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Roy Keane fed up with supposed war between cyclists and motorists; Fiona Kolbinger smashes 778km at 28km/h; Wiggo urges G to go stage hunting; Ben O'Connor's epic breakaway; Froome talks crashes; Shoulda put a 52t ring on it + more on the live blog

Happy Monday readers, in the absence of a Tour stage to keep you entertained Dan Alexander will be trying hard to replicate the drama, emotion and excitement on the live blog
05 July 2021, 16:34
Roy Keane fed up with "supposed war between cyclists and motorists"...just don't ask for him for help changing a tube

Former Manchester United hardman Roy Keane is loving life on two wheels, according to Ned Boulting. The ITV commentator currently working on the Tour de France told his Never Strays Far podcast that he bumped into Keane at ITV studios recently and had a chat about cycling.

Roy was apparently quick to say he sympathised with cyclists having to deal with dangerous motorists. “Roy said ‘you know this whole thing, supposed war between cyclists and motorists? It's all the motorists," Boulting recalled. "He said ‘you might get one or two idiots on a bike but until I’d experienced what it was like to get a close pass from a white van and the way people disrespect cyclists.' He was really emphatic."

Who'd have thought it? Keane recently shared a snap of him ready for a ride on Instagram with the caption: "I’ll wear the helmet but if you see me wearing Lycra, run me over."

However, if you're hoping to go for a spin with the notorious midfield general you'll have to be a decent mechanic. Well, know how to change a tube that is...

"He’s got a great story about getting a bike and he’s even more mechanically inept than I am," Boulting continued. "The one skill I have, inflating a tyre... he can’t even do that – and he’s never tried. The first time he got a puncture on his road bike, not only did he not repair it himself, he threw the bike away and got another one!"

05 July 2021, 16:13
Brad back on a bike at Le Tour

Wiggo's big comeback is almost here. No yellow jersey attempt, but he'll be back out on the road on a motorbike with another angle to the coverage tomorrow.

05 July 2021, 15:06
Fiona Kolbinger completes 778km epic from Dresden to Trentino via Czech Republic and Austria...climbing 10,000m at an average speed of 28km/h
Fiona Kolbinger Strava 5/7/2021

Sorry, Ben. I know we said you won Strava this morning but you've lost your crown. Fiona Kolbinger is back doing quite ridiculous things on her bike. This time riding 778km in 27 hours from Dresden in Germany to Trentino in Italy, passing through the Czech Republic, back into Germany, through Austria and into the Italian mountains. Epic. 

Riding to what we think was third place at the ElbSpitze ultra-endurance race, she averaged 28.6km/h and racked up 10,095m of elevation on the way, including setting the eighth fastest women's time up the HC Don Lavazé which averages 7.6 per cent for nearly 12km after more than 30 hours out on the road.

It is not the first time the 2019 Transcontinental champ has had us questioning our life choices. A few weeks back she stunned Strava followers with a 428km ride at 30.5km/h. Good luck getting near her when the Transcon race returns in 2022...

Fiona Kolbinger Strava 5/7/2021

 

05 July 2021, 14:58
Cav's First World problem
05 July 2021, 14:04
"Something's got to change": Chris Froome on racing becoming more dangerous

Here's one that got lost in the Allez Opi-Omi fallout last week...probably around the time 50 Cent gave his two cents. But the rest day it's probably a good time to give it some airtime...

Chris Froome took to his YouTube channel to talk about modern racing and how much more dangerous it has become. Froome was taken down in the second major pile-up of the Grand Depart in Brittany and looked as though he may have to abandon.

After stage three, Froome described the action as "another mental day of racing." He told the camera: "Something's got to change because racing is just getting more and more dangerous. It's unfortunate that it's the way the sport is. There's obviously so much pressure on all the teams and everyone thinks they can get into the yellow jersey, everyone wants to win a stage, all the GC riders want to be up front. It's a recipe for disaster.

"The teams and riders. We're not innocent either. Everyone's pushing to be at the front and all that tension builds up and crashes happen."

