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Friday wipeouts: you're the (club run) referee

Two stacks to watch... but who's to blame for the road rash?...

How's your Friday afternoon going? Anyway, hide that spreadsheet and have a look at these two vids from Fly6 that we've been discussing in the office, which both end up with a bike and rider flying off in an unplanned direction.

Wipeout 1

Some fast-paced group riding on a fairly narrow cyclepath shared with pedestrians here, which in itself probably isn't all that advisable. But anyway, a botched overtake means that one chap is lucky not to end up in Hooger-land impaled on a fence. And also lucky not to break his neck, by the look of things. But should he have checked back before he changed line? or does the shout from the charging rider in red come too late? We've had people arguing both corners. Have a look, and get your blame in.

Who's to blame?
The guy doing the overtaking
The guy being overtaken

Poll Maker

Wipeout 2

This one involves a bit of wood that ends up in a rider's spokes. We've watched the video a bunch of times and it's still not clear how; our best guess is that the first rider catches the very end of it with his wheel and it somehow flicks up and ends up in the next man's wheel, which you'd have to concede is pretty unlucky.

Obviously the guy riding in the front of the video isn't front of the line: there's at least one more bike (the one the camera is attached to) and possibly more. So the hazard may have been spotted and the message not passed back properly, or it's possible that no-one saw it. In any case, the chap in shot is busy waving to a tandem on the other side of the road when he rides over the debris, so he's not 100% focused. But then, we're all guilty of that on a club run. It seems fair to assume that since he ran over it, he didn't see it. What do you think?

Have a safe weekend's riding!

Dave is a founding father of road.cc, having previously worked on Cycling Plus and What Mountain Bike magazines back in the day. He also writes about e-bikes for our sister publication ebiketips. He's won three mountain bike bog snorkelling World Championships, and races at the back of the third cats.

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33 comments

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usedtobefaster replied to don simon fbpe | 10 years ago
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don simon wrote:

50:50 in the first one (so I can't vote). The overtaker should have made his prescence known and the overtakee should have glanced behind before changing lines.
Second video, I can't see jack! So no comment.

ditto.

In the second one if the guy crashes because of riding over what looks like a piece of patched rode then he needs to get some bike handling skills.

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glynr36 | 10 years ago
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Wipeout 1, the guy overtaking I'd say. His warning is far too late (as he's past the guy).

Wipeout 2, the guy waving at the tandems fault, fuck other cyclists, riding in a bunch is about trust, especially in the guys in front of you to be your eyes at times, if you're more bothered about waving at people than taking the bunch seriously, go ride on your own.

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bobbinogs replied to glynr36 | 10 years ago
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glynr36 wrote:

Wipeout 1, the guy overtaking I'd say. His warning is far too late (as he's past the guy).

Wipeout 2, the guy waving at the tandems fault, fuck other cyclists, riding in a bunch is about trust, especially in the guys in front of you to be your eyes at times, if you're more bothered about waving at people than taking the bunch seriously, go ride on your own.

Yepp, totally agree with both.

Outside of racing, if you overtake you need to ensure that the person being overtaken is aware of that.

If you ride on the front of a group you accept that you are the eyes for all the folks following. You may miss the odd risk (we are all human) but missing a risk because of waving at totty is piss poor.

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