It feels like it’s been a while since everyone’s favourite driving instructor/YouTuber/son of a four-time European Cup-winning full back popped up on the live blog, but don’t worry – Ashley Neal is back after a quiet summer and is once again causing controversy within the cycling community… and this time he’s on a bike.
(Yes, I do realise that paragraph sounds like the opening seconds of a trailer for an incredibly niche film. Maybe Marvel are interested? Okay, maybe not…)
Anyway… What has Ashley – who has amassed 146,000 subscribers on YouTube over the years thanks to his videos on all things road safety – done to irk cyclists on social media this time?
Well, in the Liverpool-based driving instructor’s latest video, titled ‘The Crazybird Jumper Tested; And Why Cyclists Do What They Do; A Motorists Guide’, he’s swapped the driving and passenger’s seat for one of the aforementioned brand’s fat tyre e-bikes, which he spends 46 minutes testing out (with his saddle height a bit too low for my liking) around Liverpool, while providing a running commentary on how to cycle safely.
Except when he maybe isn’t cycling safely, however.
Holy crap, please do not filter like this guy, incredibly dangerous, far far too close to the vehicle, in danger of hitting the wing mirror, clipping the refuge/kerb. One of the worst MGIF pieces of cycling I've ever seen.@PudseyPedaller@2wheelsgoodBrum@StuInNorwaypic.twitter.com/Q3E6K1rQUW
— CykelTony (@tony_eh) October 23, 2023
About 11 minutes into the video, as he approaches a set of traffic lights, Neal filters past a motorist who had just overtaken him, narrowly squeezing between the car and a traffic island, almost clipping the vehicle’s wing mirror in the process.
After fiddling with his camera while stopped, Neal says during the video: “This car behind, have I just caused an issue? Possibly. They did overtake first, when it wasn’t necessary, and if they hadn’t have done, we’d be status quo.
“I haven’t done this to get my own back, I did it to show the motorist that a lot of the time there is no point in overtaking, when you’re coming up to lights like that – cyclists are just going to slip past.”
Despite his explanation, Neal’s spot of filtering – especially for a driving instructor usually critical of poor cycling habits – hasn’t gone down well online.
“Holy crap, please do not filter like this guy, incredibly dangerous, far, far too close to the vehicle, in danger of hitting the wing mirror, clipping the refuge/kerb,” CykelTony wrote.
“One of the worst MGIF pieces of cycling I’ve ever seen. And he’s a driving instructor who constantly complains about cyclists riding into risk.”
“You don’t have to filter. Sometimes it is safer to wait behind the traffic,” added while CycleGaz, prompting Tony to reply: “This all day long. He was clearly too distracted fiddling with his new ‘toy’ to pay proper attention to the road. As he himself likes to say, ‘failed to anticipate!’”
Ashley’s preoccupation with his e-bike was also picked up by other cyclists, with one e-bike rider asking: “Why the **** is he talking about ‘putting it up a couple of levels’ immediately before a tight manoeuvre and slowing down to a stop? That’s the last place you want an e-bike in turbo.”
“Cycling like a drivist! No one expected that, did they?! Oh, wait, it’s exactly what we expected, isn’t it?” Bicycal Life said.
“Yes, but as AN teaches us, it matters little about the safety of the cyclist as long as drivers aren’t inconvenienced,” added Tim. “He isn’t even consistent. In other videos he says you shouldn’t filter past because drivers will have to overtake again.
“And moments later he lets a car very close pass because he’s fiddling with the gears in secondary, but excuses the driver. He has no self-awareness as a rider, he does not look ahead.”
However, others weren’t as scathing of Ashley’s on-bike take on cycling safety.
“I’m in two minds about this,” says Melissa. ”It’s clearly MGIF syndrome by AN. But the car is into the painted bike area. I think I’d pass it just to watch the driver panic due to nearly clipping the car, but only if the lights had just gone red.”
What do you think? Was Ashley’s filtering a case of MGIF driving directly transferred onto a bike? Or do you think the manoeuvre was a perfectly responsible, and relatively safe, response to a pointless overtake?
Whatever you think about Mr Neal, he never fails to ignite online discourse, anyway…
When asked for comment the officers’ police force doubled down on their actions, insisting “road safety is a priority for us and we will always look to educate road users on how they can keep safe”.