Hopefully we'll see more of Froome at the right end of the race as the stages go by, but anyone got any rest day thoughts on how we can make the sport safer? Are crashes and injuries just an unhappy inevitability of bike racing or can something be done to help the riders?

05 July 2021, 12:52
Thomas De Gendt honest about level of Tour de France competition...says he's doing his best ten minute power numbers only to get dropped

Lotto-Soudal breakaway extraordinaire Thomas De Gendt opened up to Sporza about just how much higher the level is at this year's Tour de France. The Belgian is normally on our TV screens off the front of the race putting the hurt on everybody else but has this year found himself struggling off the back. Despite this the 34-year-old insists his performance levels have not dropped, in fact he's as good as he's ever been according to the power data...

"Yesterday I did one of my best 10 minute values ever from the start," De Gendt explained. "Those values ​​have been recorded since 2013. Normally I drive things to pieces with those values, now I was 100 meters behind a group of 70 riders. And I would have started from the front row. If you don't keep up with the peloton, the general level is just much higher.

"I have to hope for a super day. I can only try. This year I already had one super day and then I won the stage in the Tour of Catalonia. So it is possible, but everything has to go well."

05 July 2021, 11:29
Rest day recap of G's nightmare start to the Tour

Just as we put Wiggo saying he wants to see Ineos stage wins at the top of the blog we've come across this behind the scenes video from Ineos Grenadiers about the team's far from ideal start to the race, including footage of the aftermath of G's crash on stage three. 

05 July 2021, 09:49
Rest day tactics with Sir Brad...Ineos Grenadiers should let Geraint Thomas go up the road to win a stage

In the latest episode of his podcast on Eurosport, Sir Bradley Wiggins says he believes the Tour de France is far from over for Geraint Thomas and that a stage win should be his priority in the second and third weeks of the race. "I don’t remember a Tour like it for a long time," Wiggo said. "It’s been brutal. To think it’s only one week we’ve done. We’ve got two weeks left of the race and the field is decimated. It’s absolutely decimated.

"I don’t think this race is over for G yet. It is for GC definitely, it would be nice to see Ineos spread their numbers a bit and let G go up the road. He is capable of doing something like Ben O’Connor did and that is something you’re not used to seeing from a Team Sky or Ineos point of view. It would be lovely to see that."

Despite losing big time on GC, Thomas was back at the head of the peloton yesterday helping his teammate Richard Carapaz who sits in fifth place, five minutes behind Tadej Pogačar. At the back of the race, Mark Cavendish made the time cut, something his former teammate and track partner was delighted to see.

"I saw him getting dropped on the first climb, and he had three or four team-mates around him," Wiggins continued. "It shows the difference that a team makes to you, committed to a cause and committed to Mark as well and it shows he was lacking on the team front a couple of years ago, and he's back in his rightful place."

Cav may be eyeing a third stage win of the race on the lumpy run to Valence tomorrow on stage 10.

05 July 2021, 10:50
If you liked it then you shoulda put a 52t chainring on it...Beyoncé as Tour de France caravan vehicles

Tom Owen is back with another masterclass. Having previously brought us the madness of Nicolas Cage as bottle cages, he has now put his mind to Beyoncé as Tour de France caravan vehicles...and it's as weird as you'd expect.

05 July 2021, 10:05
road.cc Recommends is back with more of the kit we think you'll love this month

Here's the latest episode of our road.cc Recommends YouTube series with a round-up of the best products we've tested this past month as well as a route and cafe stop for you to try...

05 July 2021, 09:24
Lachlan Morton stops at Tom Simpson memorial during double ascent of Ventoux...EF Education-Nippo rider almost halfway to Paris

No time for rest days on the Alt Tour but Lachlan Morton found a moment to pay tribute to British cycling legend Tom Simpson at the memorial on the upper slopes of Mont Ventoux. The EF Education-Nippo rider is now onto stage 12 of the Tour having summited the famous climb twice and is almost halfway to Paris. He is currently heading to Nimes before beginning the long road south west towards the Pyrenees. 

