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England fans celebrate Euros win with bike lane wand javelin; Do wands make you feel safe?; Pogačar smashes Mont Ventoux KOM (Dave B's pretty quick too); Sagan abandons; Delivery rider catches the match; Breakaway day; New kit + more on the live blog

No need to worry about football for a few days...come enjoy Thursday's live blog with Dan Alexander instead...
08 July 2021, 15:52
BBC presenter Louise Minchin joins the club

Been there, done that. It's a good club to be in... 

08 July 2021, 15:28
The calmest day of the Tour de France so far

Cycling's a funny sport. Peter Sagan, Bora-Hansgrohe's leader, left the race this morning and lo and behold the team has its first win of the race a mere five hours later. Just a coincidence I'd say, but what a strong ride by Nils Pollit to escape his breakaway companions.

Behind, Cav won the sprint from the peloton for the final two points available on the line...you can't say he's not putting in the effort.

08 July 2021, 15:20
Do wands make you feel safe?

After last night's video of wands being ripped out and chucked about in Leciester, some have been wondering if it's proof that the pop-up cycle lane dividers don't offer cyclists enough protection. After all, if they can be easily pulled out and lobbed halfway to Coventry at closing time then what's to stop a driver ploughing through?

Brooksby also noted in the comments that some of Bristol's wands have also mysteriously disappeared over the night of one of the biggest pub drinking evenings for years...

Anyone got any thoughts on wands? Are they better than nothing? A step in the right direction? A token gesture to safe segregated cycle lanes? Let us know...

08 July 2021, 13:39
The Countess of Wessex rides tandem bike alongside visually impaired cyclists in Bushy Park

The Countess of Wessex rode on a tandem in Bushy Park, West London, yesterday to support a charity ride for visually impaired cyclists and raise awareness for the Vision Foundation's See My Skills report. The Countess is a patron of the charity whose report advocates better employment opportunities for blind and visually impaired people.

The royal rode the tandem bike in the pilot position while the Foundation's Centenary Appeal Manager, Monica Smith rode as stoker. Smith told Hello! magazine, "It was really just like going out cycling with a friend, it was really lovely. Yesterday when we had a trial run, she said I was the one that was calming her down, and she said that if I had not been calm then she would not have been able to do it."

08 July 2021, 13:31
Cav's going to have to wait for number 34...breakaway should go all the way on stage 12 to Nîmes

It seems Deceuninck-Quick-Step are content to have a day off after yesterday's all out race to beat the time cut. All of the team except Julian Alaphilippe, that is. After being in the breakaway yesterday, the world champion is having another shot today and is one of 13 riders up the road.

Pick your fighter: Julian Alaphilippe, André Greipel, Edward Theuns, Imanol Erviti, Nils Politt, Stefan Küng, Stefan Bissegger, Connor Swift, Harry Sweeny, Brent Van Moer, Luka Mezgec, Sergio Henao or Edvald Boasson Hagen.

For old times' sake I'll go Greipel, a British win for Swift would be alright too...78km to go.

08 July 2021, 10:37
Tadej Pogačar smashes Mont Ventoux KOM...but it's Dave B who caught our eye
Ventoux Strava

Despite being unable to follow Jonas Vingegaard's attack, Tadej Pogačar was still fast enough to smash the Mont Ventoux KOM by 43 seconds. Helped by the early pacing of the Ineos Grenadiers and a tailwind on the exposed upper slopes, the yellow jersey summited the 20km official segment from Bedoin in 57:16 at an average speed of 21km/h...Not bad for an eight per cent climb...

Stage winner Wout van Aert clocked the ninth fastest time on Strava with 1:00:02 at 20km/h. At the other end of the scale, a look at the grupetto's times shows that Brit Fred Wright was the slowest man brave enough to upload their ride. The 22-year-old was 24 minutes behind Pog and interestingly only two minutes faster than a certain Dave Brailsford who took on Ventoux before the stage...Could Dave B be Ineos' secret weapon for the third week?

