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“Tell drivers to get off their phones and stop driving in cycle lanes”: Police slammed for targeting cyclists on LTN one-way street; “Children more important than empty bike lanes”; No Tour for Pidcock; Cyclocross coverage “farce” + more on the live blog

It may be a dark and gloomy Monday in mid-January, but the road racing season is almost here (so the summer must be close too) and Ryan Mallon’s back to brighten up the start of your week with all the latest cycling news and views on the live blog

SUMMARY

12:25
Groves LTN, York
“Do you want to tell motorists to get off their phones and stop driving in cycling lanes while you’re at it?” North Yorkshire Police criticised for targeting cyclists on one-way street in Low Traffic Neighbourhood, in bid to “keep everyone moving safely”

On Friday, police officers in York hit the streets “bright and early” as part of an attempt to “engage” with cyclists in the Groves low traffic neighbourhood area of the city.

Road closures in the Groves, a collection of close-knit terraces just north of York city centre, were first introduced in 2020, following complaints from residents about rat-running motorists.

In January 2022 the LTN was made permanent, following a reduction in traffic, an improvement in air quality, and a rise in both cycling numbers and community activities in the area.

And now, almost five year since rat-running was eliminated in the Groves, North Yorkshire Police’s officers have now turned their attention to something even more alarming (to anti-cycling zealots on social media, anyway)… cyclists riding the wrong way down one-way streets.

Police crackdown on cyclists in York LTN (North Yorkshire Police)

“This morning, our dedicated officers hit the streets bright and early to engage with cyclists in The Groves, ensuring everyone stays safe and follows the rules,” North Yorkshire Police posted on Facebook on Friday morning.

“Cyclists, it’s important to adhere to one-way systems to keep everyone moving safely! Our team is here to help with advice and education on safer cycling practices.”

Of course, not everyone was impressed with the police’s efforts to crack down on one-way cycling.

“Makes me laugh, they close all the roads down, but make cycling harder,” said David Rogers.

“Do you want to tell motorists to get off their phones and stop driving in cycling lanes while you’re at it!” added Louise.

“Also stop driving so close and forcing us through potholes and drains! Also stop cutting us up and stopping in cycle boxes at traffic lights! Ta.”

Fair points.

> Police threaten "regular patrols" and £50 fines in crackdown on cyclists in pedestrian area

But while cyclists weren’t happy with the apparent focus on people on bikes, you’d assume those naturally opposed to all things cycling would be delighted at the patrols in the Groves? Think again.

“Rather than hitting the streets bright and early you should get on your bikes after dark and address those many irresponsible and dangerous cyclists who ride in dark clothing and without lights,” said Pebbles (quick, someone tell Fred and Wilma!).

“Maybe time to start fining them too, they might well decide the price for some lights would be cheaper than a £20 fine.”

“More needs to be done across the city to educate some cyclists to use the roads and bike lanes, not pedestrian paths, and to have lights,” added Mattie.

Meanwhile, Chris added: “It’s the ones in the dark outfit with no lights on running red lights on you need to watch. Also, all the delivery riders running red lights.”

“Suggest they get out more often,” echoed anti-cycling bingo enthusiast Dave. “Cycles and bikes without lights, on pavements, ignoring lights all across the city.”

Full house!

Goes to show, you can’t win, can you?

14:59
Children cycling in pop-up lane (YouTube)
“Children should be a greater priority than empty bike lanes”: Drivers calls for “unwanted” cycle funding to be switched to “put dedicated for our children’s futures” in bizarre anti-cycling plea

Spare a thought for the poor staffer in charge of the Bournemouth Daily Echo’s inbox, having to sift through piles of anti-cycling letters every day.

Or that’s the way it seems at the moment, anyway, judging by the recent editions of the local paper’s ‘letters to the editor’ page.

Just last week, we highlighted one letter, from a certain Mr David Chapman of Ferndown, who argued that cyclists are aiming to take control of the roads… by lowering speed limits.

