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'Tesla lanes' could see cyclists sharing bus lanes with electric cars; Cyclist knocked off by driver following dispute; Incredible collection of 2,300 cycling jerseys; Riding 16,000 miles during a pandemic; Donald Trump on Strava? + more on the live blog

It's Thursday and Dan Alexander is in the hot seat for all your live blog needs...
14 January 2021, 16:44
'When you go over the bonnet whilst dressed in Lycra at least you won’t have to inhale any nasty fumes': Your thoughts on 'Tesla lanes'
14 January 2021, 16:28
EF Education-Nippo extend deal with Cannondale to 2023
cannondale ef pro cycling bikes2

The boys in pink will be riding Cannondale bikes until at least 2023 after the bike manufacturer extended its deal with EF Education-Nippo. The team has used Cannondale bikes since 2015 and had a spell under their banner between 2015 and 2017. 

"At the core, the relationship with Cannondale is about evolution and revolution. We want to make progress on the roads, off the roads, and ultimately keep pushing the boundaries of our sport outward," said EF Educatiion-Nippo CEO Jonathan Vaughters.

"We want to work with Cannondale to highlight the beauty of the elite level but also make the sport more accessible everywhere. We want more people riding bikes with smiles on their faces."

14 January 2021, 16:26
Teamwork makes the dream work

14 January 2021, 15:52
Remco Evenepoel's return delayed by pelvis injury
Evenepoel Lombardia crash, LaPresse, RCS Sport.JPG

Remco Evenepoel's return to racing has been delayed by an ongoing "small problem" with the pelvis injury he sustained in his season-ending crash at Il Lombardia last August. The Belgian, who doesn't turn 21 for another two weeks, admitted during a virtual press conference at Deceuninck-Quick-Step's training camp in Calpe that his recovery is taking longer than expected. 

"There were some small difficulties, all part of the rehab process. To be honest, we don't know yet when I'll be able to restart because we slowed the comeback down a bit to give my body time to get ready to be 100 per cent, " Evenepoel explained.

"I'm not a doctor so I don't know the specific words but it's just a bit of pain in the area where the fractures were so sitting down on a saddle for a few hours is still hard. It needs to be fixed before being 100% on a bike."

Evenepoel has taken the pro cycling world by storm earning the label of one of the sport's most exciting young talents. Despite the setback, the 20-year-old still expects to race his first Grand Tour at the Giro d'Italia in May.

14 January 2021, 15:42
Tough day at the office...
14 January 2021, 15:09
'Tesla lanes' could see cyclists sharing bus lanes with electric cars

Cambridge Cycling Campaign highlighted this new initiative from Cambridgeshire County Council which means drivers of electric cars are now allowed to drive in the bus lane on Elizabeth Way. The council has used an Experimental Traffic Regulation Order (ETRO) which means the scheme can run for up to 18 months while it is monitored and assessed. However, many cyclists have pointed out the potential dangers of allowing cars in a space usually reserved for buses, motorcyclists and cyclists.

The Cambridge Cycling Campaign wrote on its website: "Electric cars are still cars. They take up a lot of space on the road, may endanger people who are cycling (especially as they travel near silently) and will surely congest a facility that is meant to help public transport function more smoothly. This is a dreadful precedent to set, which will lead to the destruction of public transport priority and will further deteriorate already poor conditions for cycling."

Cambrdige County Council has invited the public to provide comments and objections on the scheme by emailing: policyandregulation [at] cambridgeshire.gov.uk 

14 January 2021, 14:10
Sam Bennett hoping Mark Cavendish can help teach him 'how to deal with pressure'
New Oakley Sunglasses Sam Bennett ASO GOMEZSPORT (SWPix.com).JPG

Sam Bennett could have been forgiven for raising an eyebrow when Deceuninck-Quick-Step confirmed that Mark Cavendish was returning to the team for 2021. Cav enjoyed three typically succesful years with the Belgian outfit, winning three Tour stages as well as five in one Grand Tour at the 2013 Giro. However, Bennett doesn't feel threatened by his return and is instead hoping to tap into the 35-year-old's mentality and experience.