Perhaps the Ineos team boss was chased up the mountain by someone in a Ineos Grenadier 4x4 tooting the cyclist horn for added motivation.

Ventoux Strava

 

Brailsford is back on Strava and uploading his rides out at the Tour. Earlier this week he revealed that he underwent heart surgery in March for a blocked artery.

Dave B Strava
Dave B Strava

 

08 July 2021, 12:11
Lotus announces Léger collaboration on new kit and concept bike
Lotus-and-Jenson-Button-s-Leger-announce-collaboration-6

Full story will be up on the site shortly but here's a first look at one of the new kit designs that has come out of Lotus' collab with Léger, the premium cycling clothing brand established by former F1 star Jenson Button. They've also got plans to make a range of bikes too...

08 July 2021, 11:26
Peter Sagan abandons Tour de France ahead of stage 12

Peter Sagan has pulled out of the Tour de France ahead of stage 12 due to knee pain. The seven-time green jersey winner has struggled to challenge for stage wins and is 123 points behind Mark Cavendish in the points classification. 

"It’s not very nice to be leaving," Sagan said at the start today. "The injury I had after the first stage seemed to be getting better and better but then I hit the knee against the handlebars again two days ago in the sprint and it’s swollen. I can’t bend my leg. There’s nothing I can do but take some rest and get better. If you can't move your leg, where can you go?"

It means 33 riders have now abandoned the Tour this year, the most since 2012...and we're only just past halfway...

08 July 2021, 11:10
Uber Eats rider invited in to watch the game
08 July 2021, 10:28
Stage start delayed by ten minutes due to strong winds
08 July 2021, 09:49
Is today the day Cav matches Merckx?

As you can see on Headwind's stage map, it's going to be a bit blustery out on stage 12. Mainly a tailwind which is good news for the breakaway, but also a chance of crosswinds. Will Deceuninck-Quick-Step have the energy to chase the break after yesterday's gruelling time cut mission? If it does come down to a sprint then it should be Cav's first of two chances to bag number 34 before the weekend...

TdF 2021 Stage 12 profile.jpg

 

08 July 2021, 09:01
Ventoux reaction: Parties and time cuts

There was big party on Mont Ventoux yesterday evening...no wands were harmed. One of the more dramatic stories of the day that deserves a bit of attention was Søren Kragh Andersen crossing the finish with three seconds to spare before the time cut. You'd have to be one mean-spirited commissaire to chuck the Dane out if he'd arrived a few seconds later. Luke Rowe was not so lucky and is out of the race.

Cav was content with his day's work: "We knew it was never going to be as close as Sunday, but we still had to be focused the entire day as it was really hard out there. I had my teammates with me, helping me up and down the mountains. It wasn’t easy, but I was incredibly motivated to make it and not quit. I love the Tour and I’ll keep going for as long as I can."

08 July 2021, 07:45
Leicester bike lane wands take the hit as rampaging England fans celebrate semi-final win over Denmark

This video doing the rounds on Twitter this morning shows the drunken scenes in Leicester last night after England beat Denmark in extra-time to secure their place in the Euro 2020 final on Sunday. The unfortunate target of the revelry was one unlucky bike lane's wands which were thrown around like a pissed-up Olympic javelin trial...

 Major tournaments must do strange things to people...yesterday on the live blog it was kids pulling wheelies photobombing a peculiar patriotic procession...today, it is booze-induced bike lane bashing...

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.

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35 comments

Avatar
OnYerBike | 2 years ago
3 likes

Most of the time wands make me feel safer, on the grounds that your average incompetent driver is at the very least going to stay on the other side of them. They're by no means perfect, but I do think it requires a whole other level of poor driving to ignore them. A level of poor driving that does unfortunately exist (see e.g. recent video of car mounting pavement) but is less common.

However, they can cause problems too. They are often blocked by parked vehicles, bins etc. and the wands make it harder to move out and around the obstacle. Or if you want to turn right, you need to find a gap in the wands and a gap in the traffic.

