Perhaps unsurprisingly, given the lack of certainty surrounding the race for much of 2024, not all of the biggest teams in the women’s peloton will be travelling across the Channel next week to race the inaugural edition of the revamped Tour of Britain Women.
Of the Women’s World Tour’s 15 teams, only SD Worx, DSM-Firmenich, Liv AlUla Jayco, and Human Powered Health will represent the sport’s highest level at the four-day successor to the dearly departed Women’s Tour.
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But that doesn’t mean next Thursday’s start line in Welshpool will be missing some of the UK’s biggest cycling names.
Because, in welcome news for fans across the country, British Cycling has this afternoon confirmed that a six-strong Great Britain Cycling Team will race the renamed Tour’s first edition, led by former world champion and double Women’s Tour winner Lizzie Deignan.
Deignan will be joined by her Lidl-Trek teammate Elynor Bäckstedt, while Bäckstedt will enjoy the opening two stages on home turf alongside her fellow Welsh rider and Olympic gold medallist Elinor Barker (Uno-X Mobility).
Visma-Lease a Bike’s Anna Henderson, who’s endured a tough, injury-prone 2024, will make her comeback from a broken collarbone at the Vuelta in GB colours, and will surely fancy her chances for a stage win.
(Cor Vos/SWpix.com)
Fenix-Deceuninck duo Millie Couzens and Flora Perkins round out what is a very strong national squad.
“It’s always incredibly special to race on home soil where the energy and support from the crowds is unparalleled. For me personally, I am particularly excited that two of the stages will be hosted in Wales on some iconic roads, which will undoubtedly make for a challenging and competitive race,” Barker said after the team was announced.
“The Lloyds Bank Tour of Britain Women comes at an important time in our preparations for a huge summer of cycling. I think I speak for the whole squad when I say we’re extremely motivated to put on a brilliant show in June – we can’t wait.”
British Cycling’s Performance Director, Stephen Park, added: “We know that the team will relish the rare opportunity to race at home, and for the Paris hopefuls among the squad, the event will play a crucial role in the final preparations for the Games.
“We know that they’ll add real strength and stardust to the race and expect fans will be out in force to show their support.”
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Completely agree. What I don't understand though is how the cycle to work scheme is still running. It seems totally at odds with the governments stance on cycling.
With the recent increase in the national minimum wage the cycle to work scheme has become even more of a perk for the well off rather than assistance for those that need it. Deductions cannot take your pay below NMW even if it would save you more in travel costs.
Seeing as both the blue team and the red team have said that they will not raise income tax (or VAT), they could scrap the scheme to raise some cash.
Alternatively, they could put up road fuel duty and VED.
Though I suspect evolution of porcine wings will happen quicker than that.
Though I suspect evolution of porcine wings will happen quicker than that
The present lot have quite a lot of experience with such anatomy through their regular creation of porcine 'ears', like Brexit
I'm prepared to bet that this bloke still drove home.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/videos/c133x22kzrpo
Not an X user so I can't see any replies which may cover this but I am going to ask anyway. While he was waving a speed gun around near Regents Park, were any of the cars exceeding the 20mph limit or was it was just bikes, or more likely did he only point it at bikes and totally ignore the cars as they didn't suit his narrative?
In their own video that accompanies the tweet, where IDS claims he's not anti cyclist or anything just pro safety, they show a setup where the claim they catch a cyclist speeding at 24mph.
Except they're almost certainly getting the speed of the van infront of the cyclist, because there's no way the cyclist is doing 24mph at their cadence or bike position. If they are sign them quickly to Team GB. And yet the cyclist doesn't appear to be catching the van either.
It's as fake news narrative as you'd expect, maybe worse, surprised LBC can get away with stuff like that.
And we shouldn't forget that 85% of drivers speed on 20mph roads.
I've posted it somewhere on road.cc before, but…
My village put a notice up after they put those smiley-face speed detectors up in various places last summer, after the local speed limit was reduced to 20mph (from 30).
Out of every 250 vehicles, 223 were travelling at under 30mph (89.2%), 26 were travelling at 30-40mph (10.4%), and 1 was travelling at over 40mph (0.4%).
For some reason, they didn't measure how many were actually travelling at below the 20mph limit.
I still read the last bit as " and I was travelling at over 40mph " !
Maybe they did and the answer was 0. I bet there were gaziillions of cyclists going throught at 52mph though and that's why the didn't include an over 50mph reading.
I didn't think speed guns were calibrated for use on cyclists. I thought they needed a hard surface to work accurately.
You've assumed way too much science and data analytics went into it. Like they actually calibrated the device they used, and weren't just waving it around like some sci-fi raygun. Or they hadn't shown a piece of footage from riding a bicycle and deliberately speeded up the film just to give the impression of speed.
In theory if the device is set right it can measure speeds from the person as the object, rather than the bike which is notoriously difficult to measure at angles as such a tiny area to target.
And it works, those speed indicator devices that appear instead of speed cameras, fairly accurately matches my GPS, as long as I'm the only object it can sense, if there's a vehicle behind me it always reports their speed instead.
I rode past a local policeman using one of those last summer, he grinned and shouted 22, which sort of matched my gammons reading (mental maths included), so either they work on bikes or police in Oxfordshire have a sense of humour. I suspect both.
I strongly suspect that "gammons" is an auto-correct from "Garmin's", but the idea that you cycle with an overweight red-faced man who continually calls out your speed has tickled me
This really winds me about journalism at the moment. Linking to twitter is seen as an acceptable thing to do but the article is hidden unless you have a twitter account. Instagram, twitter, facebook and any other site that requires an account even to view should not be used as a story source.
My local bus company has started sending out service updates via twitter. They are now invisible to anybody who doesn;t want to sign up to elon's world of hate.
This! 1 million times!
There used to be a workaround: Click on 'sign up', and then just go back. This hasn't worked for me recently, but maybe there is another way.
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