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Driver slams police’s “disgusting” failure to prosecute cyclist who collided with her car – and broke his leg; Annemiek van Vleuten’s Sonic the Hedgehog bottle missing tribute at the Vuelta; Cycle to Vote day + more on the live blog

It’s Thursday and Ryan Mallon’s back with all the latest news, views, and nonsense from the cycling world. Once he remembers how the live blog works, that is…

SUMMARY

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04 May 2023, 08:09
Angry driver - image cc licensed by Jon Collier on Flickr.jpg
Driver complains to local paper over police’s “disgusting” failure to prosecute cyclist who collided with her car – and broke his leg

Since it’s my first live blog shift in over a week (it’s great to be back…), I thought I’d start the morning by flicking through the latest cycling (or anti-cycling?) stories filling up the pages of this week’s local newspapers, and this complaint to the Swindon Advertiser certainly caught my attention…

The story centres around a collision between a motorist and a cyclist on a busy major roundabout, which left the rider with a broken leg. Why do we know this? Because just under four months after the collision, the motorist has contacted the Advertiser to complain about the police’s “shocking” failure to prosecute the cyclist for damaging her car.

According to the driver, the collision happened on the Wiltshire town’s Gablecross roundabout on 9 January, when she claims the cyclist hit the side of her vehicle.

Gablecross junction, Swindon (Swindon Borough Council)

“I heard the most horrendous noise and felt a bang on the passenger side of my car and I was horrified at the time,” she told the Advertiser.

“I was breathalysed and it showed nothing, but the police didn’t take a statement off of me at all and purely went from the dash cam footage.

“It is disgusting as the cyclist was riding illegally with no lights on at all.”

Wiltshire Police, who did not take action against either party, also confirmed that the 19-year-old cyclist involved in the crash suffered a serious leg injury.

Our source doesn’t come across as entirely sympathetic with regards to the cyclist’s injuries, telling the Advertiser that she had to fork out £700 to pay for the damage to her car, in order to protect her insurance policy’s no claims bonus.

“I want awareness to be put out there that this sort of thing can occur,” she added.

“I’m concerned that the people who use bikes for work don’t spend money on protective clothing and lights. He wasn’t even wearing a helmet, dark clothing, it is reckless.

“I’m upset and I’m more wary of driving now and it’s something that could have been totally avoided.

“The police response is absolutely shocking and no prosecution has happened, and instead, I’ve had to fork out for my own car’s insurance. I have found the whole experience harrowing.”

 

 

 

 

04 May 2023, 16:29
“I wonder why she hasn’t availed herself of this excellent service and chosen to go whining to the newspapers instead?”

On the subject of this morning’s local newspaper botherer:

Live blog comments 4 May 2023

Meanwhile, road.cc reader HoldingOn made an astute observation concerning the driver’s criticism of the injured cyclist for not wearing a helmet:

Live blog comments 4 May 2023 2

Good point.

And no, I’m not acknowledging the Star Wars references in the comments, no matter what day it is…

04 May 2023, 16:01
gwr main
The good, the bad, and the faffing about: Your experience taking bikes on trains

We asked for your experiences taking bikes on trains, and you duly delivered (albeit without much storage space on the journey).

Here are some of your thoughts on taking bikes on trains in the UK:

Awavey was one of our more positive readers, concluding that “Greater Anglia is always pretty good, only know a few times when reserved spaces meant friends had to wait for the next train. I've still not tried with any of the new trains so don't know what they're like yet, (or seen any cyclists on board them either) though I suspect the Dunwich Dynamo riders would disagree.”

Global Nomad said they “occasionally had to use trains to return into London after mechanicals out in the countryside – never had a problem when out of rush hour. Buy ticket, take bike on local train.

“Only problem was when the trains were cancelled and the replacement bus service refused to let me on the bus. Ended up struggling to another station on a different line.”

Secret_squirrel, meanwhile, reckoned editor Jack’s attempt to store his bike was a “bit naff”.

They continued: “Absolutely no problem getting that bike hung properly. Are they a bit crap and sub-optimal, absolutely, but not for someone whose fit enough to ride a decent graveller.  Those tyres are narrow enough to fit as well. Just laziness IMO.”

However, Dnnnnn replied: “Pretty sure you couldn't hang that bike on the new(ish) GWR or LNER Hitachi trains. The rims are far too deep for the silly hooks.

“There's also the issue of expecting smaller and less strong people to lift relatively heavy and cumbersome objects off the ground and manoeuvre them in tight spaces. I regularly encounter people who struggle with this, not helped by LNER (not GWR) leaving of the two doors to the compartment locked.”

And finally, David9694 added: “It's easiest if you can stick to commuter/ local type trains. Problems arise these days because on long distance/express trains, like on the GWR main line, the guard's van has disappeared and not been replaced.