There is also one junction near me where the road curves round to the right but with a turning on the left going effectively straight on, and most drivers want to go that way. In the abscence of wands I would want to move out and take a primary position well before the junction to avoid left hooks, but the wands keep you tucked in to the side right up until the junction. I think they also make drivers less aware of you, as if you're on the other side of the wand they don't have to put any concentration into overtaking, so they just forget about you instantly. (Map link to clarify my explanation - https://goo.gl/maps/FSCJHRn1RBNjdEyk6

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brooksby replied to OnYerBike | 2 years ago
0 likes

Not all wands are equal, I suspect.

The ones here in Bristol are lightweight plastic hollow cylinders, which screw (a half turn) into a base which is (AFAICS) melted onto the road surface, not bolted.

The wands can easily come out if hit by a motor vehicle, punched by a passing drunk (I've seen it!), or if its particularly windy weather.

I personally wish that the council would work on the assumption that motorists are skilled enough to not hit them, and as a consequence have the confidence to put more more rigid and fixed ones in place.

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Pyro Tim | 2 years ago
1 like

wands stop drivers driving in cycle lanes, and stopping in them while in traffic, but offer no protection to cyclists, and don't create a safe space for them in non stop start conditions.

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Owd Big 'Ead | 2 years ago
0 likes

Pfft.....

It's Leicester, what does anyone expect.

They like to talk up a big rivalry with Forest, but we couldn't care less about them, Derby are our rivals. The reality is that Leicester have to contend with Coventry and they haven't played each other for a couple of decades now IIRC.

One can only assume that the hard lads think chucking a few wands around is the equivalent of gettiing "a result" at Notts County. All talk, no action.

Avatar
wtjs | 2 years ago
7 likes

Stupid drunk football supporters do lots of stupid things and use either losing or winning a game as an excuse for things they should be severely fined for! In Garstang, Lancashire the morons decided to uproot a tree planted 'in memoriam' and meticulously watered by me for months. They are at liberty to rot in hell!

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Jetmans Dad replied to wtjs | 2 years ago
1 like

Could be worse ... Canadian hockey fans have been known to set fire to things when they win the Stanley Cup. 

Or when they lose it. 

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HarrogateSpa replied to wtjs | 2 years ago
0 likes

Sorry to hear that.

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Hirsute | 2 years ago
4 likes

Today we tackle the difficult subject of football hooliganism

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=04clpd7h0b0

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brooksby | 2 years ago
2 likes

Something like that might explain the eight (if I'm counting bases correctly) wands missing along Park Row, Bristol.  They were all there at 6pm last night, and all disappeared (not just tossed around, actually gone) this morning.

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Awavey | 2 years ago
4 likes

And there is the reason that bike lane near Celtics ground reported about yesterday doesnt get the wand treatment

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HarrogateSpa replied to Awavey | 2 years ago
4 likes

So the strategy is to give in to criminals in advance, rather than providing safe bike infrastructure and using the criminal law against anyone who commits criminal damage?

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Awavey replied to HarrogateSpa | 2 years ago
6 likes

No the strategy is work out how places like London or the Netherlands deliver lots of miles of protected cycle lanes without a flappy bollard in sight, and go do that kind of stuff instead.

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HarrogateSpa replied to Awavey | 2 years ago
0 likes

Alright smart-arse. If you'd read the European Cyclists' Federation Best Practice Guide, you'd know that light infrastructure can be a useful stopgap measure which is both cheap and quick to implement, and can provide a good level of safety and comfort (p27).

The costs of this infrastructure are around 10% of more permanent physical separation.

1) Your original point was that you have to give in to vandals, which is the wrong approach. You then moved the goalposts in your second comment.

2) It's very easy to be critical of cycle infrastructure that isn't perfect, but if you were actually interested in the subject you would know that light segregation does serve a useful purpose; and transport planners should not have to anticipate the effect of football hooligans ripping up their work.

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half_wheel79 | 2 years ago
15 likes

Only the English could celebrate a joyous occasion by smashing up their own country ffs...

