British Cycling has today announced the long lists of riders who will hope to represent the country in the first home UCI Road World Championships since 1982 in Yorkshire later this month.
With the country dropping out of the top 10 of the UCI Men’s World Rankings just last month, there are only six places in the Men’s Elite Road Race and 15 riders vying for those spots, plus three hoping for the two places in the individual time trial, among them Geraint Thomas, who has made that his late-season target.
The country has also qualified six riders for the Women’s Elite road race, with 13 named on the long list, and five for the two time trial slots.
Great Britain Cycling Team Performance Director Stephen Park said: “To compete in a home road world championship event is an opportunity which is likely to only happen once in a rider’s career, and it’s fair to say everyone – riders and staff – are looking forward to Yorkshire 2019.
“The last time the event was held in this country was in Goodwood in 1982 during which the Great Britain Cycling Team were victorious in the elite women’s road race with Mandy Jones taking the rainbow jersey. Keith Lambert, our current senior academy men’s road coach, was the highest British male finisher in 45th, and I know he will relish the chance to be Director Sportif on his home roads with our under-23 men’s squad.
“Yorkshire has firmly established itself as one of the leading counties for cycling in Britain and it was incredible to see the fans line the roads at the Grand Depart of the Tour de France in 2014, and the significant success of the Tour de Yorkshire in subsequent years. There’s no doubt the road world championships will match this success, and the squad will be proud to race in the Great Britain Cycling Team jersey in front of the home crowd.
“While it’s too soon to confirm our final squads, looking at the longlist for each category, we do have some very real medal chances across the board and we look forward to announcing the final line-up in due course.”
It's worth noting that while the championships have not been held in Great Britain for nearly 40 years, they return here in just four years' time when Glasgow hosts the inaugural multi-disciplinary World Cycling Championships (although the way things are going at the moment, whether Scotland will still be part of the UK by then is anyone's guess).
Yorkshire riders are expected to lead the country’s challenge in both elite road races – Rotherham’s Ben Swift, the reigning national road champion and Otley’s Lizzie Deignan, who won the rainbow jersey in Richmond, Virginia in 2015.
With the long lists that have been announced today, that does raise the question of which of the riders named might be best placed to support them and whether all the eggs should be thrown into one basket to protect them – or whether a rider or two capable of a solo attack should also make the cut.
You can find full details, including the long lists for the Under 23 and Junior races, here.
https://www.britishcycling.org.uk/gbcyclingteam/article/20190903-gb-cycl...
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26 comments
Erm... Nothing about it here. Your article still says "Johnson, ..., was taken into custody at the 83rd Precinct station house, but had not been charged as of Monday evening."
I do like the idea of the Hiplok Ankr, I have had to leave a couple of ground and wall anchors at rented properties over the years.
Hopefully it withstands attack better than Hiplok's Z-Lok "armoured" cable ties!
Now admittedly they were never intended to hold off a determined attack, but I was using Z-Lok ties to deter front wheel and saddle theft (with a decent lock through the frame /rear wheel) on a bike (BSO) locked up outside Manchester Piccadilly all day.
On my return, the bike and all its parts are still there -- so far so good -- but when I came to remove the Z-lock on the front wheel, one of the prongs on the little fork/key broke off. I was able to bend the tie at one of the holes folding it back on itself once, twice, thr … snap!
The plastic outer and the inner steel core both broke in less than 2 seconds with no tools, and no prior nefarious knowledge of how to defeat them.
The bird was just being a patriotic Australian, performing his national duty to stamp out the scourge of active-travel.
With the US story, neither the screwdriver-slasher nor the mad-max wrong-way driver sound like upstanding citizens. Both of them had about 40 prior convictions! But I agree with brooksby. Plus, Mr vigilante driver could easily have killed multiple bystanders, what with driving on the wrong side of the road and crashing into parked cars.
"Johnson, who has reportedly been arrested on 40 previous occasions" Well he seems like a reasonable chap, I for one believe his side of the story such a shame we can't hear the other persons point of view.
Screwdriver. Jeep Grand Cherokee. I'll be honest: I'm not convinced that was an entirely proportionate response...
