It’s 1 August, and that means only one thing in the cycling world: it’s transfer announcement time!
(Also, it means that social media is saturated for one day with fake team profiles and ‘news’ of out-there signings, but we’ll get to those in a minute.)
For a team so adept at infiltrating the morning breakaway, it’s perhaps no surprise that Uno-X were up early to announce the first big signing for the 2024 season – at around 7.40 European time, the ambitious second-tier outfit confirmed the arrival in January of stage sniffing supremo Magnus Cort.
The 30-year-old Dane will join the Norwegian squad on a three-year, following four successful years at EF Education-EasyPost, where he picked up four stage wins at the Vuelta a España, as well as a stage apiece at the Tour de France, Giro d’Italia stage, and Paris-Nice.
As cycling’s transfer window dictates, riders announced on 1 August usually only join their prospective teams the following January, ensuring that the final few months of the season are filled with motivational complexities and awkward dinner table silences.
Arnaud Démare wins stage five of the 2022 Giro d’Italia (Zac Williams/SWpix.com)
However, in perhaps the biggest news of the window so far, French sprinter Arnaud Démare has jumped ship immediately, reaching an agreement with Groupama-FDJ to end his contract early so he can join Arkéa-Samsic for the rest of 2023 and beyond.
Eight-time Giro stage winner Démare, who has spent his entire 12-year pro career with FDJ, looked likely to leave the French team ever since he was omitted – for the second year running – from Marc Madiot’s Tour de France line-up, in favour of the faltering GC contender David Gaudu.
Oh, and speaking of frosty relations, Démare’s move to Arkéa-Samsic means he will once again link up with former FDJ teammate Nacer Bouhanni, nine long years after the sprinting pair’s spell together ended, unsurprisingly perhaps, in acrimony. But we’re all older and wiser now, right?
“I’m opening a new chapter in my career with a team that believes in me and motivates me,” Démare, who takes the place of the departing Andrii Ponomar in Arkéa’s squad, said.
“I’m determined to do well. Emmanuel Hubert’s talks were enthusiastic and motivating. I want to make a success of my debut as soon as possible in my new colours. I'm highly motivated.”
With the first signings of silly season confirmed, let the Fabrizio Romano-style rumours and breaking news commence!
Remco to Ineos? Let’s go…
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21 comments
Wasn't Glasgow totally cleaned up for the 2014 Commonwealth Games?
And COP 26... Thankfully some delegates helped when they cleaned out the local hooch stores. And some of our local politicians cleaned up all the available excuses (others available as well as Boris).
It was cleaned up for the Glasgow's miles better campaign back in the day....
That stretch of HWY 119 in Colorado has an absolutely massive hard shoulder for most of its length, at least 10 ft / 3 m wide, but a 55 MPH speed limit. I wish our rural highways where I live looked like that.
Some driver was really not paying attention.
I watched Police Traffic Motorway Interceptor Cops 999 last night (I don't know which of those programmes it was - they're pretty much all the same). Ones where a camera crew does a ride-along with traffic police here in the UK.
Last night, a motorist changed lane in front of a marked police car without indicating, forcing the police driver to slow; the police then caught up with the car, went alongside - where they could see a phone propped up on the dashboard and with clearly moving video - stayed there for a minute or so then dropped back. You could still clearly see the phone lit up, until the police put their blue lights on when the phone suddenly blinked out.
The driver denied everything right up to the point where the police driver said they had everything on camera, at which point the driver switched to "But I need my car for my job, I have points on my licence, &c &c".
They got three points and a £200 (IIRC) fine. Maximum would have been 6 points, which for this driver would have been a "Catch the bus now" card.
Where was I? Oh yeah, Magnus White: really makes you wonder what the motorist was doing, to be so distracted as to drive off the main carriageway onto the hard shoulder and then run into the back of someone...
Was this before or after the new rules on Mobile devices were launched?
Does it really matter whether the driver was "distracted"? Isn't incredibly bad driving crime enough? You'd think every journo in Colorado would be demanding to know "who killed Mangus White?'' And yet, they're not. Why not? Because they share the normal, motoring American view that motor vehicles own the roads and thus, even if they kill the innocent, no matter how tragic the death might be, the cyclist accepted the risk when he/she dared to venture onto the shoulder of the road. OK, now we can move on. The motorist must feel terrible about what happened. Let's worry about the living.
So sad that kid, condolences to his grieving family.
Sadly, nothing will change to make it better for the next one. He needed to have a cop's knee on his neck for that in today's world.
If you can't pay your respects without shoehorning in your unpleasant bigotry, you're not showing any respect at all.
Your view, which I disagree with.
All those comments above add to that as well.
Step one for the Leftie, scream racist to anything.
Do explain, then, your rationale for referencing a murder case which has absolutely no relevance to this tragic traffic incident whatsoever. Why couldn't you just express your condolences and leave it at that?
Typical drivist behaviour there at the Tour of Poland. "We've stopped moving. Oh my god, we've been stopped for literally seconds! Why have we stopped moving? Maybe there's a good reason. Maybe if I just sound my horn we'll start moving again. Let's try the horn."
Hope everyone in that car crash is OK, and no one needed an ambulance.
The medical car might have been neede......... oh.
A genius speaks
"It's not a 'problem', it's a good thing. In poorer countries people depend on public transport & bikes. When they get richer they want cars because they bring freedom. Public transport will *never* be good enough for a free people to move around on."
Ranty highwayman
"Is there no start to unelected Frost's expertise on literally any subject. He is the absolute epitomy of a chancer promoted above his talents which leaves everyone else clearing up. A seagull consultant. Comes in for a bit, makes loads of noise and leaves a pile of crap."
https://twitter.com/RantyHighwayman/status/1686348770856861697
Didn't he object to the implementation of the deal that he had negotiated?
I wouldn't bother quoting Paul Sweeney, he is nothing but a rent-a-quote fud.
Typical of Scottish politicians, nothing between the ears.
"In the absence of such infrastructure, White was instead riding on the southbound hard shoulder of the highway when he was hit from behind by the driver of a Toyota Matrix. The authorities say there is no indication that drugs, alcohol or excessive speed were involved."
Just really crap driving then
There used to be a motorcycle courier whom I would see occasionally around central London who had a sign on his top box which read "Armed to the teeth, drugged to the eyeballs and madder than hell, please be courteous when passing." I always thought, well, you can't say you weren't forewarned…excellent video on Twitter of the "Armed Cyclist" guy absolutely sticking it to some bemused cops: https://twitter.com/JohnsonStBRDG/status/1686212423236423682
I know "Armed cyclist" is in the US there and representing a particular take on "I'll defend my rights" ... but in the UK why can't we fix it so it's possible (never mind "safe and convenient") for armless cyclists to defend their rights to get around independently without always needing a car?
(Edit Here's how (direct link to article with video), here's a thread from the UK asking "how is it possible?" with helpful answers)
Glasgow is doing just fine. It’s no different to any other city in the UK. There are shut business all over the country and litter and potholes are the norm (sadly).
Also, I’ve read a fair few articles and comments that it shouldn’t be in Glasgow / Scotland because it always rains – well it’s been raining across the entire UK and Northern Europe all month and it pissed it down on Yorkshire last time.
I for one cannot wait for the weekend - Glasgow will be rocking!