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markieteeee replied to half_wheel79 | 2 years ago
5 likes

To be fair, they're only throwing wands around rather than smashing anything up.  It makes me nostalgic for the days when people set fire to cars.

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Pedro Nogo replied to markieteeee | 2 years ago
1 like

Ah the good old days. 

They still punch/kick police horses pretty regulalry though - good to see the "football fan" keeping traditions alive  3 

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-hampshire-53610926  

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half_wheel79 replied to markieteeee | 2 years ago
7 likes

markieteeee wrote:

To be fair, they're only throwing wands around rather than smashing anything up.  It makes me nostalgic for the days when people set fire to cars.

  

Give it time, there's still Sunday !

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kil0ran replied to half_wheel79 | 2 years ago
5 likes

Whilst completely missing the point that their club goalkeeper and certified legend in their eyes is one Kasper Schmeicel, the Danish national keeper.

Fond memories of a Portsmouth vs Southampton derby, where Pompey won and smashed up their own city and attacked their own matchday police. It's this sort of behaviour that's a big part of why I no longer go to footie.

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cdamian replied to half_wheel79 | 2 years ago
2 likes

To be fair: this happens in Barcelona all the time. It also doesn't seem to matter if they win or loose.

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Jetmans Dad replied to half_wheel79 | 2 years ago
1 like
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youngoldbloke | 2 years ago
7 likes

So much for lockdown. July was the month the British decided that football and fun was more important than Covid 19, so f**k it. Look forward to the 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th waves.

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mdavidford replied to youngoldbloke | 2 years ago
5 likes

Erm - you don't need to - we're already in it.

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to mdavidford | 2 years ago
0 likes

4th I thought.

1st started Mar 2020, 2nd Sept 2020, we started to come down and then Kent started another Dec 2020 and now this one. 

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youngoldbloke replied to AlsoSomniloquism | 2 years ago
1 like

4th, 5th, whatever, look forward to 1000s of extra cases

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the little onion replied to youngoldbloke | 2 years ago
4 likes

Yep- there is a big gender disparity in the latest data. Basically, a big spike in pub-going drunk men catching covid

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pockstone replied to youngoldbloke | 2 years ago
2 likes

It's not just football induced madness. You should have seen the unmasked press of spectators at the Otley Crit. (Much better behaved in all other respects though.)

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GMBasix replied to pockstone | 2 years ago
4 likes

pockstone wrote:

 (Much better behaved in all other respects though.)

Right, so they didn't go around ripping up football stadia then?

Missed opportunity!

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brooksby replied to youngoldbloke | 2 years ago
8 likes

youngoldbloke wrote:

So much for lockdown. July was the month the British decided that football and fun was more important than Covid 19, so f**k it. Look forward to the 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th waves.

No - you're missing the point.

You see: all of those 60,000 spectators at Wembley had done lateral flow tests which were perfectly accurate, and none of them had lied about their result out of fear of missing out, and they were all probably in the same household anyway.  Or something...

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wycombewheeler replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
1 like

brooksby wrote:

youngoldbloke wrote:

So much for lockdown. July was the month the British decided that football and fun was more important than Covid 19, so f**k it. Look forward to the 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th waves.

No - you're missing the point.

You see: all of those 60,000 spectators at Wembley had done lateral flow tests which were perfectly accurate, and none of them had lied about their result out of fear of missing out, and they were all probably in the same household anyway.  Or something...

It's not about the 60,000 in the stadium, tested and (semi)outdoors, but the 100s of thousands in pubs across the country in enclosed spaces shouting, chanting and cheering that is driving the surge.

The view has been taken that now the vulnerable are protected fewer restrictions on peoples lives are desirable, and I think the majority of the country is behind that.

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Awavey replied to wycombewheeler | 2 years ago
3 likes

Theres been no evidence pubs are at all responsible for the surges at any stage during this whole pandemic, despite being the easy target to blame, the governments data for restricting pubs was based only on analysis of one club in South Korea I believe.

They are likely the most safest place to be around other people given the rules/restrictions they follow.

It will be the many millions more people mingling in each others homes that's the primary cause of virus spread

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