“We’ve seen many stories from the cycling community regarding their wishes to control the roads to have lower speed limits despite having their own purpose-built safety lanes away from traffic,” David wrote in his letter to the editor.

Wimborne Road cycle lane, Dorset (Transforming Cities Fund)

> Cyclists want to “control the roads” through lower speed limits, claims driver – who asks: “What right does a cyclist have to tell anyone what to do?” amid call for cycling insurance, number plates, and bike inspections

“But isn’t it time cyclists took a look at themselves before telling others how things should be? Why do we need lower speed limits on roads with cyclepaths [sic] that keep cyclists away from traffic? Should we impose speed limits on cyclepaths?

“Until cyclists have insurance, licence plates, annual vehicle [sic] inspections carried out by government officials, cycling proficiency (for children, carried out at schools) and mandatory fixed lighting, what right does a cyclist have to tell anyone what to do on the roads?”

And now, David’s claim that cyclists are mounting a takeover of the roads has been followed by another letter, this time from Bournemouth-based Ian Lawrence, who argued in a rather misguided missive to the Echo’s editor that cycle lanes are acting as a barrier to the necessary funding required to support children, especially those with special educational needs and disabilities.

Children cycling on Active Travel Street (Exeter Cycling Campaign)

Which strikes me as a very odd conflation of two very distinct issues, with two very distinct funding sources.

Not that Mr Lawrence cares, however – I suppose it’s easier to blame the cycle lanes than years, or decades, of misjudgement and bad decisions on the part of the government, after all.

“While BCP Council is on the verge insolvency, on the other hand they wasting millions on underused, unwanted cycle infrastructure and money which they assert cannot be used for urgent priorities like SEND children,” Ian said in his letter.

“Maybe there are solutions available outside the box providing opportunities for council leadership to show its initiative and problem-solving abilities.”

Ian then called on the council to work with other local authorities, and alongside parents, to lobby the government to support funding initiative for children with educational needs.

Which sounds great – but what’s it got to do with cycling again?

“Then you could all push for switching unneeded and unwanted transport funding into a pot dedicated for our children’s futures,” Ian continued.

“After all, nobody would disagree that children who should be a greater priority than empty bike lanes.”

Ah, right.

BCP cycle lane projects (Facebook/DorsetSaferRoads)

> "Not everyone has the option to drive": Council addresses backlash over controversial cycle lane projects, including row over 'driveway-blocking wands' and 'Britain's biggest bike lane'

As we’ve seen over the years, BCP (Bournemouth, Christchurch, and Poole) Council has been at the forefront of a series of disputes over active travel projects in the United Kingdom, with residents like Mr Lawrence outraged at what they see as expensive and under-used cycling infrastructure making their lives worse.

Last month, we reported that a petition calling for the Liberal Democrat and independent-run council to “reconsider their current local transport and infrastructure policies” was launched online, following a MailOnline article on the issue which featured the headline: ‘Our council is causing traffic chaos and spending £120m to install 50 MILES of cycle lanes – despite the ones already there barely being used’.

Steve Moody, who set up BCP and Dorset Motorists, started the petition and claimed that the “construction of extremely expensive and obviously under-utilised cycle paths, along with a huge numbers of local roadworks, all being carried out at the same time with minimal co-ordination by BCP Council are real and major issues”.

However, BCP’s cabinet member for roads, Andy Hadley, insisted the infrastructure projects benefit all road users, not just cyclists, and countered the petition’s claims by pointing out that “not everyone in our community has the option to drive”.

16:29
Could this be the best pro cycling paint job of 2025?

