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Jeremy Vine films impatient driver who gets stopped at next set of lights; Disc brake debate continues as Movistar pro says they're more dangerous; BBC accused of "cyclist-bashing" story; Cav's second debut; Dutch flooding + more on the live blog

It's Wednesday and Dan Alexander will be picking out the best bits from the cycling world to take you through the middle of the week...

SUMMARY

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10 February 2021, 18:04
Islabikes founder Isla Rowntree steps down as head of company... and her successor started out as a bike builder
islabikes

Isla Rowntree, who founded the popular children's bike brand in 2006,  will step back to be replaced by her first employee Tim Goodallas managind director. After meeting Rowntree at a bike race, Goodhall started out as assembling bikes for the company, working his way up through his 15 years of service. 

Rowntree said: “It has long been my ambition to build a lasting company, so passing on the baton to someone who shares my values has been of the utmost importance. I firmly believe in businesses being a force for good; a vehicle for individuals to have a greater positive impact on society than we usually can alone”.  

Goodall commented: “The humble bicycle is a phenomenally efficient vehicle that can benefit our towns and cities. We are at the consumer end of this, and with thoughtful design we can play a small part in encouraging people to cycle more - that is why Islabikes was founded, and it is why we will remain relentlessly focused on designing bikes that remove barriers to cycling”.

10 February 2021, 15:50
Jeremy Vine and a must get past driver who's stopped at the next set of traffic lights

We feel like we've seen plenty of these incidents before. As Jeremy Vine filters through traffic to get around the vehicles turning left, he passes a Honda driver who then gets upset at being behind a cyclist...In this case the driver beeps their horn a couple of times before rushing through with a hand signal. 

Jeremy politely tells the driver: "Excuse me, I think you're horn's not working. It keeps going off."

Vine is a regular on the live blog when he uploads videos from his London travels on his Twitter account. Back in December he caught this motorist driving through Hyde Park in the cycle lane. Last summer, this driver turned into his path as he rode down a new pop-up cycle lane.

10 February 2021, 16:44
Strava update
Strava Logo

There's a new Strava update that lets you search for activities or special races without having to scroll through your feed. Searches are done using keywords or filtered by sport type, distance, time, elevation and date range. You can now also see how many activities you've completed in your Training Log or Activities section by clicking on the magnifying glass icon.

10 February 2021, 15:10
Giro d'Italia wildcards announced: No invite for Nairo Quintana or Androni Giocattoli–Sidermec

The wildcard places for the Giro d'Italia have been announced with a couple of surprises as there isn't an invite for Nairo Quintana's Arkéa–Samsic or Italian Pro Continental outfit Androni Giocattoli–Sidermec. Alpecin-Fenix earned a place on the start line in Turin via their ranking position in 2020. Bardiani–CSF–Faizanè, Eolo–Kometa and Vini Zabù–Brado–KTM received the wildcard places and will join the 19 WorldTour teams at the race.

Nairo Quintana had been vocal about wanting to return to the Italian Grand Tour in 2021. However, the race organisers have gone for three Italian teams instead. Androni Giocattoli–Sidermec were the other big losers, having been a regular feature at the race in past years. In 2019 they won stage six with Fausto Masnada.

10 February 2021, 11:11
Movistar rider says disc brakes are definitely more dangerous than rim brakes even if their performance is far better
Matteo Jorgenson (via Twitter)

Movistar rider Matteo Jorgenson has added to the pro debate around disc brakes. The American needed surgery in 2019 after a disc rotor sliced through his calf muscle during a crash at Paris Roubaix Espoirs. Jorgenson told Cyclingnews that disc brakes are "definitely more dangerous than rim brakes". 

"They're an exposed piece of the bike that gets super hot, especially in a bike race. They can cause damage if they happen to land on a rider in a specific way, and it depends just by chance, on how they touch a rider. Especially if you're on that side of the bike and you fall on top of a rider like I did."

Despite his injury, Jorgenson did admit that disc brakes provide a far superior performance to rim brakes and said he was shocked by how much better discs are. "I didn't see much problem with rim brakes, I thought they were very good. But last January I switched to a new bike with discs, and I was shocked at how much of a difference it makes. In a bike race, there's so much to be gained by being able to brake later. 

