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Oliver Naesen rides steel Eddy Merckx bike on the Champs Elysees

What do The Cannibal and the AG2R La Mondiale rider have in common?

What do Eddy Merckx and Oliver Naesen have in common? Both  have ridden a steel bike during the final stage of the Tour de France. 

Just like Merckx, who won his first Tour de France 50 years ago, Oliver Naesen is competing today on a steel bike.

Is Naesen racing on a retro steel bike? No, far from it. Modern high-end steel has come a long way and the material he is racing today can hardly be compared to the steel of Merckx's day.

Oliver Naesen Eddy Merckx Corsa (4).jpg

The stage marks the official launch of the Eddy Merckx MyCorsa project.

AG2R La Mondiale rider Naesen has been racing with the Eddy Merckx Stockeu69 – a carbon fibre model – for the entire season.

However, for the final stage of this Tour de France, he is swapping that bike for the Eddy Merckx Corsa Road Rim.

Oliver Naesen Eddy Merckx Corsa (3).jpg

The Eddy Merckx company is now owned by Race Productions NV, the owner of Ridley - Merckx sold his remaining shares in the business in 2014, although he is still brand ambassador. 

The company say that the “MyCorsa project gives real steel lovers the opportunity to tweak their frame with external bearings and internal cables, among other features.”

Oliver Naesen Eddy Merckx Corsa (5).jpg

With three designs and 42 colours to choose from, you can put together a bike that is designed for your specific geometry.

Naesen’s bike, the Eddy Merckx Corsa is welded from a combination of Columbus Xcr (stainless steel) and Spirit HSS (high-quality, lightweight steel). 

Oliver Naesen Eddy Merckx Corsa (11).jpg

The design contains a few clear references to the bike with which Merckx won the Tour of 1969.

The bike that Naesen will ride is assembled with:

Mavic Cosmic Pro Carbon wheels
Vredestein Fortezza Senso T tyres
Rotor 2inPower crank
KMC chain
Shimano Dura Ace mechanical group set
DEDA SuperZero handlebar and stem
DEDA Zero100 seat post
Fizik Antares R1 saddle
Look Keo Blade Carbon pedals

A frame-fork set starts from EUR 3,299. Find more information at www.mycorsa.com.

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4 comments

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RobD | 4 years ago
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Well that's worked pretty well for promoting the bike, although it'd have been more impressive if he'd ridden some of the other stages to prove it can keep up with carbon.

What's the bolt on the underside of the top tube? a frame pump bolt?

Avatar
Rapha Nadal replied to RobD | 4 years ago
1 like

RobD wrote:

What's the bolt on the underside of the top tube? a frame pump bolt?

Attaching a race number.

This bike is bloomin' lovely and so much nicer on the eye than their rebadged Ridley frames.

Avatar
Simon E replied to RobD | 4 years ago
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RobD wrote:

Well that's worked pretty well for promoting the bike, although it'd have been more impressive if he'd ridden some of the other stages to prove it can keep up with carbon.

It's a publicity stunt (and that's not a bad thing).

I'm not sure the top pro riders would be very keen to race the whole Tour on it. The Madison-Genesis team rode a 953 steel model for one or two seasons but riders preferred the carbon model for racing (and the £5k Volare reviewed by road.cc weighed 7.87 kg).

I'm inclined to agree with other comments that it seems rather expensive compared to other well established steel brands.

Avatar
BehindTheBikesheds | 4 years ago
0 likes

Very nice looking bike, but there are so many quality steel framed bikes that are massively less than this, a Reilly for instance is £2k for a totally bespoke frame, Reynolds 953 is superior also as a tubeset.

If you're going to spend that money on a steel bike I would rather buy British, the Merckx brand is tainted for me anyways.

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