Yes, yes, absolutely yes:

2025 Van Rysel Roubaix RCR - 1

> Meet the new street art-inspired Van Rysel–Roubaix RCR

Come on Decathlon-AG2R, don’t be cowards – I know that’s not exactly your colour scheme, but still, you know you want to…

09:07
Xan Crees wins 2025 British cyclocross championships (Alex Whitehead/SWpix.com)
“How is the sport meant to grow if we can’t watch it?” British Cycling slammed for “farcical” lack of TV coverage for national cyclocross championships – as fans forced to rely on teenager’s livestream from side of course

It was national cyclocross championships weekend in the muddy fields of Europe over the past few days, as riders across the continent fought for the right to be the one who dirties their country’s shiny champ’s jersey beyond all recognition for the next 12 months.

In Belgium, European champion Thibau Nys added to his ever-growing jersey collection, along with fellow first-time national champ Marion Norbert Riberolle, while young phenoms Puck Pieterse and Tibor del Grosso bagged that much-coveted red, white, and blue jersey at the Dutch championships.

Meanwhile, on a wintery course at the Cyclopark in Gravesend, 24-year-old Xan Crees soloed to an emotional maiden British elite title, breaking clear alongside Cat Ferguson early on before dispatching the teenage Movistar sensation on the third lap.

Xan Crees and Cat Ferguson, 2025 British cyclocross championships (Olly Hassell/SWpix.com)

(Olly Hassell/SWpix.com)

After building up a solid lead, Spectra Racing rider Crees was then forced to hold off a late Ferguson surge to secure the win by five seconds, as Visma-Lease a Bike’s Imogen Wolff finished a strong third.

In the men’s race, Cameron Mason put in a dominant display to beat closest challenger Ben Chilton by over three minutes and secure his third consecutive national title, after Thomas Mein – who was putting Mason on the backfoot during the opening few laps – was forced to abandon after a fall on the steps.

Cameron Mason wins 2025 British cyclocross championships (Alex Whitehead/SWpix.com)

(Alex Whitehead/SWpix.com)

Not that we could see any of the racing – unless you were actually in Gravesend, of course.

Because, while previous British ‘cross champs have been available to watch on the BBC iPlayer, this year’s event was only accessible to those at home through (officially at least) live text updates and the occasional short clip on British Cycling’s social media page.

This lack of coverage was questioned in the lead-up to the events, with one fan asking under a cyclocross-themed British Cycling Instagram post: “Is the British National Championships being televised/streamed live anywhere?”

“You have to livestream it manually by going to Gravesend,” another sarcastically replied.

And that, bizarrely, was how it turned out.

After fans desperate to see the Kent-based action were warned about dodgy links purporting to be officially recognised by the governing body, up stepped a young teenage ‘cross fan named Kirstie, who filmed the race from the side of the course as part of a YouTube livestream and helpfully – and brilliantly – performed a running commentary on the racing in the process.

“Great job Kirstie, there’s nearly 350 of us watching you now. Brilliant. You are the official live stream of the British Cyclo-cross Championships!” one viewer commented on the teenager’s feed, which was uploaded to her YouTube page, ‘The World of Cycling According to Kirstie’.

In fact, Kirstie racked up a whopping 18,500 views across the two elite races for her livestream, with viewers joining all the way from the US too. So you can’t say there wasn’t a market for the coverage.

“I was super happy to do today's livestream at the National Championships and commentate on the race. It was really nice to see loads of people tuning in from all over the world,” Kirstie wrote on her YouTube channel after the race.

Nice use of the classic cycling trope ‘super happy’ too, Kirstie.

Xan Crees wins 2025 British cyclocross championships (Olly Hassell/SWpix.com)

(Olly Hassell/SWpix.com)

And while the cost of broadcasting a bike race in Britain can be shockingly prohibitive – just ask the Tour of Britain – some fans felt very short-changed when it came to this year’s national ‘cross coverage.

“Just a shame there’s nowhere to watch this on a screen,” Andrew wrote under one of British Cycling’s short clips of the racing.

“BC have really dropped the ball on this,” added cycling writer Katy Madgwick.

Cameron Mason wins 2025 British cyclocross championships (Olly Hassell/SWpix.com)

 (Olly Hassell/SWpix.com)

“Basically we are going to be relying on a teenager to stream live from the Cyclopark,” said Alex on BlueSky.