The pashleys are available to see on Morgans website and online.. they look ace in a retro sort of way.
Let's not turn this into another leave/remain discussion, that does the (rather awesome) bike a disservice.
I was expecting a tricycle based on Morgan's expertise with 3 wheelers.
Morgan + Pashley, that's going to be another backwards-looking low-tech retro effort, right? I suppose that's the best Brexit England can manage though.
The beauty of Britain is that we can do things such as wonderful hand crafted goods like Morgans and Pashleys, but also lead the world in F1 manufacturing.
True enough. What we seem to lack is the wherewithal to build large companies. The UK's number of Fortune 500 companies goes down every year. We build great niche companies like ARM with world class expertise, but lack either the skills or culture to develop them further before they are snapped up by foreign interests.
Boris? Shouldn't you be in Parliament about now??
Australian magpies, otherwise known as your sprint coach! I’ve had a few exploratory swoops in the last couple of weeks, but it’s early days. Once breeding season kicks off in earnest they’ll get more serious. At least it’s some justification for mandatory helmets for the next six weeks.
Didn't you read the article? It attacks the face, not covered by the helmet.
I'm just rather surprised, give the attitude of the authorities to cyclists, that they killed the bird. Mind you, it did take 40+ attacks; if it had been pedestrians they'd have shot it after the first.
in 40 plus years of cycling, I’ve never had one go for the face. I guess the bird world has its random psychos like humans do.
Didn't you read the article? It states:
...the bird in this case was displaying greater aggression than is typically the case, saying that it was “swooping underneath helmets ... to attack people's faces,"...
As in, only that particular bird attacked people's faces. It's dead now, so no face pecking to worry about anymore
They will attack anywhere they can. My son received a nice triangular beak imprint about an inch below his eye once when he was about 4 years old. They learn to recognise faces and if they know you're not a threat they will leave you alone. Just don't stray into unknown territory!
a helmet, shades and one of these should be adequate:
IMG_1727.JPG
I think it looks good.
Roller brakes though, that discussion could open up a whole new can of worms.
I think I’d go for the 3 speed, sturmey hub brakes instead of Shimano rollers.
But why put a dynamo light on the front, but not the back!
https://www.pashley.co.uk/bikes/bicycles/pashley-morgan-3.php
Jaguar & Sky/Pinerallo - changed the shape of those Tour Winning bikes! There's a decent documentary on just how involved they were in designing the F8/F10
Other than writing 'Morgan' on a bike, how can a car brand collaborate on the design of a bike? We've seen this type of collaboration before, usually on high-end carbon stealth machines, but as far as I can tell, this too just consists of sticking a Ferarri/McLaren logo on a bike.
Advanced composite expertise springs to mind, that's transferable to a lot of use cases. Ditto aerodynamics, material knowledge (e.g. alloys), manufacturing techniques (e.g. welding, machining, gluing) and so on. Plenty of scope for useful interaction.
The Specialized / McLaren project was an example of the first, apparently using McLarens composite knowledge to help with a weight reduction without sacrificing stiffness (according the blurb at the time).
That is a stunning bike! (as seen on the Morgan website)
I think these two companies might have done a little bit more together than the usual car industry 'buy a carbon frame, paint it and put our badge on it' nonsense.
You've got Morgan and Pashley and Reynolds all together in the Midlands/Worcestershire, all of whom could appear to have contributed to this.
I would love to own the '8' bike, even if I wouldn't know quite what to do with it.
I know what you mean, I really like the 8, but it's probably totally impractical for most of the riding I do, and a bit expensive for a town/pub bike. The kind of thing that one day I'd love to find a builder at Bespoked to build for me.
Most car manufacturers have a heritage of bicycle manufacture. Car manufacturers have huge engineering resources, and if they apply themselves can design a bicycle. Volkswagen have a tilting cargo trike coming from their commercial vehicle division, GM have a new company called ARĪV making folding commuter bikes.
Apparently Morgan did collaborate on the design, which might mean they’ve had input into just the mudguards, chainguard and grips or maybe it’s more than cosmetic. But having two companies that trade on their heritage collaborating, it’s not a bad thing.