Anyone fancy a sweepstake on how long until the UCI statement drops?
The EF Pro Cyling aero package brought to you by Cannondale. Rapha. Poc. Wahoo. and Amacx. 💪
Attack brought to you by Alberto Bettiol 😏#MilanoTorino#AlbertoBettiolpic.twitter.com/hcnxW5Do9b
— EF Pro Cycling (@EFprocycling) March 13, 2024
Alberto Bettiol, EF-Education EasyPost and all their kit sponsors (that of course get a shout-out in the team's post above) have pulled off a superb solo victory at Milano-Torino, the Italian firing off the front at the top of a climb before using all his aero nous to see him home.
👀 The ultimo kilometro of a breathtaking ride by @AlbertoBettiol, to claim the oldest classic in cycling#MilanoTorino | #piemontesport l #viviiltuosport | @Livignopic.twitter.com/eXAq4p9rE9
— Milano-Torino (@MiTo1876) March 13, 2024
Surprise surprise, this is cycling after all, almost all the post-race talk has been about Bettiol's kit choice... skinsuit, pretty normal in road races these days... TT helmet, less so... TT helmet with full visor and no sunglasses, genius or a crime against the sport (depending who you ask). To be fair, TT helmet with visor AND shades would be the real crime...
BAN THIS!
— Simon Warren (@100Climbs) March 13, 2024
The clue really should have been there for all to see, hardly like he's gonna tap around at the back of the peloton in that get up...
Mohoric using a dropper post, knowing exactly what he was going to do
🤝
Bettiol wearing full aero kit, knowing exactly what he was going to do#MilanoTorinopic.twitter.com/3o1DuS88l4— Dan Deakins (@DanDeakins) March 13, 2024
Then again, if you can attack like that, it's one thing knowing he's going to... another thing entirely being able to follow.
🔥 A huge attack from @AlbertoBettiol near the summit, and the former Ronde van Vlaanderen winner has a 24" lead over the peloton! #MilanoTorino | #piemontesport l #viviiltuosportpic.twitter.com/9kG5OQWDqQ
— Milano-Torino (@MiTo1876) March 13, 2024
Got any plans in the San Remo area on Saturday afternoon, Alberto?
Last week, the UCI said it would be reviewing its design rules in light of Team Visma-Lease a Bike debuting an eye-catching Giro TT helmet at Tirreno-Adriatico.
The governing body said the use of "ever more radical designs [...] raises a significant issue concerning the current and wider trend in time trial helmet design, which focuses more on performance than the primary function of a helmet, namely to ensure the safety of the wearer in the event of a fall".
> Is Jonas Vingegaard's latest time trial helmet one step too far?
The whole situation prompted plenty of frustration at Visma-Lease a Bike, the team saying it had spent plenty of time and resources producing the helmet within the UCI's rules. The team's performance manager Mathieu Heijboer said the respone had been "driven by emotions and all the reactions on social media".
While we already touched on Lotte Kopecky taking her second Nokere Koerse victory in as many years earlier, Tim Merlier went one better this afternoon, bagging his third in a row. Less attacking flair from the men's champion, more destructive sprinting dominance...
🥇 2022
🥇 2023
🥇 2024Tim Merlier makes it 𝐛𝐚𝐜𝐤-𝐭𝐨-𝐛𝐚𝐜𝐤-𝐭𝐨-𝐛𝐚𝐜𝐤 wins at Nokere Koerse 🙌 pic.twitter.com/nPIgy0HN1N
— Eurosport (@eurosport) March 13, 2024
Star of the show however went to the mystery course crosser who narrowly avoided disaster on his way to Lidl. Tell us you're in Belgium without telling us you're in Belgium...
— Cycling out of context (@OutOfCycling) March 13, 2024
Ominous Lotte Kopecky form as we enter the classics campaign...
Cycling superstar Lotte Kopecky wins yet another bike race #NokereKoersepic.twitter.com/bCD0OPRmqO
— Eemeli (@LosBrolin) March 13, 2024
An SD Worx 1-2 as well. How many times will we say that this year? The Belgian had crashed early on, but all that seemed to do was add motivation as she'd soon attacked, Tadej Pogačar style, around the halfway mark, before settling down and deciding to wait for the final stages, attacking on the cobbles to win by 17 seconds from teammate Lorena Wiebes in second.
The internet's a strange place, episode 4,619...
No, we're not sure why either.