“No issue on GWR local trains (Portsmouth-Cardiff) or South West or Southern. In practice, there is no-one around to give you a hard time.”

04 May 2023, 15:37
Pro cyclist Imogen Cotter launches road safety campaign, says “drivers see cyclists as an object that interferes with their journey”
04 May 2023, 15:12
Red jersey Marianne Vos sprints to second Vuelta stage win

Cycling, as Gary Lineker never said, is a simple game. 150 riders take on a grippy, complicated 133km in the middle of a week-long stage race, the best in the world launch attack after attack in the closing kilometres, and in the end, Marianne Vos wins.

The greatest cyclist who’s ever lived wrote yet another line in her illustrious, and now weighty, tome, this afternoon in Guadalajara, easily following the pace on the series of climbs that defined the fourth stage of this year’s Vuelta Femenina, before keeping a low profile as the likes of Demi Vollering, Liane Lippert, and Chloe Dygert launched attacks on the fast run-in.

Vos, wearing the red jersey, then timed her sprint to perfection to comfortably beat Emma Norsgaard and Marlen Reusser for her second stage in a row, extending her lead over Dygert to 25 seconds in the process.

With the first summit finish of the Vuelta coming at the 4.6km, 7.2 percent average Mirador de Penas Llanas tomorrow, the Jumbo-Visma star may be set to finally relinquish her iron grip on the red jersey.

But then again, this is Marianne Vos we’re talking about…

04 May 2023, 14:44
The story of Brooks England, the resurgent British bike saddle specialists
04 May 2023, 13:56
Roger Kluge, 2019 Bay Crits (Zac Williams/ZWP/SWpix.com)
Organisers call time on Australian Bay Crits series

The organisers of the Bay Crits, the cycling season’s annual curtain raiser (sit down, Paris-Nice purists), have called time on the 34-year-old races, citing the financial and logistical issues affecting events all over the world as the reasons behind their demise.

> How do we save UK bike racing? SweetSpot's PR Director on Women's Tour cancellation and staying positive for the future

The Bay Crits, based in Geelong, took place right at the start of January, marking the start of an Australian summer of elite racing that also includes the national championships, the Tour Down Under, and the Cadel Evans Great Ocean road race.

The races have boasted an impressive list of winners, including Caleb Ewan, Robbie McEwen, and Chloe Hosking, and were won in 2023 by Brenton Jones and Ruby Roseman-Gannon.

Caleb Ewan, 2019 Bay Crits (Zac Williams/ZWP/SWpix.com)

Zac Williams/ZWP/SWpix.com

However, those races will prove the last for an event founded in 1989, according to a statement issued by organisers John Trevorrow and Karin Jones.

“It is with a heavy heart we are announcing the famous ‘Bay Crits’ have taken their last pedal stroke, with event organisers making the tough call that the much-loved event will not be continuing into 2024,” the organisers said.

“For the best part of 30 years, and despite some very trying times, we have collectively found a way to make this wonderful event happen, an event cherished by riders, fans, and stakeholders alike and one that has enjoyed a significant place in the Australian cycling calendar.

“The financial and logistics issues we have absorbed now over an extended period of time have become simply too prohibitive to continue, with a significant increase in costs again this year. The packed January cycling calendar has also impacted on the event with it regularly having to start on New Year’s Day. This has made it challenging for many riders and fans, especially those coming from interstate, to participate.

“These factors have increased to such an extent that it is completely uneconomic and unrealistic to get to the start line next year.

“It’s been quite a ride, but all good things must come to an end, and today it is the famous ‘Bay Crits’ that have crossed the line for the final time.”

04 May 2023, 13:29
20mph sign (CC licensed by EdinburghGreens via Flickr)
Petition claims new 20mph speed limits will “increase danger” – by encouraging children to play on the road

As regular readers of the live blog will know, from September blanket 20mph zones will be introduced in Wales on residential areas and streets busy with pedestrians, and where street lights are fewer than 200 yards apart.

However, Ceredigion, a county in the west of Wales, where the council will be required to conduct a formal consultation on the new arrangements, residents have created a petition to stop one rural hamlet from being subject to the proposed 20mph limit.

Nation Cymru reports that on Tuesday Ceredigion County Council received a petition calling for the 30mph zone to remain in Stag’s Head, between Llangeitho and Tregaron, on safety and pollution grounds.

> Retired neurologist says increased weight and acceleration of electric vehicles will lead to rise in cycling-related fatalities unless 20mph speed limits are introduced

“We, the undersigned, object to the above proposal on the following grounds: the proposal is not necessary because the roads involved have a very low accident rate, the roads have a very low volume of traffic,” the petition reads.

The angry residents claim that by lowering the speed limit, motorists will be too busy watching the needle on their dashboard to see children, emboldened by the measures, playing in the middle of the road.

