A housing association in south Wales has come under fire from residents, after it fenced off the entrance to a woodland that was being used by children as a cycle track after the youngsters allegedly cleared it of litter.
Throughout June, the group of local kids, all around primary school age, spent their weekends clearing rubbish from Garw Wood, which runs between houses in Croesyceiliog, a suburb of Cwmbran, to create a makeshift bike park.
However, last week the Bron Afon community housing association fenced off the entrances to the ancient woodland, a decision it claimed was due to “anti-social behaviour in the area which has caused damage” – but which local parents have claimed was due to pressure from residents who had threatened and swore at the children.
“It was overgrown and full of brambles and has been for decades,” local resident Robin Willis, speaking to Nation Cymru, said of the woodland.
“And a group of local kids have gone in over the last three weekends and cleared it and made a little bike track – it’s only 200 or 300 yards.
“The area was overgrown and people have used it for a shortcut, and the boys have cleared rubbish out of there. They had four black bags of rubbish out of there and there were cans, glass, and plastic bottles.”
Mr Willis said that his children, aged nine and 10, heard the boys riding their bikes and that he was happy for them to join in.
“My boys heard them playing over the fence and they were all well-mannered boys. I got speaking to them, realised I knew their parents, and I had no problem with my boys playing with them,” he said.
The local resident also said he took a photograph of one of the black bags that the boys filled with rubbish when they were creating their homemade cycle track.
However, the Bron Afon housing association has said that it has been contacted by “concerned local residents groups” who claimed that “severe damage” had been caused due to bark being removed from some mature trees.
These complaints prompted Bron Afon to install metal fences at each of the entrances to the woodland, which it says will remain close until the area is made “safe”.
The association added that it is concerned about the woodland being used for riding bikes, along with the creation of ramps.
It said that while the ramps may not “inherently harm the woodland, associated activities and lack of proper planning can lead to negative consequences”, including damage to trees, flowers, and the soil, and the disturbance of the “delicate eco system of the ancient woodland”.
It added that “increased human activity can disturb wildlife habitats, scare away animals, and disrupt natural processes”.
We are sorry to tell you that we’ve had to fence off the entrances to Garw Wood in Croesyceiliog. This is due to anti social behaviour in the area which has caused damage.
Once we make them safe we will let you know when everyone can enjoy Garw Woods again pic.twitter.com/yOpN5vg9gp
— Bron Afon - Community Housing Association (@BronAfon) June 27, 2024
“We are sorry to tell you that we’ve had to fence off the entrances to Garw Wood in Croesyceiliog. This is due to anti-social behaviour in the area which has caused damage,” the association said in a social media post.
“Once we make them safe, we will let you know when everyone can enjoy Garw Woods again.”
The association also denied claims that the bike-riding children had helped clear “decades” of rubbish from the area, instead insisting that its grounds maintenance team cleared “large amounts of litter (bottle, cans, and other litter)” from Garw Wood over the past week and that there was “no evidence of any being cleared”.
“The woodland is part of a regular inspection regime carried out by Bron Afon and regular woodland management has been carried out by Bron Afon and local resident groups over the past five to 10 years to encourage natural regeneration and growth of wild flowers, especially the bluebells,” a spokesperson said.
Bron Afon’s claims that the children were causing damage has been disputed, however, by Robin’s wife Emma, who also claimed that the boys were subject to threats from residents angry at them cycling in the woodland.
“There wasn’t any damage and no anti-social behaviour,” she wrote on Facebook.
“The only harassment was coming from tenants of the flats by the woodland who were threatening the kids, swearing at them and threatening to pop their tyres!
“All the boys wanted to do was make a track to ride their bikes down, it was an absolute pleasure to hear them all having so much fun! As I said woodland areas always grow back, that’s nature for you. Those boys went home every day happy telling their parents about all the fun, and that they had they built something for them and were excited every day to go out and play!”
"Kids should play outside like back in my day"
"But not near me."https://t.co/pBGt9ZecTM— Roo (2 inch trials) Rider (@commuteroo) July 2, 2024
All day long, you knew it was coming.