"Disc brakes are very consistent, so when you pull the brake at first, it grabs just as much as 10 seconds later. Whereas with a rim brake, especially in the rain, you pull it and it starts to heat up, and then you get either less or sometimes it grabs more depending on the pad type. It's very inconsistent, you have to kind of think through it while you're braking. If you're braking quite hard into a corner, you have to try and anticipate how much more you can brake."

On Monday, Chris Froome said he wasn't completely convinced by disc brakes, while talking about his new Factor Ostro VAM. The four-time Tour de France winner "doesn't believe the technology is where it needs to be yet for road cycling". We took a look at what could be wrong with his disc brakes...

10 February 2021, 14:30
Show me a picture that says you are a cyclist without having a bicycle in it thread

Three giveaways that you're a cyclist...

10 February 2021, 13:19
BBC's Scooby story comments come rolling in...
BBC Scooby hit by cyclist Facebook comments

Plenty of discussion in the comments about the BBC story. Dogless asked the important question of if "anyone has any information on whether the dog was wearing a helmet and hi viz?" No answer on that one yet, but we do now know the dog's owner Jackie Dale wasn't the person walking the dog at the time...She has popped up on the Island Echo Facebook page to give her side of the story, including some more serious accusations about the cyclists who she claims also kicked the dog. In a further twist, another comment on the Facebook post from Nath Thorley claims "the person walking the dog is a born liar...I know this as he's married to my mum". This has all got very strange...

Some more of your comments...

Muddy Ford wrote: "If there is any valid warning from this story, it is that dog owners (myself included!) should minimise the risk of their dog causing an accident by keeping it on a lead as per Highway Code guidance."

Sean1 added: "The biggest danger on shared use routes such as NCN is dogs running around off the lead.  Inevitably when there is an incident like this the dog owners never blame themselves for irresponsible behaviour."

10 February 2021, 12:32
Women's cycling network JoyRiders launch first group outside London

JoyRiders, the women's cycling network, has set up a new group in Oxford as part of their plan to run 400 rides across the country, focusing on helping female cyclists gain the confidence to cycle. With men making up roughly 72% of journeys by bike in the UK, JoyRiders aims to encourage and empower more women to get involved. Once Covid restrictions allow they hope to continue their group rides in London and Oxford and have plans to expand to Manchester too.

Dr Alison Hill, chairwoman of Oxford's cycling group Cyclox told the Oxford Mail: "It is so exciting to know that JoyRiders will be coming to Oxford. Support for women by women through JoyRiders is a brilliant way of building confidence.”

10 February 2021, 11:52
Mark Cavendish to make Deceuninck-Quick-Step debut this Sunday at Clasica de Almeria

Mark Cavendish will make his second Deceuninck-Quick-Step debut this weekend, at Clasica de Almeria – the race he won in 2015. That year Cav went on to win Kuurne-Brussels-Kuurne and a stage of the Tour de France. Normally a race for the sprinters, Quick-Step will have two or three sprint cards to play with Colombian Alvaro Hodeg and young prospect Jannik Steimle both also on the Wolfpack's startlist for the race.

"Like every rider in these times I’m excited to get the season underway. We are fortunate that the races can go ahead and I’m even more excited to pull on the jersey of the Wolfpack once again and race with the boys. The fact it will happen at an event which brings back a lot of beautiful memories makes it even more special”, Cav said ahead of his first race back at the team where he won 44 races between 2013 and 2015.

10 February 2021, 10:24
A little bit of rain isn't going to stop a Dutch mother
10 February 2021, 10:09
Elia Viviani returns to training following heart surgery

Elia Viviani is back in training after three weeks off the bike due to a cardiac arrhythmia. Viviani underwent atrial ablation surgery to treat the arrhythmia, which he noticed while out on the bike last month. Before the surgery, he explained that he was doing normal strength-resistace work at 140-150 beats per minute when he felt palpitations and his heart rate rocketed to 220 beats per minute 20 seconds later. 

Viviani sought out his old Liquigas doctor Roberto Corsetti before undergoing tests at hospital. His return to training at Cofidis' team camp in Benidorm is a big relief for the Italian sprinter who is still hoping to get his season underway at the UAE Tour later this month before heading to the Giro d'Italia in May. 2020 was something of a disappointment for Viviani who failed to win a race all year, the first time he's failed to do so since 2009.