05 July 2021, 08:43
Sign silliness
05 July 2021, 07:39
Ben O'Connor wins Strava with epic Tour de France mountain breakaway
20210704TDF1075-A.S.O._Pauline_Ballet

Ever wondered what it takes to win an epic mountain stage of the Tour de France? Maybe you've been watching the serene mountain scenery on TV and thought you could hold the wheel in the breakaway. How hard can it be?

 Ben O'Connor achieved his career highlight yesterday, winning stage nine and has kindly uploaded his ride to Strava with all the juicy numbers we want to see.

 The Aussie riding for home team AG2R Citroën snuck away early in the stage with a big group of riders, picking them off one by one over the 147km route with 4,441m of elevation. O'Connor's average speed stayed a touch under 32km/h, even with one HC mountain and two first cat climbs and he maxed out at 92km/h on the descent of the Cormet de Roselend.

Where his numbers become even more impressive is when we look at the power data. Unlike Tadej Pogačar, who selfishly keeps his power hidden on Strava, O'Connor uploaded his ride in full. His normalised power for the four hour plus stage was 350w, which at his Strava weight of 67kg is 5.2w/kg and is nothing short of staggering. Next time you're giving it beans up your local hill ask yourself if you could sustain it for another four hours?

Ben O'Connor Strava

When we take a look at the climbs things get even more silly. O'Connor summited the hors catégorie Col du Pré in 39:08 at 18.8km/h pushing 366w average. On the Cormet Roselend he held 367w for 21:18 before getting a touch of recovery on the freezing descent. He then covered 23.5km in the final hour as he slogged up to the finish at Tignes, 2000m above sea level at an average power of 343w...

Ben O'Connor Strava

And that doesn't include the efforts he made to make the break in the first place...

Ben O'Connor Strava

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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16 comments

Avatar
brooksby | 2 years ago
0 likes

Someone needs to tell Cav that's the shower tray.  The bath is a separate thing...  3

Avatar
mdavidford | 2 years ago
6 likes

Quote:

anyone got any rest day thoughts on how we can make the sport safer?

Hi-viz

Stop riding 2- (or 3-, or 4-, or 5-, or 6-) abreast

Stop riding through red lights

Make them get insurance

Make them get licences (oh - wait - they already do...)

Use the cycle lane (oh - hang on - that one's against the rules...)

....

Avatar
Captain Badger replied to mdavidford | 2 years ago
7 likes

mdavidford wrote:

Quote:

anyone got any rest day thoughts on how we can make the sport safer?

Hi-viz

Stop riding 2- (or 3-, or 4-, or 5-, or 6-) abreast

Stop riding through red lights

Make them get insurance

Make them get licences (oh - wait - they already do...)

Use the cycle lane (oh - hang on - that one's against the rules...)

....

You forgot road tax! tell em about the road tax!

Avatar
dee4life2005 replied to Captain Badger | 2 years ago
2 likes

Make them have a registration number fitted to their bike so they can be easiliy identified .... oh - hang on - they already do that too. 

Avatar
EddyBerckx | 2 years ago
3 likes

I know it's never gone away as such but I wonder if in a few years we'll be looking at this years TDF and the like and be thinking 'how can they have been so naive?". Hopefully there's no undetectable 'super drug' or something being used in the peleton but we have seen a lot of amazing riders come through in recent years.

I'm happy to give the benefit of the doubt and just enjoy it unless something is proven otherwise but when I first got into cycle racing I read all the usual books about doping in the 90's etc and it is starting to have a familiar feel to it.

But as I said, I'll just enjoy it for now, no need to get paranoid  1

Avatar
Pyro Tim replied to EddyBerckx | 2 years ago
1 like

EddyBerckx wrote:

I know it's never gone away as such but I wonder if in a few years we'll be looking at this years TDF and the like and be thinking 'how can they have been so naive?". Hopefully there's no undetectable 'super drug' or something being used in the peleton but we have seen a lot of amazing riders come through in recent years.

I'm happy to give the benefit of the doubt and just enjoy it unless something is proven otherwise but when I first got into cycle racing I read all the usual books about doping in the 90's etc and it is starting to have a familiar feel to it.