What initially appeared set to be a day for the breakaway – it’s too early for the GC contenders to really go for it, we thought, that descent at the end will negate things, we thought – soon turned into a classic Alpine war of attrition, as UAE Team Emirates’ white armada stamped their authority on an ever-dwindling bunch.
Into a headwind, one by one they set an asphyxiating pace as the Tour snaked into France the hard, mountainous way only it knows how, their stoic, impassive leader Tadej Pogačar ominously lurking in the background.
By the time they reached the foot of the Galibier proper and its increasingly steep slopes and gasping for breath altitude – the rest was just a draggy, annoying prelude, we had thought – many of his rivals were reaching the end.
On the Galibier, the doomed remnants of the breakaway reeled in, they dropped like flies. Yellow jersey Richard Carapaz, gone. 2018 Tour winner Geraint Thomas, gone. 2019 Tour winner Egan Bernal, gone. Dauphiné winner Matteo Jorgenson, and rest of Jonas Vingegaard’s hitherto dominant Visma-Lease a Bike team for that matter, gone.
But then we waited, for maybe longer than we expected. A quickly aborted stint by a fading Adam Yates gave way to some harrying and cajoling as Juan Ayuso was ushered to the front to share turns with João Almeida, a brief period of respite that allowed Primož Roglič (almost gone) to recover and regain the wheels.
WE HAVE LIFT OFF 🚀
Pogacar attacks and drops Jonas Vingegaard and his other rivals over the top of the Col du Galibier 😱😱😱#letourdefrance#tdf2024#cyclingpic.twitter.com/QZubdvTK3V
— Eurosport (@eurosport) July 2, 2024
Then it happened. Pogačar’s burst, with 900m left to the top, was predictably exhilarating, Vingegaard’s immediately response encouraging. But, like we saw more than a few times last year, the elastic began to stretch as the Slovenian, fully aware of how long he could sustain his searing pace, piled on the pressure.
Vingegaard, in his first test since that crash, ultimately ceded – but not by much, crossing the summit only eight seconds down on his eternal rival.
On the rapid descent down to Valloire, things stayed roughly the same, Vingegaard’s descending skills – deemed superior to Pogačar’s, at least before April – keeping him in sight of the rampaging attacker in the white. But halfway down the gap began expanding; a consequence, perhaps, of the Dane’s lack of confidence so soon after his Basque Country spill.
Meanwhile, Remco Evenepoel – the only one in the shot behind the big two in that final uphill kilometre – also came under pressure on the descent, dropping from third on the road to sixth, as Ineos Grenadier Carlos Rodriguez underlined his podium credentials.
The clearly in-form Belgian needn’t have worried too much, however, as those chasing Pogačar eventually coalesced, before he outsprinted them all for some vital bonus seconds.
Pogacar TAKES FLIGHT 🚀
Tadej Pogacar dropped Vingegaard, Roglic and Evenepoel on the Col du Galibier to take the yellow jersey back 🥊#tourdefrance#TDF24#cyclingpic.twitter.com/jVL69IzYn2
— Eurosport (@eurosport) July 2, 2024
All the big bonus seconds, and 35 seconds on the road besides, went to Pogačar, the 25-year-old driving hard to the line, aware that every second counts in a Tour that remains delicately posied.
And with a 45-second gap over Evenepoel and a 50-second gap over Vingegaard the top of the GC standings (with teammates Ayuso and Almeida also handily placed in the top eight), Pogačar and UAE certainly made their first foray into the mountains of this Tour count.
Vingegaard, for his part, will be buoyed by the fact he could respond to that initial searing attack, and easily lived with the best of rest, while remaining within a minute of Pogačar, so early on in a Tour that could have passed him by. He’ll be less content, however, with the apparent superiority of UAE over his Visma outfit, who have long been established as the Tour’s dominant team.
In any case, we definitely have a Tour de France on our hands.