Hmmm… I’m sure frightening an eight-year-old child and putting her off riding her bike can be considered a job well done in that case…
🇹🇼 𝗖𝗵𝗮𝗹𝗹𝗲𝗻𝗴𝗲 𝗮𝗰𝗰𝗲𝗽𝘁𝗲𝗱!🤝
We're ready to 𝗙𝗶𝗴𝗵𝘁 𝗚𝗿𝗮𝘃𝗶𝘁𝘆!⛰
💬 "There are not many climbs like that & doing a race that is basically one big climb will be a really interesting challenge." - @SimonYatess#TaiwanKOM read more ⤵️
— Team Jayco AlUla (@GreenEDGEteam) October 23, 2023
Speaking of curious post-season relaxation techniques, Simon Yates will head to Taiwan this week to take on the country’s infamous KOM Challenge – a gruelling climbing test attempted every year since 2012 by both amateurs and professionals (and even tackled by road.cc in 2014).
Located in Taiwan’s Hualien County, the climb of Mount Hehuan takes the riders from sea level to 3,275 metres in 87 long, leg-deadening, oxygen-sapping kilometres, averaging 3.5 percent with sections hitting almost 16 percent.
So, like I said, very relaxing.
Yates – who capped off a successful 2023, which saw him finish fourth at the Tour de France, just behind twin brother Adam, with fifth at Il Lombardia earlier this month – will travel to Taiwan alongside Jayco-AlUla teammate, 23-year-old Colombian climber Jesus David Peña, as the pair seek to break Vincenzo Nibali’s course record of 3:19:54, set by the Italian legend in 2017.
> From zero to 3250 metres in 105km... The Taiwan KOM Challenge
“The Taiwan KOM Challenge is a different style of racing to what we are used to with the race starting at sea level and then climbing to over 3000 metres,” Yates said before jetting off for Friday’s rather unique mountain time trial.
“There are not many climbs like that and doing a race that is basically one big climb will be a really interesting challenge and totally different to anything I’ve done before. Also, lining up alongside riders of all different levels from all over the world will be a unique experience.”
Needless to say, I imagine this particular zero to high altitude test will require a different sort of effort than that usually displayed on the short but steep affairs of the British hill climb scene, eh Simon?
Not quite my cup of tea, anyway...
You may not be able to transport 26 tonnes of medicinal china clay by bike (scroll on for more on that), but you can transport climbing ace Ashleigh Moolman Pasio:
Not even a well-deserved holiday can keep our riders off the bike 😛 pic.twitter.com/r7UR2KjHNt
— Soudal Quick-Step Pro Cycling Team (@soudalquickstep) October 23, 2023
And at least Yves Lampaert now has some novel ideas for his winter training this year…
A classic of the ‘Sorry, didn’t see you there’ genre of driving around cyclists, courtesy of this astoundingly oblivious driver in Comber, Co Down…
Contender for idiot of the week. pic.twitter.com/MR7toBD8Bj
— Belfast Cyclist (@BelfastCyclist1) October 22, 2023
Yep, it only took around two months, but the results are finally in for the British 12-hour time trial championships, with provisional winner Richard Sharp confirmed as topping the hitherto vacant podium with a mammoth distance of 295.1 miles – that’s an average of 24.6mph for half a day, folks – beating second-place Tom Thornely by just 0.7 miles.
While Cycling Time Trials certainly took their time (apologies) getting round to announcing the winner, their speed certainly picked up over the past week, for some reason…
According to this morning’s statement, CTT held a rather timely ad-hoc committee meeting on Saturday to finalise the results – just five days after road.cc first contacted the time trialling body for clarification on the unusual situation.
Coincidence?
> National 12-hour TT results still aren't finalised... two months after it finished
Surrey County Council has promised to make life on the roads safer for cyclists, after data released by the Department for Transport revealed that 139 people on bikes were killed or seriously injured in the county in 2022, making it the country’s most dangerous local authority for cyclists.
But thanks to a new Vision Zero project, which will see the council work alongside Surrey Police, Surrey Fire and Rescue, and National Highways, the council aims to halve all road deaths by 2030 and eliminate them completely by 2050.
“Over two thirds of our cycling casualties take place on 30mph speed limit roads, so we’re looking at putting more segregated cycling infrastructure in, either a kerb or a section of wands,” Duncan Knox, a road safety expert working for the council, said.
“There’s lots of roads that could easily become 20mph, especially where there isn’t room for segregated infrastructure.”
Welcoming the plan, Cycling UK’s Keir Gallagher said: “We need to stop seeing people dying on our roads as acceptable, it isn’t.