"He’s a guy that’s dealt with expectation. He’s a guy, if he came away with two stages in one Grand Tour people would say it’s a bad Grand Tour for him so he set the bar really high for himself," Bennett said in a virtual press conference from the team's training camp in Spain.

"So just learn from his experience, his mindframe and how he approaches the big races. I don’t know if I can top 2020, which was such an incredible season, but I would like to get some more stages at Le Tour, especially as this year’s parcours is more sprinter-friendly. I would also like to get a one-day WorldTour win, it’s something that’s missing from my palmares and I hope to tick it off this year."

Cav's mechanic posted this on Instagram earlier, so have a sneak peak at this beauty...

14 January 2021, 13:54
'Ongoing rise' in active travel in West Yorkshire as trips on cycle route up 90%
oxon travel cycle lane picture 2 - via twitter.PNG

The Telegraph & Argus reports that West Yorkshire experienced a cycling boom in 2020 with the number of people using the Canal Road cycleway, between Bradford and Shipley, up by over 90% compared to November 2019. Last year, 15.5km of segregated cycle lanes were built in West Yorkshire using the emergency active travel funding. And, at a meeting of West Yorkshire Combined Authority's Transport Committee on Friday, members were shown a report which suggests the new schemes are offering good value for money.

It reported: "Although detailed monitoring and evaluation of active travel schemes in a monetised form is an emerging science, initial figures from across the UK are helpful in providing evidence that such investment provides value for money. 

"The Department for Transport’s own Active Mode Appraisal Toolkit includes several worked examples to demonstrate how these various benefits, including reduced congestion, reduced emissions, public health  benefits and road traffic collision reduction, accrue.

"For example a scheme on Clifton Road in Bristol resulted in £1.80 of benefit for every £1 spent. These figures are heavily dependent upon the number of cyclists which use the scheme, and the increase in ridership demonstrated over the last year shows that there is appetite for a significant increase in the number of cyclists if schemes which enable safe, utility cycling for all users are implemented."

14 January 2021, 13:37
Rome wasn't built in a day...and neither it seems was Cycle Superhighway 8

Cycle Superhighway 8 (CS8) is finally getting some segregation...ten years after it first opened. Better late than never I guess. The route runs from Chelsea Bridge to Wandsworth Town Centre and will soon (hopefully) have new sections of cycle lane with barriers or wands. The key new sections can be seen in the tweet above but include a 1.5km stretch on Battersea Park Road which will have 250m of current car parking removed to make way for a mandatory widened cycle lane with wands. A 20mph speed limit is also to be introduced.

In 2018, a lorry driver was handed a nine-month suspended sentence after admitting to causing the death of a pregnant schoolteacher cycling to work when he failed to indicate at the junction of Grovesnor Road and Chelsea Bridge.

14 January 2021, 12:30
Sir Chris Hoy thought knighthood was a wind-up
Sir Chris Hoy podium London 2012 (copyright britishcycling.org.uk)

There's an amusing story in the Daily Record today as Sir Chris Hoy recalls being phoned about receiving a knighthood. After the letter got sent to his old address in Edinburgh, Hoy took a call. "They said, ‘This is so and so from Buckingham Palace’ and I thought, ‘It’s one of my mates, this a wind-up.' I said, ‘Oh yeah’ and they said, ‘I wondered if you got your letter?’ I said, ‘No, I didn’t get a letter’ and he said, ‘Oh well, we are writing to offer you a knighthood’.

"I was about to go ‘Yeah right, sling your hook pal.’ Then my wife Sarra who was sitting next to me said, ‘It’s real.’ I then went, ‘Oh, I would love to, sorry I didn’t reply.’ So I almost told him to take a running jump.”

Hoy was knighted in 2009 after winning three gold medals at the Beijing Olympics in 2008. At London 2012, he won two more golds to become Britain's most successful Olympian with six golds.