10 February 2021, 08:50
BBC accused of "cyclist-bashing" story about dog hit by cyclist

The BBC has been accused of "cyclist-bashing" for their reporting of a story about a dog on the Isle of Wight which was running free when it collided with a cyclist and narrowly avoided being run over by a bus driver. The BBC's story, headlined 'Scooby the dog rescued by police after being hit by cyclist', some cyclists have said, ignores the fact that the owner had lost control of the dog.

The dog's owner Jackie Dale says the basset hound named Scooby slipped its collar when a group of cyclists "came whizzing from nowhere". One commenter claimed that they were walking on a National Cycle Network path when the cyclists passed. Scooby had tyre marks on its back and was found away from the scene by PCSO Stephen Hull who said the dog also narrowly avoided being hit by a bus driver.

Since posting the story the BBC has received criticism from cyclists who say the story unnecessarily frames the bike riders as having run the dog over, rather than questioning why the dog was out of control. Scooby was reunited with its owner who said she hopes "this will be a warning to cyclists".

On Facebook, Bob Moore commented on the story saying: "This is the flimsiest pretext to run a cyclist-bashing article I've ever seen." Leonora Fletcher added, "Slipped its collar. So basically it was running loose then. Wish people would read the article and not just the headline."

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

69 comments

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brooksby replied to Kendalred | 3 years ago
0 likes

Good point yes

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Daveyraveygravey | 3 years ago
8 likes

"tyre marks up his white fur" ???? Really?  Is this a Wile E Coyote cartoon?  If the bike had hit him, he might have had bruises or cuts, but I just don't believe that a tyre can mark a dog's fur.  I hope she learns her lesson, but I suspect it will just make her more convinced that all cyclists are evil.

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EK Spinner replied to Daveyraveygravey | 3 years ago
5 likes

agreed, and I would expect the cyclist to be down if that were the case, so whoever got injuries get a claim in for the damge to you and your bike since she failed to keep the wild rabid bike hating monster under control. Maybe its abot ime these beast were licensed (with  visible registration No) and insured to be out in public

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Dogless | 3 years ago
12 likes

Does anyone have any information on whether the dog was wearing a helmet and hi viz? 

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rct | 3 years ago
7 likes

Lucky the dog didn't hit a disc rotor!

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Captain Badger replied to rct | 3 years ago
4 likes

rct wrote:

Lucky the dog didn't hit a disc rotor!

Course it didn't, you don't think the evil cyclist had brakes on its bike do you?

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dreamlx10 | 3 years ago
1 like

I'm still surprised that anyone pays a license fee to the BBC

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Captain Badger replied to dreamlx10 | 3 years ago
1 like

dreamlx10 wrote:

I'm still surprised that anyone pays a license fee to the BBC

Not a licence, it's a pollution tax.

Or is that a different point of pedantry? Meh, still fits...

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Muddy Ford | 3 years ago
15 likes

Re: Dog story...how the f. is this a warning to cyclists, other than there will continue to be bullshit stories published by the BBC stirring up hatred that may put cyclists safety at risk from idiots taking retribution against any cyclist. If there is any valid warning from this story, it is that dog owners (myself included!) should minimise the risk of their dog causing an accident by keeping it on a lead as per highway code guidance. BBC should be reported for inciting hate, as it was intentional by them to phrase the headline so that the cyclist is taken as the perpetrator of a wrongdoing rather than the owner of the dog. 

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fwhite181 | 3 years ago
6 likes

The thing that strikes me most about the tweet of a Dutch cyclist riding through flood water - they clearly trust that there are no potholes/grooves/subsided road surface under there. My main reason for avoiding riding through floods (at least ones that wouldn't submerge the BB/hubs) is that a hidden pothole would have me on my arse!

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HoarseMann replied to fwhite181 | 3 years ago
0 likes

I suspect those Dutch roads are well maintained. Plus if it's a regular commuting route, then they will be familiar with the road surface.

There is a section of road on my old commute that flooded regularly. I rode it every work day and paid particular attention to the camber and surface. So that when it did flood - I knew where it was likely to be shallowest and that there were no manhole covers that might have been displaced by the water etc.

