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Elias Schwärzler hits 272km/h on a mountain bike (towed by a motorbike); Doctor loses second bike this month to thief who cut through hospital rack; UCI announces cyclocross WC round in London; A Tale of Two Drivers; Tour teams + more on the live blog

Happy Friday! Dan Alexander is getting you ready for the weekend with our final live blog of the week
24 June 2022, 14:49
Fred Wright makes Bahrain Victorious' Tour team

 Fred Wright has made the cut for Bahrain Victorious. That's two Brits now confirmed for the big one, with Adam Yates, G, Tom Pidcock and Connor Swift still possibly to come.

Wright will be eyeing up the Roubaix stage, as well as team duty looking after joint leaders Jack Haig and Damiano Caruso.

The team's sports director, Gorazd Štangelj explained the thought process: "We've selected a really strong group of riders for the Tour. It's a Tour with plenty of challenges with chances for wind in Denmark and then more wind in France and cobbles. After this, we go straight into a concentrated block of uphill finishes. I think we have got a group of riders to cover all these difficult challenges and support our leaders, Jack and Damiano, to achieve our objective.

"We will also be looking for chances with our other riders to take stage wins or help us gain time for our overall objective. I'm convinced we have a strong team for the race itself."

24 June 2022, 14:37
The Tour 21 gets underway
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by The Tour 21 (@thetour21)

🚨 SEVEN DAYS UNTIL THE TOUR DE FRANCE 🚨

A week until the Tour means The Tour 21 riders, including Geoff Thomas, are getting their three-week challenge underway with the Copenhagen TT stage. Over 21 days, the riders will ride the exact same route the professionals will race, aiming to raise over £1 million for Cure Leukaemia.

As of day one of the 2022 ride, The Tour 21 has this year already raised over £635,000. Geoff Thomas returns to ride the Tour de France once again this month alongside 17 other riders. After hearing of LeMond’s diagnosis he said: "I was shocked to hear of Greg’s diagnosis, but what is promising is seeing him being so positive.

"This demonstrates the incredible progress being made in clinical trials across the world. When I was first diagnosed back in 2003 with the same form of leukaemia, I was only given a slim chance of survival. Fast forward 19 years and a diagnosis such as ours is treatable.

"We are over half way to our target of £1million but we still have much more to do to keep giving more people positive news when they are first diagnosed."

24 June 2022, 14:35
A reasonable question
24 June 2022, 14:27
Biniam Girmay makes winning return to racing

Biniam Girmay won Eritrea's national TT champs on his return to racing following THAT dream Giro d'Italia win and nightmare celebration...

He's something of a superstar in his home nation (and the rest of the world, for that matter)...

Other newly-crowned TT champions we might have missed: 21-year-old Raúl García Pierna, who rides for Equipo Kern Pharma, shocked the big WorldTour names to take Spain's title, while Mavi García took the women's crown.

Lisa Brennauer is the German champ for the second year in a row, and Omer Goldstein will represent Israel's national jersey a week today in the opening TT of the Tour de France. Brother and sister Mathias and Emma Norsgaard won both Denmark's top titles, while Jan Tratnik and Urška Žigart are Slovenia's winners (neither Pog or Rog made the journey home however)...

24 June 2022, 13:12
Elias Schwärzler hits 272km/h on a mountain bike (towed by a motorbike)

272.9km/h or 169mph...that's how fast German mountain bike pro Elias Schwärzler clocked in a successful Guinness World Record attempt last month. He's this week released the video showing his pulse-raising achievement. Think how fast he could have gone if he pedalled...(joke)...

Schwärzler is now officially the "fastest person to be pulled on a bicycle" after more than a year of preparation for the attempt, and was pulled into the record books at the Lausitz-Ring in Brandenburg, north east Germany.

His parents reaction to learning his idea was, as you'd expect: "No, definitely don't do that," he told Voralberg. "In the end it was okay because my parents now know that I prepare everything I do properly.

"I always say, you squat up there like a donkey. I can't raise my head because the headwind is so strong. I just had a real tunnel vision and kept seeing briefly, ah, there's the motorcyclist, I have to go there. On the one hand, I was of course happy that everything worked out well, in terms of safety. On the other hand, we didn't achieve the goal."

The goal? 300km/h...