“Well done Kirstie, all kudos to you. Farcical by BC though. Not sure how the sport is meant to ignite fires and grow if there’s no live coverage anywhere.”

Who knows, maybe Eurosport will sign Kirstie up for next year?

15:58
Our kind of racing

Just when you thought cyclocross couldn’t get any better:

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by @germain_samier

And nice to see Kevin De Bruyne making use of his FA Cup weekend off by taking the win, fair play.

10:55
Tom Pidcock, Q36.5 training camp (Georg Lindacher)
Tom Pidcock confirms he will miss this year’s Tour de France and says he’s “happy I’ve got a year out from it”, as British star insists Ineos exit was “business, it wasn’t personal”

He may have been one of the stars of the first two series of Netflix’s fly-on-the-wall Tour de France documentary – after all, who doesn’t love a tense and moody post-stage, mid-massage debrief scene? – but Tom Pidcock won’t be heading to cycling’s biggest race in 2025, the British star confirmed in an interview with BBC Sport at the weekend.

Following his long, drawn-out transfer from the Ineos Grenadiers to second-tier Q36.5 Pro Cycling over the winter, Pidcock and his team are now reliant on wildcard invitations to WorldTour races, including the grand tours and most important classics.

And with the Tour’s final two invites set to be handed out to either breakaway-hungry Uno-X, Julian Alaphilippe’s Tudor squad, or French outfit TotalEnergies, Q36.5’s chances of making it to the start line in Lille on 5 July are somewhat slim, double Olympic champion on the books are otherwise.

Not that Pidcock, who’s had a love-hate relationship with the Tour and the pressures of riding for GC over the past few years, seems to mind that much.

Tom Pidcock, Q36.5 training camp (Georg Lindacher)

(Georg Lindacher)

“We’ll have a year out from the Tour and try to get to the Tour in 2026,” the 25-year-old, who won a stage of the 2022 race atop Alpe d’Huez, told the BBC.

“I’m happy I’ve got a year out from it, a break. When I come back, it’ll be with a refreshed energy.”

While the former Amstel Gold and Strade Bianche winner is happy to sit out the Tour – where he appeared to be visibly bristling against the GC-focused demands placed upon him by Ineos at the race last year – for one year at least, he remains confident Q36.5 will secure invites to the events he’s most focused on: the one-day classics.

In fact, Pidcock is almost certain to race this year’s traditional Belgian Opening Weekend of Omloop Het Nieuwsblad and Kuurne-Brussel-Kuurne, with the aim of taking in a full spring campaign with the Swiss squad.

Tom Pidcock, 2024 Amstel Gold Race (Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

(Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

“We don’t have full control over the calendar, we have to get invited,” he added. “But in theory we should have all the races that I want to do.”

Meanwhile, at Q36.5’s media day in Calpe yesterday, Pidcock told reporters, including Daniel Benson, that his decision to break his contract with Ineos early, amid an apparent breakdown in his relationship with the British team, was “business, not personal”.

“Things were just not going how it was originally envisioned at Ineos and how I had imagined it. The solution, the mutual solution, was to end the contract, which was the best,” Pidcock said during a press conference.

The 25-year-old was sensationally dropped at the last minute from the Ineos squad for Il Lombardia in October following months of tension within the struggling squad, kicking off a protracted transfer saga that ultimately led to Pidcock leaving the team he turned pro with in 2021, and signing a three-year deal with Q36.5 in December.

But, the Yorkshire all-rounder says, there was no specific moment that hastened his departure from Ineos.

Tom Pidcock, 2024 Paris Roubaix (Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

(Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

“Things were just not going how it was originally envisioned at Ineos and how I had imagined it. The solution, the mutual solution, was to end the contract, which was the best,” he said when asked why he moved teams.

“It wasn’t a specific moment. It had been going on for a while. There’s no secret that last year was difficult for me, and Ineos I guess. It was more of a gradual thing.”