“Surrey does have a very high density of motor traffic and a lot of cycling, so I think the important thing is to be looking at how we can get those deaths and serious injuries down while being proactive.”
More bad news on the Wiggle CRC front, as parent company Signa Sports United closes its offices in the United States, while preparing to make insolvency filings.
The closure of the offices in Park City, Utah, home to operations for Vitus and Nukeproof, has been described by the company’s North American head of operations as “a shock” and “a bitter pill to swallow”.
Tower Hamlets Council’s decision last month to remove most of the borough’s low traffic neighbourhood schemes, despite a series of consultations showing that residents were in favour of retaining the traffic-calming measures, has been criticised by a group of local headteachers, who have penned an open letter to mayor Lutfur Rahman urging the notoriously anti-active travel politician to reverse the decision, which they branded “an attack on thousands of children’s futures”.
Last month, we reported that Tower Hamlets Council voted to scrap the walking and cycling initiatives introduced by the previous Labour administration in 2021 in Columbia Road, Arnold Circus, and Old Bethnal Green.
A similar Liveable Streets scheme on Canrobert Street, however, was retained, while a bus gate restriction in Wapping was kept due to “exceptional” support in a consultation last year.
“As headteachers of Tower Hamlets schools, we have a duty of care to all the young people in the borough and we are shocked and dismayed by the way that Mayor Rahman’s decision on 20 September deprioritised the health and safety of students in Bethnal Green,” the letter, addressed to councillor Mushtak Ahmed and signed by 86 primary and secondary school headteachers, said.
This isn’t the first time, meanwhile, that Rahman’s pro-car platform – since his re-election last year, the Aspire Party leader has rolled back a series of initiatives aimed at reducing motor vehicle traffic and promoting active travel, which he claims have increased congestion and contributed to more CO2 emissions in the area – has been opposed by local schools.
Last October, children, teachers, and parents installed their own Les Misérables-style barricade outside a school in Bow in protest at the council’s decision to put an end to School Streets initiatives in the borough, designed to restrict the use of motor vehicles outside schools at drop-off and pick-up times – a campaign that eventually saw Rahman reverse his decision.
> Children take to the barricades to save School Street
And in their open letter to the mayor, they accused the council of ignoring the views of local schools when it came to ripping out the borough’s “popular and successful” Liveable Streets measures, a decision they say would bring the borough “back to square one”.
The letter said: “Five of the most affected schools (Oaklands, Lawdale, Elizabeth Selby, Virginia, Columbia) wrote jointly to the mayor on 30 January 2023. In the letter they outlined why they supported the current street layouts in Bethnal Green, their concerns about the proposals to reintroduce thousands of extra cars per day in front of their school gates, and their belief that there are ways to improve the current layouts, for example by introducing more controlled crossings.
“The letter did not receive a response, neither the mayor nor any member of his cabinet went to speak to the schools, and it was not included in the consultation reports appended to the officer report for the 20 September decision. This is an unacceptable omission in the decision-making process.
“Mayor Rahman promotes the interests of Tower Hamlets’ young people through his free school meals policy for secondary schools and in his decision to retain the 33 ‘school streets’ across the borough.
“However, his decision to remove the current street layouts in Bethnal Green, and his failure to take any steps to reduce vehicle journeys in the borough, are an attack on thousands of children’s futures.”
The headteachers noted that, according to the council’s public health team, only 23 percent of children and young people in Tower Hamlets are physically active and that all schools in the area have council-approved School Travel Plans, which aim to encourage cycling and walking to school, and reducing car use.
“So, infrastructure which encourages walking and cycling to school is a powerful tool for the council to use, yet the mayor has decided to spend millions of pounds removing the most successful active travel infrastructure in the borough,” the letter said.
The council’s own equalities impact assessment, the teachers pointed out, also flagged during the decision-making process that scrapping LTNs would have a particularly negative effect on young people, due to the “increase in road danger, pollution, and discouragement for walking and cycling”.
> Police urge against scrapping low traffic neighbourhood, saying it reduces crime
The letter concluded: “While the immediate effects of this decision will be felt most significantly by schools within the low traffic neighbourhood in Bethnal Green, the impact will be felt across the borough.
“Children and young people will see that their daily safety and their long-term health is less important to the powers that be than the interests of people passing their schools in motor vehicles.
