Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

TECH NEWS

Lance Armstrong tweets about his new bike… and it's not a Trek

Armstrong shows off his new road bike and – surprise! – it's not a Trek

Having been associated closely with Trek during his racing career, Lance Armstrong has tweeted that he now has a new Parlee Z-Zero road bike.

Lance said, “Down @mellowjohnnys building up my new @parlee_z1. What a beauty!! Right at 15 lbs.”

Mellow Johnny’s is a bike store in Austin, Texas, owned by Armstrong. The name comes from maillot jaune – French for ‘yellow jersey’.

Mellow Johnny's is a Trek dealership. Whereas usually Trek might not be too pleased with an ex-pro and current dealer showing off a bike other than a Trek, in this case they're probably fairly relaxed about the situation.

The Parlee race bike brand was established by Bob Parlee in Massachusetts about a decade ago.

The Z-Zero is custom-made to order in 16 semi-custom sizes, or in a full-custom geometry. Parlee say that they can tune the ride characteristics to each rider's exact requirements.

Armstrong has gone for a Shimano Dura-Ace 9070 groupset here. Previously, he had a contract with SRAM but the US component brand terminated it last year in the light of revelations about Armstrong’s doping during his race career – you might have heard about that!

Mat has been in cycling media since 1996, on titles including BikeRadar, Total Bike, Total Mountain Bike, What Mountain Bike and Mountain Biking UK, and he has been editor of 220 Triathlon and Cycling Plus. Mat has been road.cc technical editor for over a decade, testing bikes, fettling the latest kit, and trying out the most up-to-the-minute clothing. He has won his category in Ironman UK 70.3 and finished on the podium in both marathons he has run. Mat is a Cambridge graduate who did a post-grad in magazine journalism, and he is a winner of the Cycling Media Award for Specialist Online Writer. Now over 50, he's riding road and gravel bikes most days for fun and fitness rather than training for competitions.

Add new comment

74 comments

Avatar
PaulVWatts replied to farrell | 11 years ago
0 likes

In reply to farrell: Cycling's most famous cheater perhaps certainly not its most famous cyclist even when his cheating wasn't general knowledge. Maybe road.cc would like to tell us and their sponsors what it thinks its doing by giving this piece of filth publicity?

Avatar
farrell replied to PaulVWatts | 11 years ago
0 likes
PaulVWatts wrote:

In reply to farrell: Cycling's most famous cheater perhaps certainly not its most famous cyclist even when his cheating wasn't general knowledge. Maybe road.cc would like to tell us and their sponsors what it thinks its doing by giving this piece of filth publicity?

Don't be so silly.

When you've unbunched your knickers name me one other cyclist that could possibly be more famous than the worldwide/global phenomenon Lance Armstrong and his brand?

Avatar
PaulVWatts replied to farrell | 11 years ago
0 likes
farrell wrote:
PaulVWatts wrote:

In reply to farrell: Cycling's most famous cheater perhaps certainly not its most famous cyclist even when his cheating wasn't general knowledge. Maybe road.cc would like to tell us and their sponsors what it thinks its doing by giving this piece of filth publicity?

Don't be so silly.

When you've unbunched your knickers name me one other cyclist that could possibly be more famous than the worldwide/global phenomenon Lance Armstrong and his brand?

Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, Miguel Indurain and Greg Lemond are four for starters.

Avatar
farrell replied to PaulVWatts | 11 years ago
0 likes
PaulVWatts wrote:
farrell wrote:
PaulVWatts wrote:

In reply to farrell: Cycling's most famous cheater perhaps certainly not its most famous cyclist even when his cheating wasn't general knowledge. Maybe road.cc would like to tell us and their sponsors what it thinks its doing by giving this piece of filth publicity?

Don't be so silly.

When you've unbunched your knickers name me one other cyclist that could possibly be more famous than the worldwide/global phenomenon Lance Armstrong and his brand?

Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, Miguel Indurain and Greg Lemond are four for starters.

Do you genuinely believe that or are you just talking with your sausage out?

There is not a chance in hell that those riders are more famous than Armstrong. You can debate the rights and wrongs of that fame all you like, but that doesn't make Armstrong less famous.

Avatar
colinth replied to farrell | 11 years ago
0 likes
farrell wrote:
PaulVWatts wrote:
farrell wrote:
PaulVWatts wrote:

In reply to farrell: Cycling's most famous cheater perhaps certainly not its most famous cyclist even when his cheating wasn't general knowledge. Maybe road.cc would like to tell us and their sponsors what it thinks its doing by giving this piece of filth publicity?

Don't be so silly.

