1. Chris Froome confirmed as winner of 2011 Vuelta
Chris Froome has officially been awarded the 2011 Vuelta a España title as a result of Juan José Cobo’s doping ban. The result means he now has seven Grand Tour victories to his name, including Britain’s first.
Read more here
2. Driver "didn't see" cyclist crossing road before "completely avoidable" fatal collision
A driver who admitted she "just didn't see" a Cambridge cyclist crossing the road has pleaded guilty to causing death by careless driving. A police spokesman said the incident had been "completely avoidable".
Read more here
3. What was behind Rohan Dennis’s “reluctant” withdrawal from the Tour de France?
One of the most striking stories from our Thursday live blog was Rohan Dennis’s disappearance from the Tour de France. For a time, even his team didn’t know where he’d gone. It was reported that the world time trial champion climbed off at the feed zone, 80km into stage 12. Bahrain-Merida sports director Gorazd Stangelj ran back to speak to him, but he wouldn’t talk. Then he vanished...
Read more here
4. Rohan Dennis's Merida Time Warp TT - The time trial bike you're not going to see at the Tour de France
World time trial champion Rohan Dennis quit the Tour de France on stage 12, about 80km into the route, and a day before the individual time trial in which he would have expected to compete for the win. Even so, it would be a shame not to have a closer look at the Merida Warp TT bike he didn't ride...
Read more here
5. Keep it clean! The case of the disappearing cables on Tour de France race bikes
Nowadays, even some of the most entry-level bikes you can pickup for a few hundred quid often have some of the gear and brake cables routed through the frame - and it's been a good few years since we've seen fully external cables on a pro bike at the Tour de France. We've been scanning some of the pro team camps at the Tour to find out how many have consigned cables to the past, and who's still not afraid to bare all...
Read more here
6. Tour de France pros on Strava: the definitive list of who to follow
It's the first Tour de France rest day at the time of writing, and while the riders take a brief chill pill we've had some time to take our eyes off the TV to compile a list of every rider with a Strava profile!
Read more here
7. New Colnago V3Rs launched - lighter, stiffer and more compliant
Colnago has launched the new V3Rs, the successor to the bike first launched in 2014, designed with input from Ferrari, and updated in 2017.
Read more here
8. Tour de France 2019: eight of the most unique pro stems in the peloton
Long or short? Nice and relaxed or super slammed? The humble stem is often an afterthought for us mortals; but pro riders can be pernickety, which means there is a surprising amount of variation going on with the stems of the peloton...
Read more here
9. Is this the end for helmetcam footage? Right to privacy outweighs recording journeys in case of collision says EU data watchdog
Concerns over individuals’ right to privacy outweigh capturing footage by dashcam or helmet camera to provide evidence in the event of a road traffic collision, according to the independent body set up by the European Union last year to police the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
Read more here
10. Jeremy Vine criticised for claiming taxi driver was at fault in near miss with cyclist
Mr. Vine is a keen cyclist as you will all know, and also keen to call out bad driving and post the evidence on social media armed with his action camera; however on this occasion not everyone had sympathy for the cyclist who Vine recorded experiencing a near miss with a taxi. The cyclist rode out on a crossing and failed to spot the taxi coming from her left, with the driver swerving to avoid at the last minute. Vine claims the cab driver "saw her a mile out", to which not everyone agreed...
Read more here
That's not true of identifiable public spending. For balance, you'd have to note the much greater contribution to the Exchequer made by London too ...
Driving is a right embedded in the Maggie Carter (sic)...
I will confess to not having watched the programme yet but I don't think it helps that this article keeps referring to some of these bikes as ...
Perhaps the batteries on his e-clubs and e-caddy ran out while on the course, and he had to drag an 80kg trolley with him?
Once again vehicles take priority. Hardly surprised these days and only goes on to highlight how little the council's and gvt genuinely care for...
I think it will help - the second fixing point is a sleeve, and the bracket then clamps to it. This means the bracket can still define itself...
They can be remarkably honest about the consequences of using their vehicles though https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H8GHiY6jmR8
There appears to be a bollard at a 45º angle mostly obscured by the bins - presumably they were able to remove that and then drive through the gap.
Have to say as a long time and multiple (7 bikes) user of Camapg - I have about half the fleet on genuine rivetted Campag chains and half on SRAM...
There is also the BBC's own complaints process, which is utterly useless, but it might be good to submit a complaint there to show Ofcom that you...