“More children will spend more days doing short journeys in cars, undermining their fitness, and increasing their risk of obesity. And they will all have friends in neighbouring boroughs who are much happier walking and cycling to school, where the councils have ongoing programmes to install and improve active travel infrastructure.
“How is it rational to feed and teach our children well, mandate that schools should encourage walking and cycling to school, and then remove the infrastructure which makes it safe and easy for young people to travel in a healthy way every day?”
You can't carry [insert random large/heavy object that the vast majority of people will never need to carry] on a bicycle, therefore it's completely pointless owning one. A thread 🧵
— Jani (@janipewter) October 21, 2023
Over the weekend, Twitter/X user Jani provided a wonderful, selfless service to the online cycling community, by collating all the weird and wonderfully niche examples people give to argue that bicycles are, in fact, completely useless when it comes to transporting anything other than their rider…
And don’t worry, Jani didn’t just limit his search to the old, tired ‘But you can’t carry a fridge on a bike’ examples, he really has them all – from 60 square metres of carpet to “30 sheets of drywall, especially when it’s -40°C and there’s four feet of snow”, a cement mixer, a few hundred beef carcasses, and, errr, 26 tonnes of medicinal china clay:
26 tonnes of medicinal china clayhttps://t.co/XJX6hkGyRT
— Jani (@janipewter) October 21, 2023
To be fair, you can’t say they’re not creative.
I just brought 50kg of bramleys back from the plot, but I'm selling the bike because it can't deliver 26 tons of medicinal clay in central London 😉 pic.twitter.com/oT4R2nQsLs
— Dave McCraw (@david_mccraw) October 22, 2023
Come on Dave, it’s time to give up and buy a van, you know you want to…
A proposal which the council says would see the “front of York Station transformed to create a new and improved gateway to the city”, with safe cycling infrastructure, improved pedestrian facilities, and better access for bus users, has attracted objections from some residents who do not want to lose the parking spaces in front of their homes – despite the local authority announcing mitigation for blue badge holders, tradespeople, and emergency service workers.
“There’s just not room for everything and that’s part of the challenge that faces us,” James Gilchrist, York Council’s director of environment transport and planning, said. “Walking and cycling are prioritised over buses and then that over cars.”
As cycling epochs comes to an end elsewhere, one of the sport’s longest-standing partnerships continues to endure, with the Ineos Grenadiers announcing this morning that 2018 Tour de France winner Geraint Thomas has signed a new two-year deal with the British squad.
Thomas – the only rider to have raced for Sky/Ineos throughout its history, after joining the team as a 23-year-old from Barloworld in 2010 – has proved over the past two seasons that he still has what it takes to compete at the highest level, finishing third at the 2022 Tour de France (a month after winning the Tour de Suisse), and coming an excruciatingly close second to last-gasp pink jersey usurper Primož Roglič at this year’s Giro d’Italia.
(Zac Williams/SWpix.com)
And, despite an underwhelming performance at the Vuelta and rumours of a possible move away, the 37-year-old has committed what may prove to be the final years of his career to the Ineos Grenadiers, where he remains a central figure in a once-dominant team struggling to shape its new identity, during what has been an often painful period of transition.
“I am really delighted to extend my time as an Ineos Grenadier. I still just love riding my bike – racing and training with the boys – every single aspect of it,” Thomas said in a statement today.
“Although you ‘never say never’, in my head this is my last contract – but I know that I still have two more big years in me. And I wouldn’t have continued in a different team.
“This team understands me and, importantly, knows what it takes to achieve success. I have childhood mates here – Luke and Swifty as riders and Stannard now in management, and I’ve known Rod since 2003. This really does feel like home.
“We’re an ambitious group and have some big goals ahead. I’m really looking forward to getting stuck in again and want to help the team continue to progress.”
(Charlie Forgham-Bailey/SWpix.com)
The Welshman, who initially looked set to be a classics star before turning his attention (rather successfully, I might add) to stage races and the grand tours, even hinted that a return to the cobbles and hills of the Belgian spring may be on the cards as he heads towards retirement.
“I want to continue to be highly competitive in anything really; maybe look at going to the Classics again or ride GC in Grand Tours or help whoever is going to be the next guy coming through, but I just want to have a positive impact on the team,” he says.
“I’m at that stage where I’m still hungry to perform but at the same time, I am happy to help the team. I want to try and help us push forward to get back to the very top of the sport.
“It’s just been an amazing career so far and hopefully it can continue in that way.”
First Thibaut Pinot retires, then his Groupama-FDJ team end their 22-year-long partnership with bike supplier Lapierre… What’s happening to the sport I love?