Three races to keep an eye on today, one in Italy and a couple in Belgium, it's that time of year. In Italy, some Milan San-Remo hopefuls will be testing their legs at Milano-Torino. With a couple of small, but not insignificant, lumps towards the finish it could be a sprint or a late attack could steal the day. That all sounds very familiar considering what's on the menu this Saturday...
🏳️ Ready for the oldest classic in cycling? #MilanoTorinopic.twitter.com/QNrDuvNh8M
— Milano-Torino (@MiTo1876) March 13, 2024
Oh, and did we mention a certain Mark Cavendish is in attendance with his lead-out duo of Cees Bol and Michael Mørkøv? In Belgium it's Nokere Koerse day, which means one thing — cobbles! The women have around 90km to go and then the men's race will follow. Plenty to keep you entertained throughout the day.
Are you even really cycling in winter if you don't have a bottom bracket garden!? pic.twitter.com/RVwl6YvDak
— Will Columbine (@willcolumbine) March 13, 2024
A councillor in Limerick in Ireland has disagreed her residents, claiming that the area's newly built cycle lanes are a "complete waste of money" and are causing "traffic chaos", that despite a National Transport Authority (NTA) survey showing that 76 per cent of residents support the building of protected cycle lanes even if it means less room for motorists.
The Limerick Post published Catherine Slattery's comments, Fianna Fáil councillor saying: "I pass up and down the Childers Road a couple of times a day, I'd say twice a week you'd see someone biking it. It's a complete waste of money, people aren't using it. What should have happened there is that they should have moved back the footpath and put the cycle lane on the footpath. All they've done on the Childers Road is cause traffic chaos in the mornings."
> Cycle lane branded a "s*** show" by local politician furious at reduced width of road
However, the NTA survey found that 52 per cent of residents walk, cycle or wheel at least five times a week, with the majority keen for more investment in walking and cycling infrastructure (61 per cent).
Slattery claims she supports cycle lanes being built, but only in "suitable" locations.
"If they're going to put in cycle lanes, do it right, connect the housing estates and stuff like that to these cycle lanes. But certainly I feel that the cycle lanes on the Childers Road were a total waste of money, and the same on the Hyde Road, a total waste of money in my view," she said.
There was then an interesting update from IrishCycle.com who dug up a Facebook post from Slattery's account from 2020, in which she said she was "delighted" with the traffic-calming project on Hyde Road and listed "segregated cycleways on both sides" as part of the scheme.
However, now she claims the cycle lanes were only added "once the scheme started", distancing her support from the bike lanes she now opposes.
It's not the first time Slattery's cycling comments have come to our attention. In December, she seconded a proposal for hi-vis for cyclists to be mandatory, saying it is a "timely motion" in the run up to Christmas.
It's not just Wout racking up the climbing, Remco Evenepoel's post-Paris-Nice recon of this summer's Tour de France route is well underway. The Soudal Quick-Step rider making his Tour debut this summer took a look at the final stage time trial in Nice earlier in the week (I mean, you might as well if you've just finished... Paris-Nice...) and has now headed north to the mountains.
From spring on the French Riviera to the wintery mountain peaks in the space of two days. Click right to the photo for some hard as nails winter shorts-wearing content.
Admittedly not what most people go to Tenerife to do, but when you've got a Tour of Flanders or Paris-Roiubaix to train for, it doesn't leave much time for cheap drinks and sunbathing. Just the SEVEN hours and 5,000m of ascent for Wout van Aert yesterday...
A touch over seven hours of work and an hour's break, welcome to the real world, Wout, join the 9 to 5 club. The Belgian classics hope is taking a slightly different approach to the spring one-day races this year, skipping Strade Bianche and Milan San-Remo, as well as whichever of the WorldTour stage races he would have picked last week, heading to altitude instead in the hope of optimising his preparation to break his Flanders/Roubaix duck.
Up the volcano with him are teammates Tiesj Benoot and Omloop Het Nieuwsblad victor Jan Tratnik, Visma-Lease a Bike classics stalwart Benoot calling the decision a "small calculated risk [...] thinking a bit out of the box".
A small calculated risk, much like hitting 91km/h on a descent... that eye-watering top speed standing out from Van Aert's Strava upload. As does the 28km/h average speed. Snail's pace for the pros, but there'll be more than a few flat rides on my Strava slower than that. Slower and without traversing a giant volcano multiple times...
We enjoyed Gareth Kerr's comment under the ride praising Wout for his "Good Fred Whitton training".
"Hey, Wout... if that Giro d'Italia thing you're doing in May doesn't work, just come to the Lake District instead... there's a little event with a few small hills... you'll love it, I promise..."