The alternative is a long detour on busier roads that also could be flooded, so still seemed to be the best option.

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sean1 | 3 years ago
16 likes

Highway Code Rule 56

"Dogs. Do not let a dog out on the road on its own. Keep it on a short lead when walking on the pavement, road or path shared with cyclists or horse riders."

The biggest danger on shared use routes such as NCN is dogs running around off the lead.  Inevtiably when there is an incident  like this the dog owners never blame themselves for irresponsible behaviour.

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EK Spinner replied to sean1 | 3 years ago
8 likes

always one of my favorites, the advice in the highway code particularly its use of the word short means that these long extending leads should not be used on the road network (pavement, road or shared use path) and dogs should not be off the lead no matter how well trained or behaved they are. quite different once they are in a park or a field but not in many of the places where they do get walked

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HarryTrauts | 3 years ago
6 likes

I need to know if the cyclist was all right?  And, more importantly, how's their bike?!

PS - I love dogs.  This is a joke. Obvs.

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Captain Badger replied to HarryTrauts | 3 years ago
6 likes

HarryTrauts wrote:

I need to know if the cyclist was all right?  And, more importantly, how's their bike?!

PS - I love dogs.  This is a joke. Obvs.

Quite, that's not an insubstantial dog, any rider hitting it hard enough to leave tyre marks on its back is going to come off.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U3p0dmeecwE

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IanMK replied to Captain Badger | 3 years ago
7 likes

My initial reaction; chapeau to the rider as he managed to cycle over an out of control dog and stay up right. The owner should be applauding his skill as they managed to avoid paying for damages.

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Captain Badger replied to IanMK | 3 years ago
8 likes

IanMK wrote:

My initial reaction; chapeau to the rider as he managed to cycle over an out of control dog and stay up right. .....

I think you're on to something. Can Danny MacAskill account for his whereabouts on the night in question?

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mdavidford replied to IanMK | 3 years ago
2 likes

Don't know why they're claiming they were hard to identify - it was obviously Danny MacAskill...

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David9694 replied to Captain Badger | 3 years ago
3 likes

Did his step sister later appear on the scene and take 15 minutes to ring the vet?

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Captain Badger replied to David9694 | 3 years ago
0 likes

David9694 wrote:

Did his step sister later appear on the scene and take 15 minutes to ring the vet?

Oh, ISWYDT! Chapeau!laugh

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HoarseMann | 3 years ago
18 likes

apparently they were not wearing helmets either 

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to HoarseMann | 3 years ago
13 likes

They shouted a warning that they were approaching from the rear but that shout stunned them Husband and the dogs??? Shouting a warning or ringing  a bell is better then just sneaking up silently. But that was bad now according to her. 

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Jenova20 replied to HoarseMann | 3 years ago
3 likes

I wish i could upvote this more than once.

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mdavidford replied to HoarseMann | 3 years ago
7 likes

Quote:

Could you identify a group of cyclists in the dark with no helmets...?

Huh? How would wearing helmets make them easier to identify? Are they meant to have their names printed on the sides?

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HoarseMann replied to mdavidford | 3 years ago
6 likes

mdavidford wrote:

Huh? How would wearing helmets make them easier to identify? Are they meant to have their names printed on the sides?

Don't give them any ideas!!

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Captain Badger replied to mdavidford | 3 years ago
1 like

mdavidford wrote:

Quote:

Could you identify a group of cyclists in the dark with no helmets...?

Huh? How would wearing helmets make them easier to identify? Are they meant to have their names printed on the sides?

Were they wearing hi-viz?

Bastards

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HoarseMann replied to Captain Badger | 3 years ago
3 likes

Captain Badger wrote:

 

Were they wearing hi-viz?

haven't got a scoobies

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Cycloid replied to mdavidford | 3 years ago
5 likes

Cyclists "not wearing helmets" is another way of saying they were irresposnsible

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Secret_squirrel | 3 years ago
3 likes

The BBC complaints links are here :

https://www.bbc.co.uk/contact/complaints

 

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Zjtm231 replied to Secret_squirrel | 3 years ago
0 likes

thanks

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