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“Please find a different job”: Jeremy Vine blasts ‘toxic’ London taxi driver; “Bristol cycle infrastructure needs reinventing”; Pidcock a doubt for classics; Snake Trespass, round 2; More dropper post chat; Coffee and cycling + more on the live blog

Happy Monday! After a weekend spent having nightmares about Matej Mohorič’s Poggio descent, Ryan Mallon’s pulled himself together to bring you the first live blog of the week
21 March 2022, 18:49
Jan Ullrich auctions off 1998 Tour bike for Ukraine

Do you have a spare 25 grand and a deep fascination with one of cycling’s darkest moments?

Well you’re in luck, as 1997 Tour de France winner Jan Ullrich is auctioning off one of his bikes from the following year’s race – yes, that one – to benefit the ‘A Heart for Children’ campaign, which supports sick children and orphans in war-torn Ukraine.

The autographed bike features carbon-fibre wheels, a Campagnolo groupset, and a carbon fibre Pinarello frame, painted yellow (with yellow bar tape too), presumably kitted out in anticipation of the German’s second victory at the race, before his infamous collapse on the road to Les Deux-Alpes at the hands of Marco Pantani. Ullrich, despite wearing the yellow jersey for a number of stages, rode a bike bedecked in standard-issue pink and grey Telekom colours throughout the race.

Of course, the 1998 Tour proved more notable for what happened off the bike – at customs checks, in hotels, and at teary press conferences – than the racing itself, so Ullrich’s ill-fated yellow Pinarello is a potent symbol of one of the sport’s murkiest hours.

The highest bid currently stands at over €25,000.

You can place a bid for your own little piece of the Festina Affair and help out the humanitarian effort in Ukraine at the auction site here

21 March 2022, 17:42
Another record: Boy completes Rubik’s Cube in 14 seconds – while riding a bike

 Careful now while trying this at home…

21 March 2022, 17:09
A new bike lane record?
21 March 2022, 16:04
Countdown to the cobbles

I know, I know, Opening Weekend was back in February – but the real cobbled classics season starts this Friday in Harelbeke, for the Ronde-lite E3 Saxo Bank Classic.

Let’s hope by then we’ve finally finished talking about dropper seatposts…

21 March 2022, 15:52
Tom Pidcock wins Brabantse Pijl.PNG
Pidcock a doubt for classics: “We can't find the cause of his stomach problems,” says coach

Tom Pidcock is a doubt for the upcoming cobbled classics after the British rider suffered stomach problems during Milan-San Remo on Saturday.

The cyclocross world champion, who also missed Strade Bianche two weeks ago due to similar digestive issues, was dropped on the small capi climbs that precede the Cipressa and Poggio at Milan-San Remo, before the racing had truly ignited. 

Pidcock failed to finish the first monument of the season and was later fined by the UCI after he was forced to stop for an emergency toilet break by the side of the road.

The Ineos rider’s coach Kurt Bogaerts told Het Laatste Nieuws that Pidcock won’t race until his stomach problems are resolved. 

The 22-year-old wasn’t scheduled to race Friday’s E3-Saxo Bank Classic or Sunday’s Gent-Wevelgem but is now a doubt for next Wednesday’s Dwars door Vlaanderen, which itself is only four days before the Tour of Flanders, one of Pidcock’s main spring objectives.

“It wasn't a stomach bug, but Tom had to go to the toilet seriously. Even afterwards, his stomach did not feel one hundred percent healthy. There was no point in racing any further,” Bogaerts said.

After failing to start Strade Bianche, Bogaerts claimed that Pidcock felt fine while training at altitude in Andorra before the issues suddenly and dramatically resurfaced at Milan-San Remo.

“The strange thing is that he doesn't really feel sick,” Bogaerts said.

“We are going to investigate this. Tom had a blood test on Wednesday and we hope that based on those results we can find a cause.

“We are not going to make a race schedule until this problem is solved.”

After De Ronde, Pidcock is pencilled in to race the Ardennes Classics later in April. He was also due to make his debut at the Giro d’Italia in May, though recent reports suggest he could be on his way to the Tour de France as Ineos Grenadiers recalibrate their plans in the wake of Egan Bernal’s training crash. 