When you've unbunched your knickers name me one other cyclist that could possibly be more famous than the worldwide/global phenomenon Lance Armstrong and his brand?

Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, Miguel Indurain and Greg Lemond are four for starters.

Do you genuinely believe that or are you just talking with your sausage out?

There is not a chance in hell that those riders are more famous than Armstrong. You can debate the rights and wrongs of that fame all you like, but that doesn't make Armstrong less famous.

Absolutely, you really think if you asked everyone on the planet to name a "cyclist" more people would say Hinault or Indurain than Armstrong ? Just because you want something to be true doesn't make it so, just ask Lance !

Avatar
Mat Brett replied to PaulVWatts | 11 years ago
0 likes
PaulVWatts wrote:

Maybe road.cc would like to tell us and their sponsors what it thinks its doing by giving this piece of filth publicity?

We don't only write about people we like or whose actions we approve of, you know. You've read a daily newspaper, right?

Simon stuck up a story on Jeremy Clarkson yesterday.

Avatar
PaulVWatts replied to Mat Brett | 11 years ago
0 likes
Mat Brett wrote:
PaulVWatts wrote:

Maybe road.cc would like to tell us and their sponsors what it thinks its doing by giving this piece of filth publicity?

We don't only write about people we like or whose actions we approve of, you know. You've read a daily newspaper, right?

Simon stuck up a story on Jeremy Clarkson yesterday.

The Clarkson story had a positive message. Most newspapers don't report on criminals as if they're heroes. What's the message behind this story? It seems to be that spending 10 years lying, cheating, wrecking peoples lives and ruining the reputation of the sport you make a living from is OK. We will still give you free advertising. Anything to produce copy is it?

Avatar
step-hent replied to PaulVWatts | 11 years ago
0 likes
PaulVWatts wrote:
Mat Brett wrote:
PaulVWatts wrote:

Maybe road.cc would like to tell us and their sponsors what it thinks its doing by giving this piece of filth publicity?

We don't only write about people we like or whose actions we approve of, you know. You've read a daily newspaper, right?

Simon stuck up a story on Jeremy Clarkson yesterday.

The Clarkson story had a positive message. Most newspapers don't report on criminals as if they're heroes. What's the message behind this story? It seems to be that spending 10 years lying, cheating, wrecking peoples lives and ruining the reputation of the sport you make a living from is OK. We will still give you free advertising. Anything to produce copy is it?

Is it free advertising? What's Armstrong selling? And exactly how does this portray him as a hero? You're reading way too much into it. There's no deep and meaningful moral message here, it's just a bit of factual reporting.

Seems to me it's a story of interest to a lot of people (in a good or bad way - but it's certainly generated some traffic). If you hate Armstrong so much that the sight of his name offends you, you could always skip to the next article...

Avatar
colinth replied to PaulVWatts | 11 years ago
0 likes
PaulVWatts wrote:
Mat Brett wrote:
PaulVWatts wrote:

Maybe road.cc would like to tell us and their sponsors what it thinks its doing by giving this piece of filth publicity?

We don't only write about people we like or whose actions we approve of, you know. You've read a daily newspaper, right?

Simon stuck up a story on Jeremy Clarkson yesterday.

The Clarkson story had a positive message. Most newspapers don't report on criminals as if they're heroes. What's the message behind this story? It seems to be that spending 10 years lying, cheating, wrecking peoples lives and ruining the reputation of the sport you make a living from is OK. We will still give you free advertising. Anything to produce copy is it?

Jeez, get over yourself Paul. Where is he treated like a hero in the article ? Says he been dumped by his sponsors. The fact is that lots of people will be interested to see what he's bought now that he's been ditched by Trek, it's a bit of gear based gossip, nothing more.

Avatar
stevemarks replied to PaulVWatts | 11 years ago
0 likes
PaulVWatts wrote:

In reply to farrell: Cycling's most famous cheater perhaps certainly not its most famous cyclist even when his cheating wasn't general knowledge. Maybe road.cc would like to tell us and their sponsors what it thinks its doing by giving this piece of filth publicity?

Just a small point. if he/it is so unimportant why are you reading/commenting on here?

Avatar
notfastenough | 11 years ago
0 likes

Wonder what Parlee make of that.

Avatar
j4m1eb | 11 years ago
0 likes

now is Parlee happy with the exposure or unhappy to have the brand associated with Armstrong??

Avatar
Alan hall | 11 years ago
0 likes

I hope he paid for all that gear!!!

Avatar
cowspassage replied to Alan hall | 11 years ago
0 likes

He did. He gave Dr Ferrari a fortune. By all accounts.

Pages

Latest Comments