Pidcock then pointed to the changes that have taken place within Ineos since he signed four years ago, including the departure of team principal Dave Brailsford.

Meanwhile, it’s also clear that he will be afforded more freedom at Q36.5, where his off-road and classics ambitions won’t be stifled by an apparent desire for further success at grand tours, which seemed to be the main, and somewhat overbearing desire, at Ineos, a team formerly dominant at cycling’s three-week races.

Tom Pidcock wins Olympic mountain bike gold 2024 Paris Olympics (Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

(Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

“To be perfectly honest with you, I’m struggling to give an answer to that question because I’ve actually moved on,” Pidcock insisted when asked again why his spell at Ineos had ended in such acrimonious fashion.

“That team was my second family and I had great memories there but it was time to change. I accepted that a long time ago and I’m fully focused here and that’s not a scripted answer, I’m just very good at putting things behind me and moving on.

“Ineos was a fantastic team. They have their motivations and goals, and how they want to achieve them but at the end of the day what happened with me was business, it wasn’t personal.

“I signed my contract with different people who run the team now and that did create some difficulties, just from what I imagined it would be like to what happened but they still gave me every support in things they wanted to achieve.

“I had a lot of people were questioning why I had come to this team and saying these are my prime years, and that I should be winning as much as possible. But it’s not all about winning. It’s about the story you write, who you write it with, and what you achieve.

“It’s not only about winning, it’s about what you build, and here I can gain more satisfaction than anywhere else.”

15:39
I Can’t Believe It’s Not a Normal Road Bike!

Not quite as catchy a slogan as the butter one, I’ll admit, but still…

2025 Urtopia Titanium Zero e-bike - 1

> Does this new 10.8kg titanium e-road bike really “redefine what’s possible in lightweight e-bikes”?

14:40
End of the road for Fantasy Cycling

It’s the end of an era, after it was confirmed this afternoon that road.cc’s Fantasy Cycling game has called it quits ahead of the 2025 season.

In disappointing news for all of us who loved spending an evening stressing over whether to sub out Dylan Groenewegen for Derek Gee as the mountains loomed on the horizon, road.cc co-founder Dave Atkinson confirmed the decision to not continue Fantasy Cycling in a forum post.

Fantasy Cycling (Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

“We’d like to extend our thanks to everyone that’s been a part of the game over the 12 years it’s been running, especially those of you who have helped with scoring, team transfers, and answering questions on the forum. It’s had a good run,” Dave said in the post.

“We’re sad to be closing the game, but the reality is that it runs at a loss, even with volunteers doing most of the scoring, and is built on a dated codebase that is no longer reliable. It would require significant development to update the game, and in the current commercial climate that’s not something that we can commit to.

“If you’re interested in taking on the hosting and running of the game then we’re happy to start a conversation about that: you can email us at game [at] road.cc.”

And to mark Fantasy Cycling’s closure after 12 glorious years, let’s take a moment to remember the time I finished 10th overall at the 2023 Tour de France:

Fantasy League 2023 results

Glory days, they’ll pass you by…

13:54
Ukrainian climber and Dauphiné destroyer Mark Padun retires from professional cycling, aged 28

Remember Mark Padun? The Ukrainian climber who came from nowhere to blow everyone away in the Alps at the 2021 Critérium du Dauphiné before disappearing just as quickly back into the ether, barely seen at the front of a race again?

Well, he’s retired at the age of 28, following a season to forget riding – and failing to finish a single race – for Corratec-Vini Fantini.

In one of the more bizarre pro cycling career arcs, Padun turned pro for Bahrain Victorious in 2018 and was long touted as one of the sport’s most promising climbers.

However, after winning a stage of the Tour of the Alps and starting the Vuelta a España as a neo-pro, Padun’s star slowly began to fade – until one spectacular, mesmerising weekend of racing at the Critérium du Dauphiné in June 2021.