21 March 2022, 15:05
WVA: Best hair in the peloton?

Move over Marcel...

He may have missed out on La Primavera this year, but Wout van Aert continues to pick up accolades wherever he goes… 

21 March 2022, 14:59
Martin on Matej

It seems as if Matej Mohorič wasn’t being completely honest with Dan Martin during the Tour de France last year:

That particularly conversation, which took place only two months after the Slovenian’s horror crash on a descent at the Giro d’Italia, was evidently forgotten by Mohorič on Saturday afternoon as he crested the Poggio and deployed his dropper post.

Paying homage to Sean Kelly on the thirtieth anniversary of the Irishman’s second Milan-San Remo win (he must have read Thursday’s blog), the Bahrain-Victorious rider added ‘bunny-hopping out of the gutter’ and ‘nearly ending up in someone’s living room’ to the Poggio descent lexicon…

As well as commenting on Mohorič’s madcap descending, the now-retired Martin also decided – rather mischievously – to throw the 27-year-old’s name in the ring as “a strong contender” to become only the fourth rider in history to win all five monument classics.

And to think we haven’t even gotten over the whole ‘Pogačar is too dominant’ debate yet…

21 March 2022, 14:21
More ‘accessible’ infrastructure...

 I don’t even know where to start with this one...

21 March 2022, 13:11
Coffee and cycling: can you love one without the other?

Coffee stops are synonymous with cycling – but is there anyone out there who can’t stand a cappuccino or a flat white?

As a teenager on club runs, I was one of the few who ordered a cup of tea – but over the years they slowly ground me down (geddit?) and now coffee is a prerequisite on a long ride.

Has anyone stronger than me held out against the ever-increasing pressure to bow down to the omnipresent cycling-coffee culture of the 2020s?

21 March 2022, 12:45
Roadies – always at the cutting edge

With half of the cycling world taking to Google to figure out what exactly a dropper post does after Matej Mohorič’s death-defying descent of the Poggio to win a thrilling edition of Milan-San Remo on Saturday, we all assumed we were witnessing the birth of some new ground-breaking technology, set to revolutionise the sport.

> UCI confirms Matej Mohorič’s Milan-San Remo-winning dropper post is within rules

Mohorič even described dropper posts as “the future of cycling” in his post-race press conference.

But, as with all great leaps forward in road cycling, the dropper post of course stems from another branch of the sport, and was first tested in mountain biking a decade before the Slovenian was born:

I imagine I wasn’t the only one who spent the weekend listening to their brother claiming: ‘I knew they’d bring dropper posts in. After they banned riding on the top tube, I knew it…’ 

In any case, as Sam Bennett predicted over the weekend, just like LeMond’s tri-bars in 1989 the market for dropper posts has surely ballooned after Mohorič’s monument-winning antics on Saturday:

21 March 2022, 11:57
Snake Trespass, round 2

Following Cycling UK’s call for Derbyshire County Council to publish a risk assessment justifying why it closed Snake Pass to walkers and cyclists, a bunch of two-wheeled trespassers took to the Peak District climb on Saturday for the second week in a row.

Despite the brutal headwind, everyone seemed to enjoy a sunny and rather pleasant spin on the car-free A57:

21 March 2022, 11:28
“Bristol cycle infrastructure needs reinventing”: Drum and Bass on the Bike founder calls for change

The founder of ‘Drum and Bass on the Bike’, DJ Dom Whiting, is using his popular pedalling rave to call for improved cycling infrastructure in Bristol.

Around a thousand people joined Whiting as he went for a spin around the city yesterday, spinning some tunes from his handlebar-mounted decks.

It’s the second time the DJ has taken his mobile disco to Bristol, filling the streets with cyclists, scooters, walkers and positive vibes – not to mention bemused onlookers and frustrated motorists… 

Last month he celebrated the one-year anniversary of Drum and Bass on the Bike with a tour around his hometown of Southampton

“We definitely shut down Bristol, that is for sure”, Whiting announced to the impressive crowd during yesterday’s ride.