⛰️⏱️ COL DU GALIBIER (last 8.51 km, 6.88 %, 585 m) | 🇫🇷 #TDF2024
2011 | 23:34 | F.Schleck
| 25:00 | A.Schleck (🏆)
2019 | 22:23 | N.Quintana (🏆
| 23:03 | Bernal
2022 | 23:47 | Meintjes
| 24:27 | PELOTON
2024 | ~20:50 | Pogacar— ammattipyöräily (@ammattipyoraily) July 2, 2024
And into a headwind, too. Blimey.
Before you mention it, yes I know that those most recent comparisons were recorded during the final week of the Tour, and not during the fourth stage, but still.
That’s an extraterrestrial time, especially when you consider two of the ‘domestiques’ who helped set that blistering pace were able to latch onto the chasers and finish in the top eight of the stage.
I think the next three weeks are going to be fun…
😡 Don't cross the road in front of the riders!
😡 Ne traversez pas la route devant les coureurs !#TDF2024pic.twitter.com/BDykaxFmsB
— Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 2, 2024
Jeepers.
Now, that’s what you really don’t want to see when you’re plunging down an Alpine descent at 90kph.
And I thought the idiots in fancy dress running alongside the riders were dangerous enough…
Day one in the mountains, and job number one very well done for UAE Team Emirates and Tadej Pogačar, who stamped their authority on the Tour with a peerless performance in the Alps, carving out the first real gaps of what promises to be a scintillating GC battle.
“I’m super happy. This was more or less the plan, and we executed it really well. It was a dream stage, and to finish it off solo is incredible,” the 25-year-old, back in yellow with a 45-second gap over Remco Evenepoel, and 50 seconds over reigning two-time winner Vingegaard, said at the finish.
“I wanted to hit hard today. I know this stage really well, and I’ve trained here for a lot of weeks. It felt like a home stage passing through Sestriere and Montgenèvre, so it was really nice racing here. And bonus seconds at the top, too.
🙌 INSANE descent from Tadej
🙌 Quelle descente de Tadej #TDF2024pic.twitter.com/L7Eu9dsZv8
— Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 2, 2024
“I had confidence at the start, and I had good legs, so I had to try. There was a lot of headwind on the climb, so it wasn’t too hard in the wheels. The team did a super good job and I didn’t want t go too early because of the wind, so I had to make all the difference I could in the last 800m.
“I knew the downhill, but I was a little bit surprised to see the wet road in the first few corners, so it was a bit scary! But this descent was super-fast and if you know the road, it helps.”
When asked about his current healthy lead after four stages, the Slovenian sensation added: “It’s very good news, and I’m happy to be in this place. And I’m very happy with my shape and how I feel on the bike. Let’s continue day by day.”
Looks like we’re set for yet another Tour GC leader, as EF’s Richard Carapaz is distanced with 6km to go to the top of the Col du Galibier as UAE Team Emirates, now led by Adam Yates on the front, set an absolutely relentless pace on the first massive climb of this year’s Tour:
🔴Se le enciende el piloto rojo al líder
Richard Carapaz se queda cortado antes de llegar a la parte más dura de la ascensión al Galibier #TDF2024#TourRTVE2j
📺En directo, aquí: https://t.co/wsn4S2pnZ0pic.twitter.com/1v4k2eWjIK
— Teledeporte (@teledeporte) July 2, 2024
And with Geraint Thomas and Visma’s Matteo Jorgenson, a key domestique for Jonas Vingegaard, now dropped, the Tour has well and truly started!
Remember all that snow at the top of the Galibier from a few weeks ago?
Well, some it ended up on the road about half an hour, just after the summit of the 2,642m-high climb, on the descent into Valloire:
#TDF2024 Un petit bloc de glace-neige s'est détaché sur la route juste derrière le sommet du col du Galibier un peu après 15h30. pic.twitter.com/L45AlG8Be8
— Thomas Perotto (@thomasperotto) July 2, 2024
Luckily, ASO was on the ball, as ever, and the road has been very, very quickly cleared.
Though just looking at the sheer power being put down by UAE Team Emirates on the Lautaret at the moment, in preparation for what appears to be the inevitable Tadej Pogačar attack, I wouldn’t be surprised if the entire Alps starting shaking.