I wish I was making this up.

> James May says 20mph is “plenty fast enough”, and hopes “change in attitude” can help end road sectarianism

“The proposed 20mph limit is not desirable because: it will greatly increase noise and air pollution as the vehicles will be in a low gear especially ascending the three gradients to Stags Head crossroads; drivers will pay more attention to the finer detail of their speedometers at the expense of paying attention to the road ahead; the very slow pace of vehicles could actually encourage children to play in the road,” it says.

“The 20mph limit proposals across the country are a gross waste of public money which should be spent maintaining the road surfaces properly, keeping road drains clear and clearing debris from the sides of the highway.

“All these are essential to primary road safety but are deliberately ignored by Ceredigion Highways Department in the ongoing negligence.”

04 May 2023, 12:56
Covid klaxon! Jumbo-Visma forced into yet another Giro change

And the list of positive Covid cases goes on, as the Dutch team – which heads into the Giro aiming for pink with Primož Roglič – announced at lunchtime their third enforced line-up change of the week, with Jos van Emden making way for Sam Oomen:

At this rate, if you have nothing else on over the next three weeks, turn up in Italy with your bike and you may just be handed a spot in Jumbo’s Giro team…

04 May 2023, 12:10
Pidcock and Ferrand-Prevot spotted on prototype Pinarello mountain bikes
04 May 2023, 11:26
Covid-19 strikes again, as Gino Mäder latest rider to be ruled out of the Giro

We’re scribbling all over grand tour start lists like it’s 2021 this week, as Bahrain-Victorious’ Swiss hope Gino Mäder became the latest rider to be ruled out of the Giro d’Italia following a positive Covid test.

The 26-year-old, who won a stage of the 2021 Giro before going on to finish fifth at that year’s Vuelta, will be replaced in the Bahrain line-up – headed by GC hopefuls Damiano Caruso and Jack Haig – by Japanese veteran Yukiya Arashiro.

Mäder, who finished fifth at Paris-Nice in March, is the fourth rider to fall victim to the Covid curse before the Giro has even started, after home favourite Giulio Ciccone and Jumbo-Visma duo Tobias Foss and Robert Gesink were ruled out after positive tests.

Somebody, quick, wrap Remco and Primož in cotton wool please…

04 May 2023, 10:50
Guess who’s back, back again?

After what must have felt like the longest Wednesday in history for those involved, Wiggle and Chain Reaction’s sites are finally back in action… with controversial rebrands still intact:  

Chain Reaction back up
Wiggle returns

It’s alive! It’s alive!

> Wiggle and Chain Reaction down... days after much-criticised rebrand

04 May 2023, 10:27
Bikes on a Train: What’s your experience?
gwr main bike

Fancy hearing your thoughts read out, perhaps even by my dulcet tones, on an upcoming episode of the road.cc Podcast? Well, here’s your chance…

As part of our planned discussion about an old live blog favourite, the ups and downs of taking your bike on a train (particularly in the UK, but not limited to it), we would love to hear your experiences.

Do you have any horror stories? Or have you always had a great experience? Either way, let us know in the comments, and we may just feature your hot take on the pod.

In the meantime, cast your mind back to editor Jack’s rather mixed experience on a Great Western Railway train back in 2019:

> Taking a bike on a Great Western Railway train: a live blog experience

04 May 2023, 09:58
You know the Giro’s just around the corner when…

Is any bike race more synonymous with the snow than the Giro? The Gavia, Hampsten, Kruijswijk – I could go on.

Though, as someone who got caught in a wild thunderstorm in Barcelona at the weekend, I have a degree of sympathy for any riders who prefer the balmier temperatures of the Tour or Vuelta’s showpiece climbs.

Anyway, just two days to go now…

04 May 2023, 09:43
Bikes at Polling Stations

It’s local election day in England, which means one thing in the road.cc offices (no, not a new list of inept, anti-cycling councillors to provide us with an endless supply of news – though that is part of it, I suppose) – it’s time to ride your bike to the polling station!

And quite a few have already been getting in on the Cycle to Vote action, judging by social media this morning:

Are you riding your bike to the polling station today? Let us know in the comments! And, before you ask, the elections in Northern Ireland aren’t for another two weeks (lagging behind as usual…).

04 May 2023, 08:50
Annemiek van Vleuten drops a bottle during Vuelta (Eurosport)
Annemiek van Vleuten misses three bottles then almost rides into Jayco AlUla soigneur in Sonic the Hedgehog tribute at the Vuelta Femenina

World champion Annemiek van Vleuten hasn’t looked her dazzling best in the rainbow bands this year so far, I think it’s fair to say.