But as they went around the Bearpit roundabout and headed down Haymarket, the DJ had a message for the local council, declaring that “Bristol cycle infrastructure needs reinventing ASAP”.

Now it may not be my cup of tea musically (as regular readers will know from my punk and classic rock-based puns), but if it leads to more cycle lanes I’m all for the occasional drum and bass…

21 March 2022, 08:56
“Please find a different job”: Jeremy Vine blasts ‘toxic’ London taxi driver

Ah, Twitter. Widely renowned as a place for thoughtful, considerate debate (isn’t it?), the social media platform can also – surprisingly – provide a largely anonymous refuge for the more toxic opinions of certain groups.

And so it proved, when over the weekend Jeremy Vine posted another video of his commute in London, which showed a van driver mounting the footpath to get past a taxi on what used to be the cycle lane on Kensington High Street:

One particularly unpleasant taxi driver’s response to the broadcaster’s video was, let’s say, rather blunt:

In fairness, Vine didn’t hold back either:

After a few more childish and largely meme-based taunts (I would probably avoid visiting Tom the cabbie’s profile, as it’s pretty unsavoury), one user came up with handy idea for cyclists to avoid any anti-bike taxi drivers:

This prompted some cyclists, including road.cc’s very own Simon MacMichael, to share their favourite bike-related taxi stories:

And my personal favourite, from cycling author Chris Sidwells:

Others, however, were keen to point out that Tom the cabbie certainly doesn’t represent all taxi drivers: 

The last time I was in a taxi, a few weeks ago in the coastal town of Bray, just outside Dublin, we spent almost an hour chatting to our driver, a retired café owner who used to race mountain bikes, reminiscing about local cycling legends like Peter Crinnion. Thankfully he didn’t keep the meter running…

Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

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40 comments

Avatar
NOtotheEU | 2 years ago
2 likes

Those pedestrians in Jeremy vine's video were lucky not to live in Bristol. They probably would have ended up with a fine for holding up the van driver for at least 9 seconds!

Avatar
Hirsute | 2 years ago
2 likes

7 cars in the bike lane. Guessing by the time and skyline it was late sunday, so no enforcement around.

Cycle lane doesn't actually go anywhere either as it was started/built before getting approval to convert the subway to shared use and approval was not forthcoming. The other side is a hideous door zone trap. Complete waste of money all round.

https://goo.gl/maps/WcZXXiuVBafj8t8T7

https://goo.gl/maps/pTW2wJogCvjnArZcA

Avatar
AlsoSomniloquism | 2 years ago
2 likes

Re: Pidcock mysterious stomach problems. Too many superman poses on his saddle?

Avatar
brooksby | 2 years ago
3 likes

On More ‘accessible’ infrastructure... - is that some sort of childrens' play equipment? 

Avatar
chrisonabike replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
1 like

Was trying to work out what the "hole" part was for.  First I thought this - but it's not quite the right shape:

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chrisonabike replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
0 likes

Next idea - looking at the sloping sides:

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chrisonabike replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
1 like

But finally I figured it out:

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brooksby replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
1 like

@crippledbiker - can we have an opinion on this "infrastructure"?

I think that you are expected to wheel your bike halfway through the middle, leap over the bit at the side (while holding onto your bike so it doesn't just fall over), and then wheel it the rest of the way through.

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
0 likes

It seems in 2014 the "good" people of Bexleyheath decided it was an hinderance. (although it could have been the builders wanting access around the back). 

I'm down that way for Ride London as my in-laws base of operations is about a mile from there so I might pop over and see it IRL to test if the bike can get through the frame. 

Avatar
mdavidford replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
1 like

I was just coming down here to ask whether it shouldn't have some woodchip down underneath it, but you pre-empted me.

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Hirsute replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
2 likes

Like this ?

//pbs.twimg.com/media/FOXwPLZWYAAS_pn?format=jpg&name=small)

"local art class was assigned a project with bars"

Avatar
chrisonabike replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
0 likes

But the bicycle bit is too narrow for my recumbent and it will bisect me if I go through on my upright...

It does look much more like play equipment with your nice colours though, that's an improvement!