Fire, snow, and a potential early GC battle? Today’s stage has had everything so far…
In the latest in an increasingly long line of ‘cyclists versus supermarkets’ stories, a Milton Keynes branch of Sainsbury’s has refused a request from bike-riding shippers to install more cycle parking facilities.
The call for more bike parking at the shop on Avebury Boulevard was initially launched six months ago by campaign group Cycling CitizensMK, who had a meeting with Sainsbury’s management before recently being told that more bike parking was not part of the store’s plans.
“It’s a great disappointment they’ve said no,” Hazel Dean, one of the campaigners, told MKFM. “All we asked for was support for shoppers who want to be more environmentally friendly and get healthier in the process.”
Dedicated cycle racks are currently located at Sainsbury’s Milton Keynes Central store, but the cyclists say that particular branch is not easy to access by bike.
“There’s a road railing I can chain my bike to near the entrance, but sometimes it’s filled with other bikes,” regular shopper Mick Toms added.
A Sainsbury’s spokesperson said: “Our stores receive lots of requests for support from communities we serve, and we help in a range of ways, including our food donation partnerships. Unfortunately, due to the high volume we receive, it is not always possible to accommodate them all.
“We’re sorry for any disappointment this particular decision may have caused and will keep this feedback in mind in case it’s something we may be able to help with in the future.”
The lack of suitable bike parking facilities at supermarkets has proved an issue across the UK for the growing number of shoppers using bikes.
In April, Aldi apologised and promised to ensure cycle parking racks are free from supermarket stock in future after one customer found themselves unable to lock their bike due to a pile of compost grow bags outside their local Royston store.
Meanwhile, Lidl recently came in for criticism when the cycle racks at one of its London stores were filled with plants and compost for sale.
And last summer, customers at a newly opened Aldi store in Leamington Spa joked that the cycle racks “are definitely middle aisle bike stands” after discovering that they could be quite easily pulled out of the ground.
Having been left red-faced by the ordeal, Aldi quickly rectified the issue and confirmed the works to fix the stands to the ground had been completed shortly after concerns were raised.
The Tour’s route organisers have been fretting over the last hour or so, after a fire in Briançon – which the race is set to pass through today at the bottom of the descent of the Col de Montgenèvre – caused toxic fumes to engulf the Alpine city.
The blaze, and its side effects, prompted the local authority to order schools to close their windows, and was being tackled by 50 firefighters and 15 fire engines.
However, with the Tour about to cross the border back into France, less than 14km from Briançon, it was announced that the fire was under control, that the fumes had abated, and that the race could pass without any fuss. Which has prevented a few furrowed brows and headaches in the red car at the front, anyway.
As the Tour de France – a race that has always been firmly embedded in its nation’s wider social, political, and cultural consciousness – prepares to return to its homeland this afternoon, it does so at a particularly tetchy, tension-filled moment in France’s history, with the right-wing National Rally aiming for a majority in parliament following the first round of voting at the weekend.
And the Tour’s return to a potentially very different French political climate hasn’t escaped the attention of L’Équipe’s cartoonist Soulcié, who this morning depicted the peloton crossing back over into France only to be surrounded by RN posters and the news of their electoral success, prompting one rider to tell the rest: ‘Come on guys, speed up!’
Today's cartoon in L'Equipe by Soulcié as the Tour crosses back into France ("come on guys, let's speed up") pic.twitter.com/xAWkeGT5XY
— the Inner Ring (@inrng) July 2, 2024
Maybe, that’s why they were all riding so slowly yesterday…
A subsidiary of Giant has made an initial $20 million bid for the assets of Stages after the power meter brand ceased operations and laid off all its staff earlier this year.
Giant initially showed interest in purchasing a one-third share in Stages last year, the bike manufacturer’s board approving a bid of around $20 million, although negotiations fell through before Stages ceased operation and laid off all its staff in April.
Read more: > Giant bids to buy assets of bankrupt power meter brand Stages for $20 million
The Tour de France’s opening three days in Italy certainly lived up to their billing, featuring some brilliantly unpredictable, exciting racing, spectacular scenery, and Italy’s typically passionate tifosi.