14 January 2021, 12:00
Cyclist driven at and knocked off bike by motorist following dispute
Market Place Bungay (Street View)

Suffolk Police are appealing for information after a cyclist was assaulted by a motorist who drove at the victim, knocking him off his bike. The cyclist, a man in his 20s, was riding along Trinity Street in Bungay between 7pm and 7.30pm last Thursday when he was cut- up by a driver in a black, soft-top convertible. When the victim caught up with the motorist in Market Place and challenged him on his driving the suspect drove his car into the cyclist, knocking him off his bike.

The driver of the car, possibly a three-door Mercedes, is described as a white man of heavy build in his 40s or 50s. The suspect drove off leaving the cyclist with elbow, knee and hand injuries.

Anyone with information is asked to call the Crime Coordination Team, quoting the reference: 1724/21.

14 January 2021, 11:03
The man called Merckx with a collection of 2,300 cycling jerseys

With a name like Ton Merckx, the 55-year-old from Eindhoven was always going to be a cycling fan... The son of a former pro racer (not Eddy) who was also a cycling fanatic in the 50s and 60s, Merckx has taken his love of the sport to another level by collecting more than 2,300 cycling jerseys. The jerseys are stored at his house with 1,100 hanging in wardrobes and the rest in boxes...Among the famous jerseys he has a Molteni and Peugeot-Michelin-BP and top of Merckx's wish list is a Giro d'Italia maglia rosa.

Ton explained to PEZ Cycling News how he collects the jerseys: "In the past I wrote around 150 letters every winter to cyclists for jerseys, receiving around 70 answers of which 40 would be positive, It was hard to find addresses but phonebooks and national cycling unions were a good help.

"At the moment you can’t get any addresses because of privacy laws, but Facebook and the internet give me the opportunity to do some research and achieve similar results as in the past. When I visit races I never ask cyclists if they can help me on a jersey, you wouldn’t go to a building site and ask a builder to have his shirt! I wait until the end of the season."

14 January 2021, 09:59
Trump to join Strava?
14 January 2021, 08:49
Cyclist rides 16,000 miles visiting 43 countries during Covid-19 pandemic

 Nil Cabutí, a cyclist from Catalonia, shared his incredible story with Spanish newspaper El País... The engineer was originally planning to cycle from Barcelona to Singapore, however a few days into the adventure the pandemic ended that ambition while he was in Italy. Instead, he went on a spontaneous European tour, travelling 25,711km in 306 days through 43 countries.

When Italy closed its borders, Cabutí headed north through Switzerland and Germany to the Scandinavian countries. "I spent 95% of the trip alone," he told El País. 

"I soon realised that it would be impossible to get to Singapore. In Slovenia, things were as bad as in Italy, and in Croatia they wouldn’t let me cross the border at any of the 10 border control points I turned up at. It was March and they were stopping all the cars at the police checkpoints, but they didn’t stop me.

"I didn’t get to see a lot of things. Amsterdam was like a ghost town, and I did the Camino de Santiago [pilgrimage route in Spain] without being able to enjoy the anthropological aspect of it."

Despite much of Europe having travel restrictions during the trip, one of the only times he was stopped by police was in Paris. When asked by officers to return home, he replied: "I’m already going home."

The hardest part of the trip was finding places to stay and Cabutí adapted his routine to spend the first hour of each day looking for a hotel for the following night. "I had booked hotels through Booking.com, but when I arrived, they were closed. I had already paid, but they told me they couldn’t let me stay. People were afraid of Covid-19.

"One day, a man had to give me some cans of tuna fish and toast at a gas station because Italian supermarkets close on Sundays, I couldn’t buy anything!"

Dan is the road.cc news editor and joined in 2020 having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Dan has been at road.cc for four years and mainly writes news and tech articles as well as the occasional feature. He has hopefully kept you entertained on the live blog too.

Never fast enough to take things on the bike too seriously, when he's not working you'll find him exploring the south of England by two wheels at a leisurely weekend pace, or enjoying his favourite Scottish roads when visiting family. Sometimes he'll even load up the bags and ride up the whole way, he's a bit strange like that.