Avatar
Hirsute replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
0 likes

Not my image - but somewhere in that (now very long) twitter thread.

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IanMSpencer replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
2 likes

Government guidance expressly mentions tricycles and other nonstandard forms should be catered for in cycling infrastructure. Time for a complaint quoting Cycling Infrastructure Design, issued in 2020.

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nosferatu1001 replied to IanMSpencer | 2 years ago
1 like

That completely fails to meet the EA2010 requirements for access, so anyone who qualifies should complain to the council, with a. Civil claim to follow

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
1 like

hirsute wrote:

Like this ?

//pbs.twimg.com/media/FOXwPLZWYAAS_pn?format=jpg&name=small)

"local art class was assigned a project with bars"

Is that made from old Mouse Trap Game parts?

Avatar
eburtthebike replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
1 like

brooksby wrote:

On More ‘accessible’ infrastructure... - is that some sort of childrens' play equipment? 

No; it's to delay Russian tanks.

Avatar
mdavidford replied to eburtthebike | 2 years ago
1 like

eburtthebike wrote:

brooksby wrote:

On More ‘accessible’ infrastructure... - is that some sort of childrens' play equipment? 

No; it's to delay Russian tanks.

On current evidence, that doesn't take much more than a kid's sandpit.

Avatar
chrisonabike replied to mdavidford | 2 years ago
1 like

Personally I'm beginning to think Putin is actually a US agent as he's clearly destroying Russia.  He's clearly sabotaged the Russian military.  Plus Donald Trump was very positive on him to start with.

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Secret_squirrel | 2 years ago
2 likes

I followed most of that Taxi driver thread on Twitter.

There are literally a subset of sad twat taxi drivers that are convinced they are in the mafia.  

Their delusions are frightening to behold.

Avatar
Oldfatgit | 2 years ago
2 likes

Hope this Snakes Pass ride becomes a thing, and stays a thing when the road is open to motor traffic.

Small groups of say 10 or so riders all leaving the same(ish) spot every minute or two ...

Reclaim the roads 😉

Avatar
Hirsute | 2 years ago
6 likes

More bollards please (recent news item which escapes me led me to this).

 

 

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
4 likes

So either came down the road in the picture and lost control enough to end up mounting the kerb on the opposite side. Or came blasting out the road opposite (if there is one). Either way, I hope the Police are investigating the driving. 

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Hirsute replied to AlsoSomniloquism | 2 years ago
4 likes

World Bollards do numerous tweets on bollard damage. Would not surprise me if they simply tried to park there but due to the size of their wankpanzer failed to see the bollard and the bollard did it's job.

Avatar
Hirsute | 2 years ago
4 likes

Awful close pass on Saturday - as a pedestrian. Country walk, no pavement, 30 mph and some ridiculous squeeze through. Was slow to react with my trekking pole.

Earlier very late swerve by van man pratting about on his mobile.

Do I need a camera as a ped now ?

Avatar
brooksby replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
3 likes

I did some pedestrianing last weekend.  Walking back from Portbury to the A369 along this road - https://goo.gl/maps/DKeLS4zc4BknrGMP9

Walking on the right-hand side of the road, into the oncoming traffic, no footpaths beyond those 30mph speed limit signs.

REALLY not a pleasant experience...  The number of people who clearly had never even entertained the possibility of encountering someone along there not in a car... <shakes head>.

I ended up just saying to myself, "OK, well if the worst happens...", making my best Man with No Name squint, and Just Walking.

Avatar
IanMSpencer replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
0 likes

What, no 2 metres and slow speed to pass, as required by the revised HWC? You must have been wearing lycra.

Avatar
brooksby replied to IanMSpencer | 2 years ago
0 likes

IanMSpencer wrote:

What, no 2 metres and slow speed to pass, as required by the revised HWC?

 

Avatar
Pyro Tim | 2 years ago
0 likes

Love coffee, just not on a bike ride. If I stop, I want to hydrate, not dose up on caffeine

Avatar
Ride On replied to Pyro Tim | 2 years ago
0 likes

Yes. I dont do caffeine either, if you're tired get more sleep. Probably not in the middle of a ride though.

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