But all things must pass, and the Tour finally heads back into France midway through today’s 140km stage between Pinerolo and Valloire – which also just so happens to be the race’s first excursion into the Alps (before returning in the third week for a much more prolonged, brutal showdown).
A long 40km drag will take the riders above 2,000m altitude for the first time this Tour, and to Sestriere (the scene of Lance Armstrong, 1999, and all that), before crossing the border at the Col de Montgenèvre.
Then, the Col du Galibier will take centre stage. The second-most used climb in the Tour’s history after the Tourmalet, the 2,642m-high, 23km-long monster will be tackled from its easier side, via the open, steady Col du Lautaret.
The final 8km to the top, however, are the steepest of the entire climb, and could prove decisive in the breakaway or maybe, just maybe, crack the GC battle wide open before the 19km fast descent to the finish in Valloire.
According to Strava, Thibaut Pinot set the KOM for this side of the climb on stage 18 of the 2019 Tour, which was won by Nairo Quintana, also in Valloire, at the height of Pinot-mania and just a day before the Frenchman’s tearful abandon with injury when the yellow jersey was within reach.
Pinot’s time that day for the 23km, 5.5 average gradient climb was 52.46, while Strava says the average pro takes just under 58 minutes to climb the Galibier’s southern side.
The average amateur? Well they take one hour, 50 minutes, and two seconds. Which would probably get me to the foot of the climb, if I’m honest…
I think I’ll just prefer watching them today.
Jasper Philipsen will start this morning’s stage of the Tour de France in Pinerolo this morning, his Alpecin-Deceuninck team have confirmed, after the reigning green jersey winner went down heavily in a high-speed crash with 2km to go during yesterday’s ride to Turin, scuppering his chances of taking the first sprint stage of the race.
His Alpecin teammate Jonas Rickaert, meanwhile, will also head into the Alps today after suffering a bruise on his leg in the same crash.
“Soon the fourth stage will start in the Tour de France with Jasper Philipsen, who crashed yesterday,” Alpecin-Deceuninck, who were also hampered by a late double puncture for Mathieu van der Poel yesterday (the world champion’s first puncture of the season, according to his team boss), announced this morning.
“Luckily our top sprinter had a good night and seems to have recovered well from the bruise and abrasion on the right buttock.
“Also Jonas Rickaert, who suffered a bruise on the right lower leg, is feeling better after treatment with ice and an anti-inflammatory. We start at full strength again this afternoon and Jasper and Jonas can recover a bit more today with the next sprint stage in mind.”
Speaking to the Belgian press after the stage, which saw him roll in in 118th place, six-time Tour stage winner Philipsen said: “The damage is not too bad considering the circumstances. I think I hit the ground at at least 60kph but luckily it was a good road.
“We were able to switch gears quite well after Mathieu's flat tyre, but then riders in front of us got caught up and I had no place to avoid them. That is a shame, especially because you miss the sprint and thus points for the green jersey.”
Alright, before we hit the Alps, just one more look at the reaction to Biniam Girmay’s magical stage win, this time courtesy of an understandably euphoric Intermarché-Wanty team car:
EMOTIONS!!! 🥹
Celebrating Biniam Girmay historic Tour de France victory in the team car 🥇🇪🇷
📸 @insta360#insta360#TDF2024pic.twitter.com/wF8AzU1W9o
— Intermarché-Wanty (@IntermarcheW) July 1, 2024
I take it they were happy about the win?
The tale of Dylan Groenewegen’s aero Batman beak has taken another bizarre turn (yes, really), after the Dutch champion revealed that the UCI ordered him to remove the much-derided nose cover mid-stage, before he sprinted to fifth place, bare nose hitting the breeze, behind Biniam Girmay in Turin.
And what’s even more bizarre – but not that surprising, considering the current state of high-level cycling tech – is that the aero beak, an add-on to Scicon Aeroscope glasses, is currently displayed on the eyewear and clothing manufacturer’s website…
… And, when it’s available, it can be purchased for just €350.
