Rest day at the #TDF2021😁 pic.twitter.com/VpkpSOoUR4
— Deceuninck-QuickStep (@deceuninck_qst) July 12, 2021
No stage today so the pros can put their feet up before a brutal final week of the Tour de France. Tomorrow looks another good opportunity for the breakaway with the double second-cat climbs of the Col de Port and Portet d'Aspet either side of the first category Col de la Core.
Wednesday takes the peloton back above 2,000m with a summit finish at the HC Col du Portet. Stage 18 on Thursday is the final of the mountain days and sees the race traverse the Tourmalet before another summit finish, this time at Luz Ardiden. Friday is the penultimate 'sprint' stage but could be hijacked by a breakaway if Cav's troops are too tired to chase, before a 30km flat TT and the traditional Paris finish round off the Tour at the weekend...
To get that full rest day experience check out our feature on what the riders get up to on their day off...
Did someone say it’s a rest day tomorrow? 😁 #TDF2021pic.twitter.com/ccnJiBblVY
— Chris Froome (@chrisfroome) July 11, 2021
When you have a flight with Ryanair but didn't buy the extra baggage. pic.twitter.com/EoIgmn9002
— Cycling out of context (@OutOfCycling) July 11, 2021
Leisure Lakes Bikes has done some digging to compile a list of the UK's five most bike-friendly cities, based on data and routes from Bikemap. Edinburgh topped the table with 1,751 routes on Bikemap and 164,913km of mapped ways, green space and of course, cobbles...
London came second despite having the most amount of mapped ways (223,429km) and 1,730 routes, while Bristol was third with a similar number of routes (1,612) in a considerably smaller area. Glasgow was ranked fourth and York rounded out the top five. Where do you think the UK's most cycling-friendly city is?
You see the strangest things… pic.twitter.com/LlOou1PPre
— Dr Streetlove (@Iwalklondon) July 10, 2021
This happened on a street where, for reasons to do with the width of the road, drivers simply cannot accept that the person in front of them is on a bicycle. They will try a risky pass — as this one did — despite there being no advantage in doing so. I tried to stay calm. pic.twitter.com/XWiaR5uxIZ
— Jeremy Vine (@theJeremyVine) July 10, 2021
This driver was seemingly so keen to sit in traffic he just had to race past Jeremy Vine, barely missing the presenter as he passed. After getting a 'get out my way' beep from the driver, Vine continues to ride a safe distance away from the cars parked on the left. The 360-degree camera then shows just how close the driver came to hitting him as he speeds through...only to get stuck behind more drivers and watch Jeremy pedal off into the distance.
Back in January, Vine shared a video of a 4x4 driver pushing through on a narrow residential street with the caption, 'Every. Single. Day'...