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Police witness appeal following cyclist fatality on A31 in Hampshire

The 40-year-old man died following collision with a white Ford Transit van yesterday evening. A 20-year-old man is being questioned.

A cyclist has died following a collision with a white Ford transit van on the A31 near Bentley, Hampshire, yesterday evening.

The 40-year-old man, who has not yet been named, was taken to hospital after the collision with life-threatening injuries and later pronounced dead.

A man in his 20s was later arrested, and is being questioned in connection to the crash.

Police were called at 7.26pm on Wednesday, August 12, to the collision on the A31 near Bentley, near its junction with Station Road.

A31, Hampshire

Both carriageways of the road were closed for a time after the crash. The Surrey-bound side of the road remained closed until the early hours while Emergency services responded and investigated the area.

Immediate next of kin have been informed but police won't name the deceased man until formal identification has taken place.

Hampshire Constabulary is appealing for witnesses, who saw the white Ford Transit van or man on his bike immediately beforehand, to contact them.

Laura Laker is a freelance journalist with more than a decade’s experience covering cycling, walking and wheeling (and other means of transport). Beginning her career with road.cc, Laura has also written for national and specialist titles of all stripes. One part of the popular Streets Ahead podcast, she sometimes appears as a talking head on TV and radio, and in real life at conferences and festivals. She is also the author of Potholes and Pavements: a Bumpy Ride on Britain’s National Cycle Network.

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15 comments

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Echo | 9 years ago
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I ride the H10/8 course where the rider was killed frequently and work in the nearest town. I suppose in some sort of internal protest I competed last night only a day after this tragic death.
The supporting club held a minutes silence before the start for a drastically reduced field from the normal Thursday turn out and as you can imagine there was a sombre mood to say the least.

Cycling on this crowded island can be hazardous and we are all reliant on motorists obeying the highway code and above all else being alert. In the last few Years I've witnessed more and more drivers using mobile phones whilst at the wheel and even more worrying texting.
The fact is there is a good line of sight on the road and maybe they should consider reducing the speed limit as there has been a number of high speed crashes (and deaths) between the A32 and the Coxbridge roundabout at Farnham.

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hampsoc | 9 years ago
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I know this road very well, and if negotiated by a suitably trained driver there is no issue. Some roads are more challenging than others, and this section is right up there, however there is one simple rule that would eliminate a large number of these accidents:
Drive at a speed where you can stop safely on your side of the road in the distance you can see to be clear.
On the public road that speed may be 70 mph, or it may be less than 10 mph.
My sincere condolences to the family of the cyclist.

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mrmo | 9 years ago
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Just to be clear i would not ride a road like that given a choice, but the point is the problem is not so much the road, but the drivers on the road.

There is plenty of time for drivers who are paying attention to do something. That they don't!

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DougieL | 9 years ago
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The accident happened while the rider was taking part in a club time-trial (ten miles from the layby just before the Bentley slip road, down the Holyborne Rdbt, back to finish just by the Bull PH). I know that because I'm a member of the victim's club and was riding off at #2 (18:32 start). I don't know what start time the victim was off at.

There are ten and twenty five mile time trials on Tue, Wed & Thu nights all through the summer on that stretch of road (course H10/8, H25/8). There are open events (10s, 25s, 50s, 100s and a 12 hour) on a number of weekends right through the time-trialling season. The twenty five mile course is two laps, once round the Coxbridge Rdbt, twice round Holyborne Rdbt. The longer courses go across the Holyborne Rdbt and turn at the Chawton Rdbt.

I hope that Hampshire Police can gather enough evidence to charge the van driver with causing death by dangerous driving.

There's recently been some additional speed restrictions (60mph) on the section between Bentley and the Bull PH. It's also common to see a Hampshire Police camera van sitting in the middle of the road.

The weather was dry and bright, there was a bit of a head wind on the return leg from Holyborne to the Bull PH.

Please don't blame the cyclists.

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hennahairgel | 9 years ago
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My parents live near there, and the Bentley bypass was built 10-15 years ago (if I recall correctly). It's insanely fast, curved uphill, and gets cars easily doing 100mph before it narrows down again to the old road. It's bumpy and weirdly distracting with a lot going on.

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pakennedy | 9 years ago
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I *won't* ride on roads like this. It doesn't matter that I *can*. Cars and vans passing insanely close at 90mph is too damned scary.

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BikeDibley | 9 years ago
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I used to commute (by car) daily down this road. To my shock on regular occasions during summer months, you would see a local cycling club time-trialling the stretch passed Bordon Camp. I wouldn't ever consider riding my bike on this road, let alone getting in my TT 'zone' and racing it.

n/b: Not saying this cyclist was racing or insuating blame of any sort.

