As if by magic, to perfectly demonstrate the difference in attitudes towards cycling in the UK vs the Netherlands, the Shropshire Star comes in hot with coverage of a road safety meeting that heard how 85 per cent of drivers exceed the speed limit at one site...
🚶We'll be at the Radbrook Road Safety Group meeting on 25 Nov to update on a number of schemes to help improve the safety of school pupils in/near the Meole Brace area of #Shrewsbury.
📍 It's at Radbrook Community Centre, at 7.30pm.
ℹ️ Find out more at https://t.co/9ZFxwq8Cpppic.twitter.com/CfWW8Am2tZ
— Shropshire Council (@ShropCouncil) November 2, 2022
The Radbrook Road Safety Group was set up after two mothers' sons were involved in collisions, Angela Warren showing the local press the mangled wreck of her son's bike after he was hit by a driver. The group is calling for wider road safety measures, such as 20mph speed limits BUT, shocked by the outrageous calls for kids to be kept safe while getting from A to B, one resident isn't so sure...
The man, who did not want to be named, told the Star: "Kids on bikes do not stop. Some responsibility should be put on cyclists and parents, not everything on car drivers." I'm starting to see why these words were given anonymously...
He also branded 20mph speed limits "unnecessary", something a member of the council rubbished in reply... "If a mistake is made it should not cost serious injury or loss of life," Ffion Horton responded. "We are talking about children who are under the age of 18 after all. There are seven schools in a small area with a total of 5,000 children. There are a crazy number of kids. We are making it safer to walk and cycle."
Ms Horton stressed that the Highway Code emphasises pedestrians and cyclists should be treated with priority due to their vulnerability on the road, something the council must design road safety measures to promote.
Here's an opinion piece published in yesterday's Evening Standard calling for further investment into London's cycling infa...
Before whoever made the point on yesterday's blog about funding being needed for the rest of the country has to dig out their comment, I'll say it for you – it would be ideal if infra didn't just pop up in London...
Anyway, that wasn't the point of this post, as usual I've been sidetracked...as the Standard said:
Cycling or walking isn't for every journey, but a city in which locals and tourists alike can get around under their own steam, or on public transport, is within our grasp if we make the investments now.
Robert Kišerlovski, your time has come. Croatia vs Belgium for a place in the last 16, payback for the final stage of the 2018 Tour de Yorkshire...
If revenge is a dish best served cold, German Sergej Fuchs' dinner for Andrey Amador is still defrosting. The Germans need to beat Costa Rica tonight, a match 14 years in the making for the now-retired Fuchs, ever since a young Amador beat him to the Tour de l'Avenir prologue back in '08...
Amador went on to ride for Movistar and Ineos, winning a Grand Tour stage and twice finishing in the top 10 of the Giro d'Italia. Fuchs never bettered his l'Avenir effort, retiring in 2013 after a short career at Continental level...
There you have it — today's World Cup action in pro cycling (yes, that sound you might have just heard was us scraping the bottom of the Procyclingstats barrel...)
Send me one, and I’ll let you know!
— Matt Comley (@Mattjobsacuk) December 1, 2022
How it started...
> Bike hangars are "woke" (apparently) as car parking row rumbles on
How it's going...
You may have seen last week that the 'WOKE' bike hangers in Brighton, got a lot of publicity in the national press thanks to one persons campaign against them.
Apparently, as a result of all the publicity, there have been so many more enquiries for new bike hangers. pic.twitter.com/qERH1w0X4X
— Adam Bronkhorst (@AdamBronkhorst) December 1, 2022
WHAT. IS. THIS.
You absolutely must watch (with sound) Lamborghini's latest debut video. If you make it to 25 seconds, there's no turning back. pic.twitter.com/ZCBVDH2L8S
— Engineering Explained (@jasonfenske13) December 1, 2022
So far my favourite take on this one is: "Someone got paid a f***load of money for that"... Yep, that's the Lambo Sterrato, presumably named after the famous sterrato of Strade Bianche...
Classified Cycling, the brains behind the innovative Powershift drivetrain, has raised $23 million (£19 million) in investment, led by a former backer of Rapha and Evans Cycles — Active Partners.
> REVIEW: Classified Powershift Kit & Wheelset
Existing investor Bridford Investments Limited was also involved in the funding round, Bicycle Retailer and Industry News reports, while retired pros Tom Boonen, Anna van der Breggen, Marcel Kittel and André Greipel have also invested in the brand.
With the investment Classified Cycling hopes to expand to e-bike drivetrains and develop business in the US and European markets.
When Liam got his hands on one of Classified's Powershift hubs for review he was impressed, calling it a "really interesting bit of tech that has the power to change road bike design for good".
