Not only did Mathew Hayman shock the world by winning Paris-Roubaix last year just six weeks after breaking his arm and using Zwift for preparation, but also by doing it on a Scott Foil, an aero race bike that isn’t the typical choice for a course with 52km of brutal cobbles. It was the first win for an aero bike at the Hell of the North.
Hayman is returning to Paris-Roubaix to defend his title, and it’s a case of “if it ain’t broke don’t fix it” as he’s once again choosing the Foil, and not Scott’s endurance platform, the Solace. This year his bike wears a special paint job to celebrate Hayman’s love for the race.
To honour and thank him for this achievement, SCOTT has created a specific design which is strongly connected to his origin and his love for the “Hell of the North”. The design is the result of a geometric interpretation of the cobblestone vibrations and goes through the whole bike to form a Kangaroo at the side of the top tube.
The colours represent the national colours of Australia, but in more “earthy” tones to illustrate the dust, dirt and toughness of the roads of Paris-Roubaix. Within the design on the top tube is a phrase that reflects Hayman’s famous race philosophy “Always keep riding” and is written in typical Paris-Roubaix road signage style.
Aside from the paint job, the bike is very much the same as last year’s winning bike. This year he’s riding the brand new Shimano Dura-Ace Di2 groupset including the direct mount brakes and new chainset. There’s no power meter pictured on this bike and that’s something that might change come race day - last year he used an SRM power meter. His chainset has a 53/44T chainring setup, a common choice at this race.
He raced Dura-Ace C50 wheels last year but he’s dropping down to the shallower C35 wheels this year, which might provide a bit more comfort on the cobbles. The Foil, despite its aero design, accommodates 28mm tyres and he’s once again relying on Continental Competition Pro LTD tyres in a 28mm width.
A 130mm - 6° stem integrated into the top tube to reduce drag clamps a Syncros Compact 40 handlebar into place. The carbon seatpost and extremely thing saddle are also from Syncros, the component brand owned by Scott.
“The designers at SCOTT and I came up with something that is personal to me which I will ride with a lot of pride. I can't wait to start the race with my new Foil on Sunday. It gave my wings last year, let’s hope it will be the same again this year and in case something goes wrong I just have to look on my top tube to remember always keep riding, the race is not over until it is over,” said Hayman upon receiving his new bike.
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7 comments
Wheels were C-50's last year, other than shallower wheels I can't see any changes to this bike from last years winner!
If you've not seen the Orica behind the scenes video on youtube, it's a MUST watch pre-PR on sunday... you've gotta love Matt Hayman !
Watch it here - https://youtu.be/8zxnA4asj44
So Sky are going all techy to plug a bike everyone thinks is a fugly waste of time. Hayman meanwhile is just going with a good dose of HTFU.
I know which I applaud, but also which I'd prefer to ride over the cobbles (although one of the other comfort bikes, not the K8s)!
He isn't going as deep this year? Thought he rode 50's when he won.
As a wise man once said "It's not about the bike". Cancellara won it on a Domane, Duclos-LaSalle and Tchmil won it on (100% locked out) rockshox forks in the early 90s, Hayman won it on his bog-standard Foil. Pinarello are still getting the Sky guys to pretend they want to race on that rear suspension thing.
While I get the idea that the endurance bikes offer more comfort leaving the rider potentially fresher at the end, at a race like PR where riders will bury themselves to win, is the performance advantage of aero probably not greater? if it was a multi stage race over cobbles I could see the point, being fresher on day two and three would be a really big advantage, but for the big win all out performance (with a few concessions to comfort like larger tyres) seems to make more sense.
I do love that for all the effort spent on engineering "comfort" bikes for P-R (which are of course for marketing, as pro bike racing has always been about selling bikes) that he won it on a stiff-as-fuck aero bike, simply with 28mm tyres.
Even more amusingly, two articles below this is the news that Sky will be using a Pinarello with automatic electronically-adjusted suspension!