Over to Brazilian speedster Evandro Portela who has his eyes on topping 300km/h later this year to break the motor-paced cycling world record.

24 June 2022, 12:39
But does it aero? New Trek Madone 2023

24 June 2022, 11:18
Tour teams: No Simon Yates for BikeExchange

Any thought Simon Yates' early Giro d'Italia withdrawal could prompt a Tour de France stage-hunting raid have been shut down...

An almost full-on sprint team...what a throwback. Nick Schultz and Michael Matthews will offer options on the lumpier days, but don't expect to see much of the Aussie outfit in the mountains...

Team leader and making his Tour de France return for the first time since the Tour of Poland crash and subsequent comeback, Dylan Groenewegen said: "I'm looking forward to returning to the Tour de France, the last time I raced was in 2019 and it was a success for me, and so it is great to be returning this year.

"I will have a strong team, the best support that I need. We've been working a lot together this year, we've had some good wins and that is the big goal for us in France."

24 June 2022, 11:16
How to remove press-fit bottom bracket bearings in 12 easy steps

If you do fancy it...

> How to remove press-fit bottom bracket bearings in 12 easy steps 

24 June 2022, 11:01
UCI announces cyclocross WC round in London

Exciting news!

 11th December 2022: world class cyclocross is coming to London. The UCI has announced the empty slot on the calendar has been taken by the English capital, and although details about where and what the course will look like, the thought of Pidcock, Van Aert and Van der Poel (if they're not on their winter break) doing battle on home mud is something to look forward to.

Elsewhere on the calendar there is another new round in...Benidorm?! No, really... Starting from the wintering Briton-infested sun loungers, the riders will sprint to the all-inclusive, have to finish a pitcher of blue lagoon and a shot of sambuca before riding back to the start through the pool. Seven laps. Last rider standing...

24 June 2022, 10:50
Surrey Roads Policing Unit hails "really positive" Transport for London changes

> Transport for London to begin fining motorists caught driving in mandatory cycle lanes 

24 June 2022, 10:27
"Ah, hospital cycle parking, another box-ticking exercise": Reaction to doctor having second bike stolen this month

NHS Bike Room, campaigning for better bike facilities across the NHS, tweeted: "This is why we need secure places to park our bikes. Not the first and sadly won't be the last."

So what else have you been saying this morning?

Owd Big 'Ead called hospital cycle parking facilities "another box-ticking exercise by the public sector to convince themselves that they are doing something worthwhile for the health of the nation and environment".

Reiver2768 made the point: "Surely an employer like the NHS, of all organisations, should be promoting active travel and should be making at least some effort (over and above a piece of bent pipe in the ground) to facilitate this?"

eburtthebike reported it's a location issue that needs to become more commonplace: "The NHS is very keen on active travel, and in some places, they support it with cycle stations, including indoor, secure cycle parking, showers and changing rooms and lockers; just not everywhere."

It's a dilemma for most of us weighing up commuting by bike...

"I'm lucky enough to have my own private office, so I can bring my bike inside (which also, means I can commute on one of my 'nice' bikes without worry). If I wasn't able to do this, I probably wouldn't commute by bike at all - especially with the area I work in. Even using the cheapest beater bike you can find gets very expensive if it's stolen all the time."

24 June 2022, 09:32
"Flabbergasted" Yorkshire cyclist riding across America gets £2,000 donation from Dame Judi Dench

Anthony Butcher's pan-America adventure to raise money for people with multiple sclerosis received an unexpected boost in the form of a £2,000 donation from Dame Judi Dench. Anthony set a £20,000 target and was "flabbergasted" to learn Dame Judi had sent over a cheque to his home, which (to great surprise) his wife subsequently opened.

"It was just before I reached my target of £20,000 and it pushed me right up to the edge — I screamed and jumped up and down," he told the BBC.

"My dad was dentist to Judi Dench's daughter for a period of time and she had remembered my mum."

In the last week, Anthony has traversed the Rocky Mountains ahead of 10 days cycling through the Sierra Nevada. "Then there's a third mountain range to get over and the wind is blowing a real hoolie, so I'm having to fight for every mile," he said.

24 June 2022, 09:22
A Tale of Two Drivers

Oh and a YPLAC nomination right out the top draw...

