sounds like the cyclist says "it's my fault" here.

Fault?  I definitely wouldn't have cycled up the inside there if I was paying attention, I hope!  As others said (and someone says in the video) it doesn't seem you can go straight on here.  It's not totally clear but the van doesn't seem to cut off all space on the left.

Perhaps in an ideal world the driver would have spotted the cyclist coming up on the inside but I think the cyclist was not thinking ahead.  First by making the move at all but second as it looks like they had too much speed for the turn (again - seems the driver didn't cut off *all* space).  Perhaps they thought they'd whizz past the van before then and/or expecting the driver to pull wide away from them or put on the anchors?

*  Arguably van driver could have gone forward a bit to clear the corner - but then maybe them being where they were would stop someone turning who failed to spot a cyclist on the ground?

Avatar
Paul J replied to chrisonabike | 9 months ago
7 likes

Agreed, it's the cyclist's fault, and the driver behaves well after that.

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Surreyrider replied to Paul J | 9 months ago
5 likes

+1. Don't think any blame can be attached to the van driver here. And the way the aftermath was handled was good too.

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HoldingOn replied to chrisonabike | 9 months ago
6 likes

chrisonatrike wrote:

As others said (and someone says in the video) it doesn't seem you can go straight on here. 

Hopefully someone knows the area and can confirm, but I can't see any lines on the road to indicate a junction.

Yes - a very calm interaction on both sides. Kudos to them both.

Avatar
Pub bike replied to HoldingOn | 9 months ago
3 likes

The left turn arrow on the road is covered by the van at the crucial point at which the cyclist needed to know.    So either the cyclist didn't know the road, or they thought the van would not cut the corner so sharply.

From experience I always assume that if a motorist can get away with turning their steering wheel a little bit less and cutting a corner, or cutting a junction, they will do.

However, I also think there is too much reliance by road designers on road markings in the UK.  They wear out quickly, and pretty much disappear in the rain.  Perhaps that's why cycling in the rain is so scary?

Avatar
Hirsute replied to Pub bike | 9 months ago
3 likes

Umm...

 

Avatar
Moist von Lipwig | 9 months ago
1 like

Call me cynical, but I expect that as the pothole looks large enough to cause motorised vehicle damage, that may have had a bearing on it being fixed so promptly. (even though the taxi in front appears to go over it with no visible issue)

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spen replied to Moist von Lipwig | 9 months ago
1 like

Any council should traet a pothole like that as an emergency and aim to have it fixed in two hours.  There's nothing that unusual in this

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peted76 | 9 months ago
5 likes

That cyclist appears to be a numpty. One of the ones which gives the rest of us a bad name.

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HarrogateSpa replied to peted76 | 9 months ago
7 likes

I wish those Great Train Robbers would stop giving the rest of us rail passengers a bad name.

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Adam Sutton replied to HarrogateSpa | 9 months ago
1 like

I mean sure, it isn't like some on here treat motorists like a collective responsible for bad drving in general eh?

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mctrials23 replied to Adam Sutton | 9 months ago
5 likes

I mean, Audi drivers yes but thats only because as far as I can tell you have to pass a complete bellend test before being allowed to driver one. 

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AidanR replied to peted76 | 9 months ago
0 likes

It was a daft bit of riding, but given that the cyclist calmly admitted fault afterwards I don't think that he comes out of the incident that badly

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peted76 replied to AidanR | 9 months ago
0 likes

AidanR wrote:

It was a daft bit of riding, but given that the cyclist calmly admitted fault afterwards I don't think that he comes out of the incident that badly

The problem I have with that video is that it's a video, therefore in the public domain for all the cabbies, car lobbyists and general motons to use against 'normal cyclists'. 

Avatar
Hirsute replied to peted76 | 9 months ago
1 like

That genie is already out of the bottle. You only have to see a few dash cam compliations on youtube to know they love that sort of thing.

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HoldingOn replied to Hirsute | 9 months ago
2 likes

Hirsute wrote:

That genie is already out of the bottle. You only have to see a few dash cam compliations on youtube to know they love that sort of thing.

I think the difference here is that (certainly judging by road.cc) other cyclists are saying the cyclist was wrong. Had that been one of the other myriad of "driver runs over cyclist" videos that we all see, there would have been ardent defense of the driver from lots of people (including people that can't drive)

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