"It's a front derailleur-killing design that I think is going to really shake things up, particularly in the aero bike world, by allowing you to run what is effectively a 2x setup while reaping the benefits of 1x. And with more wheel brands on board, things are going to get even better"...
It seems A.S.O has listened to the readers of this live blog (and the rest of the cycling world)...
💛 #TDF2024: a finish @VilledeNice💛
After 110 editions concluded near or in Paris, the Tour de France will finish far from Paris for the first time in 2024 with stage 21 in Nice on July 21. pic.twitter.com/QkyRbAPpmz
— Tour de France™ (@LeTour) December 1, 2022
And what's more...
⏱ 35 years after Greg LeMond stripped Laurent Fignon of the Yellow Jersey by eight seconds, a time trial will decide the title among the contenders! 💛#TDF2024pic.twitter.com/cwOrINt9cm
— Tour de France™ (@LeTour) December 1, 2022
Compare this...
Dutch children love to cycle to school in groups. In December that is in the dark. pic.twitter.com/moV93jBgjM
— Mark Wagenbuur (@BicycleDutch) December 1, 2022
To how this went down...
> Sajid Javid blames father of five-year-old cyclist for letting child ride on road
All we're seeing here is a group of human beings travelling to school... no cycling kit, no hi-vis, basic lights, no helmets even, just a country with a safe culture and infrastructure for cycling...
I imagine the rest of Europe + US having mild heart attacks now 😅
— Suzanne Beenackers (@SLBeenackers) December 1, 2022
It reminds me of the reader email we shared on yesterday's live blog:
I was born and raised in Holland. Road division is as follows: Main carriageway, grass verge, cycle path and then footpath. I have cycled to school, gone shopping all on my bike. Not once was I involved in an accident or disagreement with a car driver. There it is. Dutch common sense.
Where do we buy this 'common sense' thing you talk of?
[📷: A.S.O/Charly Lopez]
As we shared on yesterday's blog, the Tour de France is likely to swap out the final stage in Paris for a seaside finale in 2024 because of the Olympic Games being held in the French capital just days later. So what do you make of the rumoured finish in Nice?
Rendel Harris hopes the procession will be dropped in favour of "full-on racing"...
"It would be really great if in finishing in Nice in 2024 the organisers could, for once, eschew the usual processionary stage and have full-on racing, there are such wonderful mountains all around the area that it could make a finish for the ages. Knowing ASO I'm 99 per cent sure they'll just go for a dull pootle along the coast with a sprint finish on the Anglais, but hope springs eternal.
Miller replied: "I suspect the riders enjoy the last stage being relatively low stress. One last sprint and they can have a big party and then take their family for a beach holiday."
But Rendel's got an idea... "I'm sure they do and by God they earn it, but just every now and again it might be nice to have a last day that actually meant something? Two thirds of the Giro last days since 2008 have been individual time trials and produced some amazing finales...imagine Pog, Rog, Bernal, Vingegaard — maybe even Pidcock! — all within two minutes of each other and an out and back 40k TT over the Col de Braus on the final day. A man can dream… but as I said, almost certainly won't happen."
I'm sold.
[📷: A.S.O/Aurélien Vialatte]
AlsoSomniloquism: "After my volunteering stint with the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, I was looking at Paris Olympics for an encore and wondering if I could go early and catch the finale. (I was aware it was probably being moved but no decision had fully been made).
"However I do hope, as you mentioned, that they decide a good full race now rather then a GC procession."
Fredy: "Very seldom watch the final stage of Tour de France as such an anticlimax. Hopefully Nice will be nice 👍"
HarrogateSpa agreed: "With you on that one. Ok, there's the sprint, but all the divving about and sipping champagne beforehand...it's not sport."
Davide Rebellin - what an absolute tragedy... RIP pic.twitter.com/hCqd4OO5vk
— Graham Watson (@grahamwatson10) November 30, 2022
The tributes to Davide Rebellin from across the cycling world continued last night...
Davide Rebellin died when he should have finally lived. It’s immensely sad.
— Ned Boulting (@nedboulting) November 30, 2022
Tragic news to hear of the sudden death of former Italian professional cyclist, Davide Rebellin.
My thoughts are with his close ones during this difficult period. pic.twitter.com/V3I9yjw8tz
— David Lappartient (@DLappartient) November 30, 2022
L'ultima intervista di Davide a Eurosport nel giorno del suo ritiro dal ciclismo...soltanto un mese fa 💔 pic.twitter.com/7sclReTerk
— Eurosport IT (@Eurosport_IT) November 30, 2022