24 June 2022, 09:13
Joss Lowden wins British national TT champs

Apologies for the late (next day) update to yesterday's TT champs results. I was long off into the search for Classic Italian Taste San Pellegrino (very good, by the way) by the time Joss Lowden won the women's elite TT in the glorious Dumfries evening sunshine.

2022 Women's Elite British National Time Trial Championships podium Joss Lowden (SWPix)

She said afterwards: "I'm very, very pleased. Obviously I was eyeing it up last year so this year to come out and do a ride I’m really pleased with – there was nothing left on the road today. I really enjoyed it, it was a beautiful course."

Joss Lowden (SWPix)

Men's champ Ethan Hayter is eyeing up a road race TT double...

"It's really nice to defend my national title and I'm looking forward to wearing these stripes in Europe. We've been pretty lucky with the weather today – perfect weather for a time-trial. Hopefully I'll win the road race on Sunday, but I've got both Bens with me [Tulett and Turner] and they're both really strong, so we'll see."

And a nice photo with brother (and U23 champ) Leo for the mantlepiece too...

Ethan Hayter/Leo Hayter (SWPix)

All images: SWPix

24 June 2022, 07:55
Doctor loses second bike this month to thief who cut through hospital cycle rack

A doctor in Sheffield finished their shift at a hospital, returned to the bike rack to cycle home, only to find a thief had taken their bike. Not by cutting through their lock, but instead cutting through the very rack the bike was locked to...Oh, and to make matters worse, it's the second bike he's had stolen this month...

"How are we in a position that this is ok and happens so frequently?" the doctor's wife asked...

 In a reply, Rachael added some interesting police 'advice' and confirmed the area was not covered by CCTV...

Unfortunately the bike theft shock factor left a long time ago. We've been worn down by countless depressing tales of thieves taking bikes from hospitals...

In March, we spoke to a victim who had their bike stolen from inside a cancer centre  where she was having an emergency brain scan.

> "My heart sank": Victim speaks out after shameless thief stole bike from cancer centre

In 2020, two men were charged following a series of bike thefts from Nottingham's Queen's Medical Centre...while staff were inside treating coronavirus patients...

Dan joined road.cc in 2020, and spent most of his first year (hopefully) keeping you entertained on the live blog. At the start of 2022 he took on the role of news editor. Before joining road.cc, Dan wrote about various sports, including football and boxing for the Daily Express, and covered the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Part of the generation inspired by the 2012 Olympics, Dan has been 'enjoying' life on two wheels ever since and spends his weekends making bonk-induced trips to the petrol stations of the south of England.

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52 comments

Avatar
pockstone | 1 year ago
1 like

So glad to see Binyam Girmay back to winning ways.

After the cork incident I would have thought his team mates would avoid similar tragi-comic accidents- waiting- to- happen...like climbing the tiled steps of a swimming pool in cleats!

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Hirsute | 1 year ago
2 likes

Regretably had to drive yesterday. 'Stuck' behind a learner who slowed to <20mph some distance before a green light. I slowed and maintained a safe distance.

Despite their much reduced speed, L driver when straight through on amber and I stopped with little effort.

Is now common practise to ignore amber lights as 'stop' ? Is this what is taught?

 

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Oldfatgit replied to Hirsute | 1 year ago
2 likes

Amber Bashing seems to be considered OK* ... Even though it's jumping the lights.

* If you're in a car, that is

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chrisonabike replied to Hirsute | 1 year ago
0 likes

Red is the new amber.

I'm just waiting for someone to propose an app for that, or suggest we fix this with a pre-pre-stop light.  Hmm... rainbow traffic lights could add to the streetscape actually.

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Rich_cb replied to chrisonabike | 1 year ago
3 likes

I believe the key to reducing congestion is to get rid of the green light.

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chrisonabike replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
2 likes

Was that the real meaning behind The Police's "Roxanne"?

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mdavidford replied to chrisonabike | 1 year ago
2 likes

Don't we have that already? I thought it went Green > Amber > Established Amber > Red > Established Red...?

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mdavidford | 1 year ago
0 likes

Quote:

...Simon Yates' early Giro d'Italia withdrawl...

Pretty sure that's the first time 'Simon Yates' and 'drawl' have appeared in the same sentence.