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mrmo replied to BikeDibley | 9 years ago
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BikeDibley wrote:

I used to commute (by car) daily down this road. To my shock on regular occasions during summer months, you would see a local cycling club time-trialling the stretch passed Bordon Camp. I wouldn't ever consider riding my bike on this road, let alone getting in my TT 'zone' and racing it.

n/b: Not saying this cyclist was racing or insuating blame of any sort.

Curious, why? It is a big fast road with descent sight lines. In theory there is plenty of space for drivers to make safe overtakes. Looking at the map there don't seem to be many direct back roads, they all seem to wiggle around and suffer from lots of junctions, and increased distance.

I am not for a moment saying roads like that are pleasant to ride, just wondering why you wouldn't ride on it?

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Airzound replied to mrmo | 9 years ago
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mrmo wrote:
BikeDibley wrote:

I used to commute (by car) daily down this road. To my shock on regular occasions during summer months, you would see a local cycling club time-trialling the stretch passed Bordon Camp. I wouldn't ever consider riding my bike on this road, let alone getting in my TT 'zone' and racing it.

n/b: Not saying this cyclist was racing or insuating blame of any sort.

Curious, why? It is a big fast road with descent sight lines. In theory there is plenty of space for drivers to make safe overtakes. Looking at the map there don't seem to be many direct back roads, they all seem to wiggle around and suffer from lots of junctions, and increased distance.

I am not for a moment saying roads like that are pleasant to ride, just wondering why you wouldn't ride on it?

Errrrr ………… because it's a motorway in all but name. Does this not tell you something about what riding along it might entail?

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KiwiMike replied to mrmo | 9 years ago
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mrmo wrote:
BikeDibley wrote:

I wouldn't ever consider riding my bike on this road, let alone getting in my TT 'zone' and racing it.

It is a big fast road with decent sight lines. In theory there is plenty of space for drivers to make safe overtakes.
I am not for a moment saying roads like that are pleasant to ride, just wondering why you wouldn't ride on it?

Firstly, condolences, for what they are worth. Christ. Another.

Secondly: dual-carriageways. I live close to the A34/A303 intersection betwixt Winchester & Newbury, and have driven these roads hundreds of times. I am frankly stunned by local club Andover Wheelers holding TT's on either. Yes, you are allowed to ride a bike on them. Yes, drivers have a duty of care and legal responsibility to overtake safely.

But. But. But.

What you are doing is handing your life - literally - into the hands of the drivers behind you. Far moreso than on a single carriageway, where the pass-don't pass decision is clearer. What happens is the vehicle approaching from behind sees you. Fine. They move over - a bit, a lot, possibly find the outside lane full of vehicles, either current or fast approaching. They have to make a split-second decision to brake heavily, swerve, or both. The following vehicle 2-4 seconds behind - sometimes less - also has to be paying attention, and react in time, and *they* may have a vehicle to their right and nowhere to go but to brake heavily for the cyclist they couldn't see until a second ago. If they are towing a trailer or caravan, it gets a lot worse, very quickly. If it's a line of 40-ton HGV's, overtaking each other at 59.999MPH, The 80kg cyclist on a standard 3.6m UK A-road lane with no hard shoulder hasn't got a chance in hell.

The basic truth is that human reactions and driver standards aren't going to improve anytime soon, and Dutch-style totally separated cycle paths 5m away from 70MPH roads are decades away, if ever.

Do I want to see cyclists banned from 70MPH A-roads? No. But I sure as hell would do my very best to talk any friend or relative out of riding on one.

Conflicted. And angry that, once again, the UK's utterly shit non-provision for people on bikes and pervasively hostile road culture has taken a life.

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oozaveared replied to BikeDibley | 9 years ago
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.

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wycombewheeler replied to BikeDibley | 9 years ago
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Quite frankly I would rather ride on a motorway than that road. 3m wide hard shoulder a nice buffer zone.

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Airzound | 9 years ago
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Looks pretty much a motorway in all but name.
I would never ever ride down such a road except on my motorbike. Certainly wouldn't cycle along it.
RIP.

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bikewithnoname | 9 years ago
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Very sad news. I've ridden and driven this road a number of times it is a very fast stretch of dual carriageway, not cycle friendly at all.

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danthomascyclist | 9 years ago
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Condolences to the family. I hope they've caught the right person, and a speedy trial ensues. The family can't put closure on this until the driver has been handed a 6 month driving ban and a £750 fine.

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