But as I said, I'll just enjoy it for now, no need to get paranoid  1

I was happy to give benefit of the doubt last year. I was happy to give benefit of the doubt after the TT. I was suspicious after Saturday, and convinced there is a new drug after yesterday. Pogacar is on it, but I don't think he's alone. If TdG says his numbers are similar to what was destroying the field, but now going backwards, its a solid circumstantial case. They need to investigate this further. If it's too good to be true...

Avatar
Rendel Harris replied to Pyro Tim | 2 years ago
1 like

When De Gendt won Stage 8 in 2019 his average power was 4.97 w/kg, or within less than 5% of O'Connor's wattage yesterday. Given that De Gendt was 32 then and O'Connor is currently 25, it's perfectly possible to attribute the difference to age, stage type and advances in training without immediately claiming everyone's on a new drug with no foundation except "I think they are."

Avatar
Pyro Tim replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
0 likes

I'm not worried about O'Connor, he didn't do it 2 days in row, arguably 4 days in a row. Pogacar however...

Avatar
Secret_squirrel replied to EddyBerckx | 2 years ago
0 likes

A possibly naive suggestion but maybe it's the upsurge in endurance fuelling like Beta fuel and that Algae stuff.  So it's not that peak power output is much better, but that sustained and therefore average powers are held for longer amounts of time.  If you have a whole team being able to put out high powers over longer time frames it's going to flatter the team lead/front man.

The real red flag would be if repeated efforts are high day on day by the same rider.

Add that to having had ~10 years of the marginal gains philosophy trickling down to junior levels and into a lot of national setups, it's maybe enough to explain everything. 

Team budgets are another possible explanation that I don't have data any for, but I'd be interested to know if they have been increasing linearly or non-linearly. 

Avatar
maviczap replied to Secret_squirrel | 2 years ago
1 like
Secret_squirrel wrote:

A possibly naive suggestion but maybe it's the upsurge in endurance fuelling like Beta fuel and that Algae stuff.  So it's not that peak power output is much better, but that sustained and therefore average powers are held for longer amounts of time.  If you have a whole team being able to put out high powers over longer time frames it's going to flatter the team lead/front man.

The real red flag would be if repeated efforts are high day on day by the same rider.

Add that to having had ~10 years of the marginal gains philosophy trickling down to junior levels and into a lot of national setups, it's maybe enough to explain everything. 

Team budgets are another possible explanation that I don't have data any for, but I'd be interested to know if they have been increasing linearly or non-linearly. 

I would have thought Ineos and the other teams would also be using the same beta/algae foods. The difference between the usual favourites is just too distinct, riding in the big ring quite nonchalantly whilst others are grimacing in the little ring doesn't fill me with good vibes. I hope I'm wrong, but we've been here before.

Avatar
brooksby replied to EddyBerckx | 2 years ago
0 likes

EddyBerckx wrote:

But as I said, I'll just enjoy it for now, no need to get paranoid  1

Well I was enjoying it... 

Avatar
EddyBerckx replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
1 like

brooksby wrote:

EddyBerckx wrote:

But as I said, I'll just enjoy it for now, no need to get paranoid  1

Well I was enjoying it... 

Sorry!! Genuinely, I don't look at races and think everyones doped up, it was just a thought that occured after the De Gendt article above. I don't see the point in believing everthing is fake but then continuing to watch it (and moaning) - I'd just stop watching tbh

Avatar
theslowcyclistxx replied to EddyBerckx | 2 years ago
0 likes

I think in a few years people will know this period as the h7379 era - or perhaps a more catching name for the substance....

Avatar
brooksby | 2 years ago
0 likes

"Sign silliness": I think some punctuation may be missing from that sign...

Avatar
AlsoSomniloquism | 2 years ago
6 likes

Tri-athlete on the cycle part of the Bolton Ironman knocked off by hit and run driver in closed road section.

 

Avatar
wtjs replied to AlsoSomniloquism | 2 years ago
10 likes

These incidents will become more and more common as the offenders see that the penalty for 'running' is no worse than for the original offence, and there's a chance they will get away with it.

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