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Daveyraveygravey | 1 year ago
2 likes

That report about the taxi on the roundabout is from Brighton and Hove news, the lovely organisation Jo Wadsworth works for, and chooses not to follow guidelines on reporting "accidents"

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delthebike | 1 year ago
4 likes

I think it would help if Sheffield stands and their ilk where stuffed with the fibre strands that are in chainsaw trousers.  That way if the vile scrotes take a saw or grinder to a stand all that fibre comes out and will block the blade from doing its job, they might even lose the tool as it might not easily be removed from the fibres.

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chrisonabike replied to delthebike | 1 year ago
0 likes

Good idea.  I'm not sure fibres will work for grinders as they do for chainsaws but there are deffo things which angle grinders do not love.  This mahoosive bike lock uses this principle:

https://altorlocks.com/products/saf-lock

Unfortunately I suspect that would increase the cost hugely.

If that lock is anything to go by the angle-grinder sabotaging material would probably need to be on the outside.  Itself protected from knocks with some metal.  With the "structural" protection on the inside.  Otherwise you could just cut a couple of rings in the outer and then (presumably) smash the section out.

Of course even just stuffing the hoop with something unpleasant likely makes it a bit more inconvenient to steal.  I just think cost is a factor as mostly these are "public" infra.

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chrisonabike replied to delthebike | 1 year ago
1 like

Alternatively - armed response:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gP9wLJhaBOE

Almost certainly would see you penalised as much or more than if you'd killed someone while driving.  I guess it might make you feel better though.  Especially if you got footage of the result. (Likely also illegal but if you're already being hanged for a lamb...)

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Rich_cb | 1 year ago
2 likes

In my experience hospitals have very high rates of bike theft.

My £100 eBay bike, thankfully, seems impervious.

Get a cheap second hand bike, deck it out in mismatching components and never clean it.

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chrisonabike replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
7 likes

I discover that I've been running a thief-proofing strategy for much of my life and never realised!

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vthejk | 1 year ago
8 likes

The same people who are chiding the doctor for leaving an 'expensive bike' at work are probably also the people who think most bikes cost £50 and are children's playthings only.

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Kapelmuur replied to vthejk | 1 year ago
4 likes

vthejk wrote:

The same people who are chiding the doctor for leaving an 'expensive bike' at work are probably also the people who think most bikes cost £50 and are children's playthings only.

On my initial visit to my LBS when I first thought of buying a road bike about 10 years ago I was astonished to be told that the cheapest 'beginners' bike they stocked was £750!

It was several years before I became reconciled to paying a grand for a bike.

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Awavey replied to Kapelmuur | 1 year ago
1 like

I've never paid more than £300 for a commute bike, and havent paid more than 1k for a decent road bike.

It's in most LBS interests, especially with C2W schemes to only stock bikes around the 1k range as there is the most turnover for them.

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vthejk replied to Kapelmuur | 1 year ago
3 likes

To be fair, my comment reads as anti-cheap bike rhetoric; it was not intended that way. I am lucky enough to own a cheap, rusty old 'beater' MTB that I take to the shops and a newer steel bike that I built up to ride everywhere else. What I did mean, though, was that statement by the police is coming from a place of belittling the average cycle owner as someone whose vehicle is low-cost and easily replaceable for a small sum.

This sort of misconception is nothing new, though. In my experience, even Awavey's £300 figure would be treated as surprisingly high by most non-cyclists. I bought a 2005 Specialized Allez off eBay for £195 - 10% of the cost of the Renault Twingo it replaced - and my then-partner had a right go at me for spending too much!

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Daveyraveygravey replied to vthejk | 1 year ago
2 likes

vthejk wrote:

The same people who are chiding the doctor for leaving an 'expensive bike' at work are probably also the people who think most bikes cost £50 and are children's playthings only.

You forgot where they tell you to "Grow up and buy a car" 

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vthejk replied to Daveyraveygravey | 1 year ago
7 likes

Daveyraveygravey wrote:

You forgot where they tell you to "Grow up and buy a car" 

Don't get me started! (too late, you just have!)

I spent the majority of my first term training to teach and then teaching fending off comments from my colleagues like "Oh, you saving up for your first car, then?" Thankfully, over a year and many fuel cost rises later, the idea of a grown man not owning a car and riding a bicycle to work everyday doesn't seem as novel and certainly not as unappealing to them.