Mark Padun wins La Plagne stage, 2021 Critérium du Dauphiné (CorVos/SWpix.com)

(CorVos/SWpix.com)

With 8km to go on La Plagne, the Ukrainian attacked some of the best climbers on the planet, including Richie Porte and Geraint Thomas, to secure his first victory for almost two years, before repeating the feat a day later on the road to Le Gets, dispatching Jonas Vingegaard – on the cusp of his breakthrough Tour de France podium – and beating the Dane by over a minute and a half.

Seemingly destined for greatness and in the form of his life, Padun was then mysteriously left out of Bahrain’s Tour squad, before riding a fairly anonymous Vuelta and moving to EF Education-EasyPost in the winter.

An early time trial win at Gran Camiño aside, Padun never really got going at EF, and ended up at the start of 2024 at second-tier Italian outfit Corratec.

Of the four races he started last year, he failed to finish a single one, managing a season-high stage placing of 161st at Tirreno-Adriatico, and even finished out of the time limit in the team time trial at the Tour of Slovakia.

And at the weekend, after seven strange, strange years as a pro, and at 28 still in what should be his physical peak, Padun confirmed his retirement from the sport. 

But still, we’ll always have La Plagne…

12:58
Cycle tour operators Saddle Skedaddle announced as new holiday partner of Cycling UK

Cycling UK has announced its new holiday partnership with Newcastle-based cycle tour operator Saddle Skedaddle, which the charity says forms part of a “shared goal” to reduce the environmental impact of tourism and promote healthier travel through cycling.

To launch the partnership with Saddle Skedaddle, which offers over 180 bike-based holidays in 36 destinations, Cycling UK members can now benefit from a range of offers until the end of January.

While Saddle Skedaddle’s regular January offer allows cyclists to get £100 off selected week-long holidays (using the code SKEDADDLE100), Cycling UK members, however, can save up to £400, while also taking advantage of half price bike hire on any UK, Spain, or Italy cycling holiday worth up to £300.

The offer also includes an extra £75 off selected UK tours, including Cycling UK routes such as Rebellion Way, King Alfred’s Way, Pennine Bridleway, and Wolf Way.

Saddle Skedaddle and Cycling UK partnership

Saddle Skedaddle will also regularly update offers for the charity’s members and has committed to donating 5p for every mile ridden on a Cycling UK route – while the two organisations appear keen to stress the need for “responsible and sustainable” cycle tourism.

“Cycling UK acknowledges the environmental challenges posed by tourism and chose this specific partnership to underscore a shared goal to reduce the environmental impact of tourism and promote healthier travel through cycling,” the charity said in a statement.

“By working together, both groups hope to inspire more people to choose cycling as a means of travel, ensuring that local communities and the environment benefit from these journeys.”

“Partnering with Cycling UK is a fantastic milestone for Saddle Skedaddle. Not only does this emphasise our shared commitment to sustainable travel and strengthens our range of UK holidays but also gives us a chance to offer exclusive discounts to cyclists,” added Saddle Skedaddle’s founder and director Paul Snedker.

“We’re excited to contribute to a greener, healthier world by supporting Cycling UK’s mission, and we’re looking forward to inspiring more people to take up cycling as a way to explore the world responsibly.”

11:45
“It’s like you’re right in the race… but warm and without 6.2 mmol of lactate”

Drones in cycling, part two – the rather more peaceful alternative:

yes but warm and without 6.2mmol of lactate

[image or embed]

— Johan Jacobs (@jacobsjohan.bsky.social) January 12, 2025 at 8:00 PM

10:02
Bedlam in Belgium

Elsewhere during ‘cross champs weekend, one particularly greasy corner at the slip-and-slide mud fest that was Belgium’s Zolder circuit – which had been a veritable ice rink only 24 hours before, delaying the start of the youth races – was causing all sorts of problems for the U23 men:

Bunny-hopping a stray bike only to careen into the barriers yourself? Now that’s what I call cyclocross.