Setting aside my nostalgic yearning for the early 2010s, it was revealed over the weekend that the long collaboration between the Dijon-based bike brand and France’s most emblematic team – a partnership which yielded over 300 victories courtesy of the likes of Philippe Gilbert, Jacky Durand, Bradley Wiggins, Arnaud Démare, and, of course, Pinot himself – will come to a close at the end of the year.
However, Lapierre will continue to supply bikes to the women’s team, FDJ-Suez, in 2024, Velo101 reports.
> Tour de France pro bike: Thibaut Pinot’s Lapierre Xelius SL Exclusive
And while Lotto Dstny’s split from long-term bike supplier Ridley earlier this year was a messy affair, Groupama-FDJ boss Marc Madiot had nothing but kind words for the departing Lapierre.
“This is the end of a historic partnership of more than twenty years and we will always remember our great performances on Lapierre bikes,” the car door panel beating team manager said.
“During these two decades we co-developed some of the most efficient bikes in the world and it was a wonderful adventure, full of success. We respect Lapierre’s choice to end the partnership. Like every company, Lapierre must make strategic choices. The end of this collaboration is an illustration of this and we are respectful of this decision. Lapierre is and will remain a great bicycle brand!”
Sir Chris Hoy says he is frustrated with the current lack of coverage of track cycling in the mainstream media, which he says could be central to raising the profile of women’s sport in the UK.
“Ten years ago there would have been twenty journalists around a table having a chat about track cycling, so it’s a shame that there isn’t more support from the general media,” the six-time Olympic champion and BBC pundit, speaking at the first round of the UCI Track Champions League in Mallorca, said, according to GCN.
“Cycling media has always followed [track cycling], although it could follow it more, but the general media doesn’t seem to have the same love for it that it used to. Which is frustrating is when you see some amazing result, like Emma [Finucane, who won the sprint title] at the worlds.
“You switch on BBC Breakfast, you think, ‘oh, let's see how they did’, and there’ll be nothing.”
> "Just chaos": Track cycling event restarted after huge crash brings down half the field
Hoy added the lack of coverage is doubly frustrating considering the strength of Team GB’s female riders.
“We have the best women's squad and now, the women's sprint squad is so strong,” he said. “If the general media wants to show that they are behind trying to raise the profile of women’s sport then how about showing some of the cyclists? Because they’re bloody awesome. That’s the frustration I think.”
The 11-time world champion said the key for bolstering the profile of track cycling is “the Olympic viewers, who only turn it on every four years and go, ‘oh great, we’re good at this.’
“The reason in the UK track cycling was booming was because, well, the results were there, but also people knew the names. They knew Victoria Pendleton, they knew Mark Cavendish, me, whoever else, Jason Kenny – everybody. They were household names. And that’s missing now.”
With Laura Kenny – the only remaining member of the Class of 2012 still in the British squad – struggling to secure her spot for the Paris Olympics, Hoy noted that “it could be a completely new squad from 12 years ago”.
“So in that respect, it’s a challenge to get these names into the public consciousness,” he explained.
Perusing road.cc’s X/Twitter notifications on a Monday morning is quite often the perfect way to kick off a particularly unhinged week, but this reply – responding to our story on West Midlands Police thanking people for reporting “hundreds of careless and dangerous drivers”– made even me stop in my tracks:
Cyclists should have to be licenced and insured. And legally required to use cycleways, and on narrow roads should be legally obliged to pull over to let proper road-users past. Or, better still, allow hunting the bastards with dags. pic.twitter.com/gRc5vf7Ov0
— Emily Cee (@DocEmCee) October 23, 2023
I’m still not sure if the post is serious or just an elaborate anti-cycling bingo satire, but in any case – Full house!
From empty national 12-hour time trial podiums (reminds me a bit of the Tour de France from 1999 to 2005), and Track Champions League chaos, to Scrooge-esque cycle lanes and Dave B’s plans to rejuvenate a sleeping sporting giant (and no, I’m not talking about the Ineos Grenadiers), here’s a round-up of all the cycling news you may have missed over the weekend…
> National 12-hour TT results still aren't finalised... two months after it finished
> Cycling group insists much-criticised "glaring mistake" bike lane is actually a "non-issue"
> "Just chaos": Track cycling event restarted after huge crash brings down half the field
> Check out the Spoon Customs 01 Sam Dunn hand-painted road bike