€350. For an ‘aero’ nose piece.
> A bridge too far? Scicon prices bizarre aero 'beak' at €350, as Dylan Groenewegen reveals UCI ordered him to remove nose cover during Tour de France stage
I think I need a lie-down…
Game’s gone.
I know it’s only the first Tuesday of the Tour de France, but today the peloton is getting ready for the first of two separate forays into the high Alps over the course of the next three weeks (those cruel, cruel taskmasters at ASO), including the not-too-insubstantial matter of a trek over the monstrous Col d Galibier, before a high-speed plunge to the finish in Valloire.
And, with Tadej Pogačar and Jonas Vingegaard already trading blows (and the occasional turn) on the roads of Bologna, it’s safe to say that the mind games have well and truly started between those two perennial yellow jersey rivals and their teams.
And with Visma-Lease a Bike’s much-vaunted Tour ‘Control Room’– basically a high-tech van the Dutch squad said would enable them to collect real-time data during the race and therefore “make the best tactical decisions, quickly and accurately” – banned from the race’s premises by the organisers, let’s just say that there’s been plenty of scope for some good-natured trolling.
Yesterday, Pogačar’s UAE Team Emirates squad gave their own take – complete with the not-so-subtle use of the Crédit Lyonnais yellow jersey lion – on Visma’s banned attempt to turn the Tour into a slightly sweatier version of Pro Cycling Manager:
Long day in the control room at #TDF2024🦁🛰️. #WeAreUAEpic.twitter.com/nKtQ9wcQ1J
— @UAE-TeamEmirates (@TeamEmiratesUAE) July 1, 2024
I don’t know about you, but give me a cuddly lion in cycling glasses over a glorified VAR truck and nerds banging on about ‘data collection and visualisation’ any day…
And UAE Team Emirates weren’t the only ones to stick the boot into Visma.
EF Education-EasyPost, who have now inherited the lion from UAE after Richard Carapaz skilfully slipped into yellow yesterday (becoming the first Ecuadorian to do so), also offered up their own variation on a Tour control room:
Hey @vismaleaseabike, do you like our control room?#RaceTVpic.twitter.com/DynBBHMdlB
— EF Pro Cycling (@EFprocycling) June 30, 2024
Ah, Visma, they keep making it so easy for everyone (apart from on the road, of course, where it really matters).
It says a lot about the Tour de France, and why it’s so compelling, that at the end of one of the most benign, unremarkable, even boring stages we’ve seen in years, history was made.
Cycling fans won’t remember much, if anything, of the opening 230km of yesterday’s soporific amble through northern Italy between Piacenza and Turin.
(Zac Williams/SWpix.com)
But they will remember that on 1 July 2024, on stage three of the Tour de France, Biniam Girmay beat the best sprinters in the world, a moment that has transcended the Tour and the sport (just one glance at the global press coverage confirms that) and one that will live long in the memory of cycling fans everywhere.
And that’s certainly the case in cycling-mad Eritrea, where I imagine the party is still continuing this morning.
That effect on his home country, and what stage three in Turin could mean for the next generation of budding Eritrean cyclists, was clearly on Girmay’s mind as he crossed the line a bike length ahead of Fernando Gaviria.
Let me open the door. pic.twitter.com/30olmGxTtT
— Biniam Girmay (@GrmayeBiniam) July 1, 2024
Speaking after the stage, the 24-year-old, whose almost constant use of ‘we’ underlines the collective effort which catapulted him to Tour success said: “There are a lot of obstacles, especially if you are an African rider. It’s not easy because you race in local races so you don’t have a lot of time to show your potential.
“Everything changed when [Daniel] Teklehaimanot wore the polka dot jersey [in 2015]. He showed everything possible that gave me a lot of positives that I could also be part of the Tour and win a stage.
“Today everyone will believe African riders can do everything.”