10:38
Drone Brompton Drone

In case you missed it at the weekend: 

Brompton Electric G Line

> War in Ukraine delays folding bike brand’s new e-bike launch – because supplier was busy building drones for British Army

Bonus points for anyone who spotted the admittedly extremely obscure reference to a 1979 single by synth-punk band Suicide in the headline. And yes, I have too much time on my hands…

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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8 comments

Avatar
don simon fbpe | 5 hours ago
2 likes

It was an opportunity missed, even the coverage from France that was pencilled in by Eurosport/Discovery+ was mysteriously removed.

Avatar
Boopop | 6 hours ago
6 likes

What was the point in that Shell sponsorship again? At the time they said "We’re looking forward to working alongside Shell UK over the rest of this decade to widen access to the sport".

Avatar
Velophaart_95 | 6 hours ago
4 likes

One wonders what British Cycling are spending their money on. Track racing most likely......

If the National champs can't be filmed/streamed live, then what hope has the sport? It shouldn't be down to the local organiser to put this together. The national governing body should ensure all national champs are availible to watch. From memory, it wasn't long ago even the Road Nationals ( in the Isle of Man) weren't covered live. 

As a MTB racing fan, I've got used to no live coverage of Nationals......

Saying that, the country (Netherlands) who've dominated recent World champs, didn't have live coverage either - as their national broadcaster prefers to cover Speed skating....

I think that tells you how big (or not) the sport of CX actually is......

Avatar
Smoggysteve replied to Velophaart_95 | 5 hours ago
1 like

Velophaart_95 wrote:

One wonders what British Cycling are spending their money on. Track racing most likely......

This , unfortunately, is exactly the issue. BC cares about one thing above all, securing medals in Olympic events. And most of our success has always been track cycling. The good ol' lets play it safe and not venture into other areas. It's a shame when you see the talent we have. You can rest assured they will want to take credit for MTB success on the back of Tom Pidcock but won't do a damn thing to broaden their horizons into backing his other discipline. Why? There are no medals in the Olympics for cyclocross. It's that simple. 

Avatar
Capt Sisko replied to Smoggysteve | 4 hours ago
0 likes

Smoggysteve wrote:

This , unfortunately, is exactly the issue. BC cares about one thing above all, securing medals in Olympic events.

Got to agree with that and it's difficult to criticise them about that when the measure of the sports success (in terms of securing future funding) is how many medals did they bring home, particularly when track cycling has both a lot of medals up for grabs AND the same athletes can compete in several disciplines. Whilst we would all love to see the money spread wider, when the measure is ‘Pounds per Medal’ and track cycling provides a good return.

Remember how money was poured into swimming, tons of it and then when the success didn’t come how the funding was taken away. Possibly I missed it because I’m not interesting in swimming, but when was the last time you saw swimming on the BBC? We are at least getting some TV coverage.

Avatar
stonojnr replied to Capt Sisko | 3 hours ago
0 likes

When was the last time we saw cycling on the BBC ? Olympics, Worlds & Ride London last year, that was pretty much it wasn't it ?

No ones demanding national broadcaster coverage, as nice as that would be, but online coverage via YouTube should be the minimum expected for nationals.

And it's a really simple equation, the more interest & more people watching it you get, the more sponsors get interested and the more potential Olympic medal winning talent you will unearth.

Avatar
panda replied to Velophaart_95 | 5 hours ago
1 like

If they're anything like other federations, then they're spending it on trying to win Olympic medals, because that's where the lottery funding comes from.  No medals, no money.  I'm fairly sure I remember an interview with some badminton (?) players who had just won a bronze which was more or less the difference between solvency and insolvency for their federation.

Which makes you wonder why they don't do more around MTB because that's been a happy hunting ground (as long as MVDP crashes in warm-up or DNS).

Avatar
lesterama replied to Velophaart_95 | 5 hours ago
0 likes

Maybe things will change in the lead-up to the winter 2030 Olympics. How do Zoe Bäckstedt, Cat Ferguson and Imogen Wolff perform on snow? 

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