The 40-year-old Dutch superstar, rather staggeringly given her dominance in recent years, is yet to win a bike race in 2023 and, during yesterday’s wind-ravaged third stage of the newly expanded Vuelta Femenina (won by another icon of the sport, Marianne Vos), continued to look decidedly uncomfortable as the peloton split into echelons.

Not that the brutally effective Van Vleuten has ever troubled the style charts even when at her best, of course.

But yesterday’s four (four!) attempts to grab a bottle from the side of the road – which, finally, saw her nearly grind to a halt to secure one before almost immediately weaving into a startled Jayco swanny in the process – were definitely ragged, to say the least, resembling a particularly frustrating game of Sonic or Mario Kart. Yes, someone was playing the Nintendo over the weekend…

But, remember, this is Annemiek van Vleuten. And, despite the awkwardness of her bottle grabbing, the Movistar leader still had the strength to solo back up to the group, during the hectic closing stages of the fastest ever road race in the history of the Women’s WorldTour.

And, as we learned to stunning effect at last year’s Tour de France, never write Van Vleuten off after a few shaky opening days at a stage race…

After obtaining a PhD, lecturing, and hosting a history podcast at Queen’s University Belfast, Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

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75 comments

Avatar
cyclisto replied to Rendel Harris | 1 year ago
10 likes

I believe anybody would want to be compensated if someone damaged them, even if the perpetrator had harmed himself. But going to the press and nagging about helmets means probably that she has a thing with cyclists.

Avatar
ITK2012 | 1 year ago
2 likes

As no details of what actually happened are given we have no idea who is at fault for the accident. But in general damaging other peoples property is frowned upon.

She may have pulled out in front of the cyclist, in which case it is her own stupidity to blame. But we don't know.

I'm sure if a driver had damaged an expensive road bike belonging to someone else, but hurt themselves in the process there would be outpourings of sympathy for the driver. 

Avatar
Hirsute replied to ITK2012 | 1 year ago
8 likes

Given the police reviewed the dash cam, then there was no evidence of fault.
Vehicular crashes happen all the time and the police rarely get involved.
I wonder if she mentioned the crash to her insurers?

Avatar
LeadenSkies replied to Hirsute | 1 year ago
2 likes

Police don't determine fault, courts and insurance companies do that, but you would be correct in saying that the police reviewing the dash cam footage cannot have seen any evidence of an offence committed with a reasonable chance of a successful prosecution. If the footage showed the collision then you would presume any offence of no lights would have been obvious so make of that what you will. The driver may need to take legal action against the cyclist or their insurance to recover the cost of the damage. That shouldn't be too difficult, after all they have dash cam footage that shows a clear cut case, at least it does if you believe the car driver's story.

Avatar
HoldingOn | 1 year ago
15 likes

I put my helmet on my head, not on my leg.

Avatar
Patrick9-32 | 1 year ago
4 likes

Let me guess, her car is one of the 7 shades of tarmac that all cars are now sold in?

Avatar
mark1a replied to Patrick9-32 | 1 year ago
0 likes

For balance, it's been alleged that the cyclist did not have lights, and the incident was January 9th, so likely dark.

Avatar
I love my bike replied to mark1a | 1 year ago
0 likes

Reasonable logic, except for the LED lighting. Seems to be a traffic light controlled RAB, so maybe both equally at fault, leading to a £700 repair for her car & a broken leg for him? Well, and cost of emergency services.

Avatar
jaymack replied to mark1a | 1 year ago
5 likes

For even more balance that is only if the incident occurred before 08:04 and after 16:11. So there was a whole 8 hrs in which the sun was up on 9th January. 

Avatar
wycombewheeler replied to jaymack | 1 year ago
2 likes

jaymack wrote:

if the incident occurred before 08:04 and after 16:11. 

the slowest crash in history, lasted more than 8 hours

Avatar
jaymack replied to wycombewheeler | 1 year ago
6 likes

Nah, the slowest car crash has been the last 13 years of Conservative Gov't. Oh, sorry you we're referring to the article...

Avatar
mark1a replied to jaymack | 1 year ago
2 likes

Thanks for your detailed astronomical research. The news report indicates it happened "after work" so unless we also want to speculate on whether the individual in the car works night shifts, the probability is that it was dark.

FWIW, I've been knocked off my bike before in broad daylight while running a 160 lumen front strobe, I personally wouldn't take my chances out on the road without lights at any time of the day or night.

Avatar
jaymack replied to mark1a | 1 year ago
0 likes

I'd certainly not venture out in the winter without them irrespective of the time of day

Avatar
Krd51 replied to mark1a | 1 year ago
1 like

Lights worked for you then......LOL

Avatar
mark1a replied to Krd51 | 1 year ago
1 like

Krd51 wrote:

Lights worked for you then......LOL

On that one particular occasion, they didn't but with just a single driver-assisted non-elective dismount in nearly 40000km of riding, I'll take my chances with the lights.

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