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36 comments

Avatar
jerv | 3 years ago
0 likes

I'm a bit late to this, however I don't think that in the bus lane that teslas are allowed in isn't an issue. Here there is cycle provision on the footway, and it is plenty wide enough. The bus lane is a bus lane, it allowed cycles in it because it would be stupid to not (personally I think that bus lanes should't be signed as allowing cycles, and instead by default allow cycles unless specifiy prohibited). Where there is no cycle provision on the footway and instead it is part of the bus lane, the bus lane has to be wider, again in these situations allowing Electric vechiles into the bus lane isn't an issue.

Where it would be an issue is where it is a bus lane with no cycle provision, in this situation cycles pratcially have to use the bus lane, with any overtaking traffic (such as busses) having to change into the unrestricted lane. In these situations limited the amount of traffic in the lane is better, such as not allowing Electric Vechicles.

The biggest issue I see with it is that fancy people with fancy electric cars may disregard saftey when using these lanes to undertake other traffic, that may lead to collosions at junctions with other traffic turning left.

Avatar
Jenova20 | 3 years ago
2 likes

Electric cars in cycle lanes...An accident waiting to happen.

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GMBasix replied to Jenova20 | 3 years ago
2 likes

Jenova20 wrote:

Electric cars in cycle lanes...An accident waiting to happen.

No such thing as an accident.

This is a deliberate policy; and electric car drivers deliberately choose to drive their cars.  A collision will be the result of a failure of a deliberate policy &/or the failure of the driver to choose to do so safely.

In a minority of cases, the standard of cycling might be below that which is required, although that is in a space that was once more restrictive and therefore more tolerant of cyclists who dared to wobble.

I recommend cyclists ride in primary position, and possibly two abreast through the priority lanes.  There is no requirement for buses, taxis or Teslas to pass within the lane; to do so is likely to be unsafe, and there is another lane available to pass.

Avatar
Captain Badger replied to GMBasix | 3 years ago
3 likes

GMBasix wrote:

.....

In a minority of cases, the standard of cycling might be below that which is required, although that is in a space that was once more restrictive and therefore more tolerant of cyclists who dared to wobble.
...

Quite right. As a driver, I am perfectly capable of mitigating the risks associated with inexperienced cyclists around me, simply by observing the HWC. Indeed any driver who is unable to take account of people on bikes has no business on the road.

Avatar
brooksby replied to GMBasix | 3 years ago
1 like

GMBasix wrote:

I recommend cyclists ride in primary position, and possibly two abreast through the priority lanes.  There is no requirement for buses, taxis or Teslas to pass within the lane; to do so is likely to be unsafe, and there is another lane available to pass.

Nothing so relaxing as riding along in a bus lane, with a double-decker bus about three feet from your rear wheel...

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wtjs | 3 years ago
1 like

The story of the nutter Mercedes driver in Bungay confirms my impression that no good comes of accosting these drivers- they're only going to run you down for impertinence. Just concentrate on getting the number and report it!

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Captain Badger replied to wtjs | 3 years ago
1 like

wtjs wrote:

The story of the nutter Mercedes driver in Bungay confirms my impression that no good comes of accosting these drivers- they're only going to run you down for impertinence. Just concentrate on getting the number and report it!

Quite. Much as I am a fan of Cycling Mikey and his exploits, his policy of confronting drivers and conversing wth them carries its own risks - risks I will say that are due to drivers behaviours, but they are risks none the less.

Avatar
wtjs | 3 years ago
7 likes

I am greatly opposed to this stupid idea of allowing a load of psychopath electric BMW drivers, and their ilk, into cycle lanes. 'Well, I hit him, but it doesn't count because I have an electric vehicle'.

PS I should have specifically included Tesla drivers in there with the usual suspects- I just haven't seen many of them yet, but the indications are that they tend to suffer from the same disorder

Avatar
Philh68 replied to wtjs | 3 years ago
13 likes

The entire history of the car revolves around the absurdity of false privilege giving you the right to get wherever faster than anyone else. The idea of electric cars receiving favourable access to special purpose lanes is just kicking that can of selfish entitlement further down the road.

