Who else is happy that Christmas is coming? 😁 pic.twitter.com/MZncmA1Z6V
— Deceuninck-QuickStep (@deceuninck_qst) December 23, 2021
This two way, segregated, King Street cycle way 9 was all I wanted for 🎄 @LBHF 🙏 🙏 It’s a beauty. pic.twitter.com/dzaG23mpts
— Andrew Pendleton (@AJPendleton) December 23, 2021
Don't worry, I haven't passed out in a pool of mulled wine just yet... I got distracted by a best of the live blog 2021 feature which will be coming to your screens soon...keep your eyes peeled...
Back to the main order of business...Andrew Pendleton got what he asked for this Christmas — a segregated bike lane with all the trimmings.
Jeremy Vine is a fan of this one too, calling it: "Wonderful. It will make the street better for everyone."
The reindeer must have worked hard to drag all that white paint and wands down from the North Pole...maybe we'll have to include proper infra in our '2022 Christmas gift ideas for cyclists who have family members in government'...niche, I know.
I reckon it's about time for a beverage...
Just another ordinary day at Robin Hood Island. pic.twitter.com/UNnlvQG0F0
— James Goes Cycling🚴🏻⛵️🇪🇺 (@JamesKPatterson) December 22, 2021
Remember this 'but cyclists' special from yesterday? Well, here's the full incident...
And for those wondering how the feck you end up upside on a traffic island ….the answer has been revealed- you drive like a tw*t! pic.twitter.com/s3fj1uSSO7
— James Goes Cycling🚴🏻⛵️🇪🇺 (@JamesKPatterson) December 23, 2021
UCI hands Mexican rider Villalobos four-year ban for doping. Two-times Mexican national champion Luis Villalobos has been banned for four years after cycling's governing body UCI said on Wednesday he had been found guilty of an anti-doping rule violation. pic.twitter.com/4ZwXRiFyMB
— Sports Crunch (@SportsCrunch_US) December 22, 2021
Two-time Mexican national champion and former EF Pro Cycling rider Luis Villalobos has been banned for four years by the UCI. Villalobos, who rode for EF Pro Cycling for one year between 2019 and 2020, tested positive for a presence of GHRP-6, a prohibited growth hormone-releasing substance, from a sample provided while he rode for the US-based Aevolo team in 2019.
The 23-year-old was provisionally suspended in May last year and was suspended by EF Pro Cycling too. "The Tribunal found the rider guilty of an anti-doping rule violation (presence of GHRP-6) and imposed a four-year period of ineligibility on the rider,” the UCI said in a statement.
"If we’d have known, we would not have signed Luis," EF Education-Nippo CEO Jonathan Vaughters said last year. "The burden of this is on the UCI because there is no internal testing program that has access to the level of equipment needed to screen for GHRP-6."
Who is ready for Dendermonde? pic.twitter.com/KKUC5OxMla
— Cyclocross Social (@Cyclocrosss) December 23, 2021
This is all anyone cares about this weekend, right? The trident of terror going head to head in the Dendermonde mud. 2pm GMT, GCN Race Pass...grab yourself some leftovers and try not to fall asleep before it gets underway...
Let's get the serious news out of the way early before the mulled wine turns the blog into a sloppy minefield of bad grammar and silly stories (no change from usual then...)
Qhubeka-NextHash have given up the hunt for a sponsor, ending hopes of keeping the team running beyond 2021. Earlier in the month the team was refused a UCI licence for 2022, signalling the beginning of the end for 'Africa's Team', which helped get 30,000 people bikes through Qhubeka's charity work.
Yesterday, a statement sent out to riders was leaked, in which team boss Doug Ryder told riders and staff, "I am very sad to send this message. We have tried everything to find sponsors for our team for next season, right up until the last few days, but nothing has materialised in time."
The team faced a similar last-minute scramble for a sponsor last off-season but survived thanks to Assos' intervention. The team was rewarded at the Giro where Victor Campenaerts, Giacomo Nizzolo and Mauro Schmid won stages. All three have already confirmed moves to new teams for 2022.