> Biniam Girmay makes African cycling history at Gent-Wevelgem
Reflecting on his upbringing and his father’s role in cultivating his love for cycling, which has now culminated in wins at the Tour and Giro d’Italia, as well as Gent-Wevelgem, Girmay added: “He would say come on guys, turn on the TV it’s time to watch the Tour de France. He always showed us how the race worked, how difficult it is, and that it is the number one sport in the world.
“I remember in 2011 when [Peter] Sagan won and I asked my father if it would be possible to be part of that one time and my father said: keep working hard and everything is possible.
“On sprint stages, we don't see a lot of black riders who can win stages. When we grow up, the mentality is that we just do it on the climbs, everyone has a slim body and less weight which means we are more suited to hard endurance races.
“For me, mentally I grew up as a sprinter with Cavendish and Sagan as idols. To win today is unbelievable and gives me a lot of motivation."
🇪🇷 ELELELELELELELELELELE 🇪🇷 #TDF2024pic.twitter.com/vWI54bN6Je
— Intermarché-Wanty (@IntermarcheW) July 1, 2024
And Girmay, who called on cycling’s top teams to branch out further afield when scouting young talent for what he says is now a “global” sport, is also clear about what his stage win means for Eritrean and African cycling.
“It means a lot personally for me but especially for the continent because it’s been a long time since a black African rider won in the Tour de France,” he said.
“That means a lot, especially for Eritrean cycling because we have a long history of cycling and we have the cycling blood. We know a lot about the Tour de France, so to win today was amazing.
“Before I came to France two weeks ago, every single day I went out training [at home in Eritrea, where he’s still based] they said they were waiting for the Tour de France and if I won one stage they would also celebrate there. Now, I don’t know what to expect, it’s going to be on fire.”
And thank goodness there were no unruly prosecco corks to dampen the celebrations this time…
I think it’s fair to say Biniam Girmay’s stage win at the Tour de France yesterday was one of the most universally popular victories the race has seen for years.
The superbly taken sprint triumph – a perfectly executed balance of precision, power, and speed amid the chaos that was yesterday’s run-in – ticked off, like so many of the pioneering 24-year-old’s successes over the past three years, a series of firsts.
A first Tour de France stage win for Girmay himself. A first Tour victory for his Intermarché-Wanty team. A first stage win on the sport’s biggest stage for Eritrea, and a first triumph on the sport’s biggest stage for East Africa and for black African cyclists.
So, it was perhaps fitting that the rider who is currently 34 stages to the good on the race’s record books was one of the happiest to heart about Girmay’s maiden Tour win.
“Is he the first Eritrean stage winner?” a beaming Mark Cavendish asked ITV4’s Daniel Friebe at his Astana team bus after the stage.
“Because Daniel [Teklehaimanot, Cavendish’s teammate at Dimension Data] had the [polka dot] jersey for one day.
“Oh, that’s brilliant, isn’t it? This race is so massive, cycling’s massive in Eritrea, that’s super good. Super good for him, for African cycling – he’s a legend, isn’t he? Very nice, very nice.”
(ASO/Charly Lopez)
While Cavendish was clearly happy to see Girmay and Eritrea strike gold for the first time at the Tour, a crash with 2km to go – while not bringing the former world champion down – scuppered his own chances of making history with a record-breaking 35th stage win in Turin.
“Yeah, we weren’t the only ones lucky to stay upright. I hear it, but I’m too little to see what’s going on, and I hear people in front of me going. And then I’m skidding and just waiting for someone to hit me from behind,” Cavendish said.
“But lucky we kind of got through. But we were way off, and with 2km to go you’re out of it. So it’s just lucky everybody’s okay.”
(Zac Williams/SWpix.com)
When asked about a number of mechanical issues he appeared to have during the stage, including a double wheel swap with 90km to go, the 39-year-old said: “I didn’t feel bad, but I don’t think anybody felt great today. I’ve always been fidgety, changing different stuff. But I’m not changing my cleats for once in my life, so it was okay.”
As we’ve all learned over the past 17 years, Cavendish fussing over his bike usually means he’s got his eyes on the prize. Though he’s just got to get over the massive Galibier this afternoon before he starts worrying about his cleat position again tomorrow…