It's the wet dream of Motordom, grant motorists privileged access to lanes intended for transit that would otherwise hinder motor cars (cycle lanes) or be hindered by it (bus lanes) thereby removing their value to those groups and claiming the space for private car users. If it were a movie it'd be called the empire strikes back…

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Hirsute | 3 years ago
1 like

How do you know a car is an electric car? Once a car gets to a certain speed, the road surface noise and wind noise can be louder than ICE noise. Or will there be lots of cameras to monitor things?

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Philh68 replied to Hirsute | 3 years ago
5 likes

Facial recognition, for the smug look on the drivers face.

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Steve K | 3 years ago
2 likes

And people got annoyed with Boris Johnson cycling 7 miles from home...

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eburtthebike replied to Steve K | 3 years ago
0 likes

Mis-post

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brooksby | 3 years ago
2 likes

I didn't realise that Bungay was a real place!  I'd aheard it before and always assumed it was made up by Harry Hill, like Swaffham.

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TheBillder replied to brooksby | 3 years ago
3 likes

Swaffham is real too. You need to become as one with your inner East Anglian.

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brooksby replied to TheBillder | 3 years ago
1 like

It's a part of the country to which I have never ever been, tbh.

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TheBillder replied to brooksby | 3 years ago
1 like

I recommend you give it a try - lovely scenery especially around the Broads and the north Norfolk coast.

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Andski808 replied to brooksby | 3 years ago
1 like

Swaffham is really real. It’s in Norfolk. See also Diss and Eye. 

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mdavidford replied to Andski808 | 3 years ago
1 like

And not forgetting Trunch.

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maviczap replied to brooksby | 3 years ago
3 likes
brooksby wrote:

I didn't realise that Bungay was a real place!  I'd aheard it before and always assumed it was made up by Harry Hill, like Swaffham.

Cycling hotspot. There's regular time trials on the Bungay bypass run by several clubs in the area

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Hirsute replied to brooksby | 3 years ago
0 likes

Little Snoring, Great Snoring

Avatar
eburtthebike replied to brooksby | 3 years ago
3 likes

brooksby wrote:

I didn't realise that Bungay was a real place!  I'd aheard it before and always assumed it was made up by Harry Hill, like Swaffham.

My favourite is Nempnet Thrubwell.

Avatar
Daclu Trelub replied to eburtthebike | 3 years ago
1 like

Wasn't Nempnet Thrubwell a well-known Thespian of the 1930s? He often had a small cheque he would ask his landlady to cash.

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brooksby replied to eburtthebike | 3 years ago
1 like

eburtthebike wrote:

brooksby wrote:

I didn't realise that Bungay was a real place!  I'd aheard it before and always assumed it was made up by Harry Hill, like Swaffham.

My favourite is Nempnet Thrubwell.

That's my father in laws favourite placename! Became a bit of a family joke. And my kids don't believe that it really exists...

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IanMK replied to brooksby | 3 years ago
0 likes

Went to Sea Palling once. Yes we did suggest they had put the space in the wrong place. I think it's quite close to Horsey.

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Sniffer replied to IanMK | 3 years ago
0 likes

Dull.

I have cycled through Dull (in Perthshire).  Twinned with Boring now.

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Dingaling replied to Sniffer | 3 years ago
0 likes

And then there is Averham. The problem is in the pronunciation!

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Achtervolger replied to Sniffer | 3 years ago
0 likes

Netherthong and Upperthong, near Holmfirth.

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Philh68 replied to brooksby | 3 years ago
0 likes

You should see some of our Aussie place names 😁 sadly they have sold  out of the printed map, but they're all real.

https://marvellousmaps.com/australia

Avatar
bobbinogs | 3 years ago
8 likes

Ref: Cyclist touring 43 countries in a pandemic: Nil Cabutí, you really are a tit.

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