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Gimpl replied to vthejk | 1 year ago
6 likes

vthejk wrote:

Daveyraveygravey wrote:

You forgot where they tell you to "Grow up and buy a car" 

Don't get me started! (too late, you just have!)

I spent the majority of my first term training to teach and then teaching fending off comments from my colleagues like "Oh, you saving up for your first car, then?" Thankfully, over a year and many fuel cost rises later, the idea of a grown man not owning a car and riding a bicycle to work everyday doesn't seem as novel and certainly not as unappealing to them.

I was working on a contract at a site less than three miles away from home and easily accessable via the Milton Keynes Redways. There's me, an overweight 50+ old man cycling in. The 20 somethings simply could not get their heads around that. To them it was like going to the moon. Just incromprehensible. Mind you, one of them had their home thermostat turned up to 30C so she didn't get cold indecision

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SimoninSpalding | 1 year ago
1 like

Isn't there a road policing unit in Sheffield that are active in prosecuting bad drivers in relation to cyclists? They should have a word with their colleagues.

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eburtthebike | 1 year ago
8 likes

It is a basic tenet of encouraging cycling that there is somewhere secure to leave your bike.  Unlike this admirable doctor, most people just give up after their bike is stolen.

Speaking of which, I'm still pursuing the failure of Lidl to implement the cycle parking plans at their new store in Lydney, and the District council is investigating a possible breach of planning conditions.  But they tell me that the planning department is so underfunded after 12 years of tory austerity that it is going to take some time, and people who know about these things tell me that the council probably won't take action as it would be too expensive.

So even when reasonable cycle parking, near the entrance and overlooked is the subject of a planning condition, Lidl can just ignore it, put some racks in where they aren't overlooked, and it looks as if nothing is going to happen.

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Owd Big 'Ead | 1 year ago
11 likes

Ah, hospital cycle parking, another box ticking exercise by the public sector to convince themselves that they are doing something worthwhile for the health of the nation and environment.

Like every other piece of crap infrastructure, it's still crap, but it keeps the accountants happy.

In Derby they have just opened an indoor cycle parking facility in the city cente, catering for a total of 35 cyclists at a time, in a building with over 2000 parking spaces for motorists.

Serious about public health and the environment? 

Hmmm......

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ShutTheFrontDawes replied to Owd Big 'Ead | 1 year ago
0 likes

I'm not sure what your point is. You deride the efforts made as 'box ticking' but are simultaneously suggesting they should do more. Do you think they should do more, or should stop bothering to try?

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HoarseMann replied to ShutTheFrontDawes | 1 year ago
4 likes

I read it as councils do the bare minimum to tick the 'active travel' box, but they should be doing more.

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Owd Big 'Ead replied to ShutTheFrontDawes | 1 year ago
3 likes

If I'm suggesting that they are carrying out box ticking exercises, then I'm most definitely suggesting they do more.
Go to the still relatively new hospital they have built here in Derby and the motorcycles have a lovely, covered parking facility right outside the main doors, bicycles however have to be stored elsewhere that isn't undercover. Where is the incentive to cycle when right from the start you are dealing with such lack of foresight. This is on a site where car parking is so limited that the council have just approved plans for a multi storey car park built on the footprint of existing ground level parking, reducing car parking significantly during the construction stage.

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Sriracha replied to ShutTheFrontDawes | 1 year ago
1 like

They need to measure the right thing. In this case it would be numbers of people cycling (or walking) to work. The number of cycle racks is irrelevant, except in so far as they encourage the thing that is wanted - numbers cycling to work. Obviously If you only count cycle racks then that is all you will get.

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Reiver2768 | 1 year ago
6 likes

Surely an employer like the NHS, of all organisations, should be promoting active travel and should be making at least some effort (over and above a piece of bent pipe in the ground) to facilitate this?

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eburtthebike replied to Reiver2768 | 1 year ago
5 likes

Reiver2768 wrote:

Surely an employer like the NHS, of all organisations, should be promoting active travel and should be making at least some effort (over and above a piece of bent pipe in the ground) to facilitate this?

The NHS is very keen on active travel, and in some places, they support it with cycle stations, including indoor, secure cycle parking, showers and changing rooms and lockers; just not everywhere.

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