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Weirdest time trial helmet ever? Uno-X’s new Star Wars bee lid divides opinion; “Motorists want our parking spots back!” Angry drivers deflate hire bike tyres and tell cyclists to “buy a car”; Luke Plapp’s sweary post-race debrief + more on the live blog

It’s Tuesday and Ryan Mallon, in between counting down the hours until Opening Weekend, is here with more cycling updates on the live blog

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21 February 2023, 09:00
Uno-X's Sweet Protection helmet at Volta ao Algarve cropped (Cor Vos)
“I don’t think I like aerodynamics anymore”: Is this is the weirdest time trial helmet ever? Uno-X’s new bumblebee Star Wars lid divides opinion

First we had the POC Tempor, the OG of oddly-shaped, style-be-damned time trial helmets:

Stefan Bissegger UAE TT (GCN+)

 The POC in all its glory

Then Kask joined in on the fun at the Tour de France last year, unveiling their new ski goggle-esque visor, with oversized wings (and superfluous gilet as an optional extra):

Geraint Thomas gilet (Eurosport/GCN+)

But even Ineos’ massive motocross goggles were overshadowed in Copenhagen last July by the then-brand-new Specialized S-Works TT 5, a helmet seemingly more at home in a 1960s low-budget sci-fi film than on the roads of the Tour, which – just to add another touch of glamour and sophistication – comes with its very own Samir Nasri-inspired snood…

You know, just to keep your head (and sense of style) as flat as possible:

Florian Senechal 2022 Tour de Frane (GCN)
Vlasoc snood Tour de France 2022 (GCN)

> Snood or no snood? Specialized’s aero balaclava divides opinion

But just when you thought we’ve been through the looking-glass of TT helmet design, Uno-X’s riders rocked up to Sunday’s time trial stage of the Volta ao Algarve sporting an, ahem, interesting new take on aerodynamics:

This rather eye-catching (but apparently not wind-catching) model comes from the team’s sponsor Sweet Protection.

Its flared edges certainly resemble the POC Tempor’s divisive looks, but the helmet’s stand-out feature is a large central vent with a splitter seemingly designed to separate the direct airflow (and not, as one Twitter user suggested, control minds).

The helmet, which has been developed alongside Uno-X as the Norwegian team builds up to its debut Tour de France in July, does not have a name as yet – but it’s certainly proved the inspiration for plenty of jokes on social media… even from Uno-X themselves:

Well played...

So, what do you think? Has Sweet Protection hit the sweet spot with Uno-X’s new bumblebee/Star Wars lid, or has TT helmet design well and truly jumped the shark?

21 February 2023, 17:11
“Just when you thought silly TT helmets couldn’t get any sillier”

Uno-X’s super-massive, super-sweet Sweet Protection helmet has gone down a storm with road.cc’s readers today.

“The UCI should ban these helmets on the basis of ‘bringing the sport into disrepute’”, says peted76. Not a fan then, I take it?

Meanwhile, several readers had the same thought concerning when the time comes to name the now-nameless lid.

‘Spaceballs: The TT helmet’, anyone?

Rendel Harris also noted that the huge helmet with a big button in the middle isn’t Uno-X’s only crime against fashion.

“To add to the sartorial elegance of the outsized titfer, Uno’s socks/shoe cover combination makes it look uncannily as though the rider is wearing Crocs,” they noted.

Uno-X 'crocs'

Very cool.

Finally, lesterama took grave offence to the comparison with triathletes.

“No one is ever more of a dork on a bike than a triathlete. Ever,” they said. Amen.

21 February 2023, 16:38
What else can you do in 15 minutes?

Suggestions on a postcard…

21 February 2023, 15:59
Selfridges hit with £12,000 bill after cyclist struck by car park barrier

High-end department store Selfridges was last week hit with a £12,000 bill after one of its former employees was struck by a barrier while exiting the company’s car park on her bike.

The Times reports that Sonia Spasiano, who worked as a manager at the La Perla concession in the flagship Oxford Street branch of Selfridges, claimed that the barrier closed faster than she anticipated, hitting her helmet and her nose, leaving a scar.

Claiming compensation for injuries and minor scarring from Selfridge’s Retail, the 37-year-old’s case alleged negligence on behalf of the company’s management for failing to warn cyclists about the potential hazards of riding through the barrier.

Last week at Central London County Court, deputy district judge Adan Tear ruled that the store should have had clearer warnings, and did not give enough thought to how cyclists could enter or leave the car park – but that Spasiano herself was also partially at fault for the incident.

> Cyclist hit by truck driver has compensation cut after judge says lack of helmet contributed to injuries

“I am satisfied that Selfridges does bear responsibility for part of this accident but that doesn’t negate how this accident happened,” Tear said.

He added that the cyclist “must bear some responsibility herself for going under a barrier that was open, which then closed and so caused her injury”.

The court heard that Spasiano was hit by the barrier while following a motorist out of the car park. She said that she followed the vehicle as it would trigger the barrier to rise.

“She said that she normally followed the car one bicycle length behind, and would then follow it through the barrier,” Tear said.

“The barrier struck towards her helmet and then moved down, hitting the bridge of her nose, causing injury to her face.”

The judge awarded Spasiano, who has since left Selfridges, £3,060 – reducing the compensation by a third to account for her “contributory negligence”.

Selfridges was also hit with a bill for nearly £9,000 to cover the legal costs of the case, though I think with a revenue of £653 million for 2022 they’ll be fine.

21 February 2023, 15:28
‘Why don’t cyclists use the cycle lanes?’ Part 6,950
21 February 2023, 14:48
“Finally, a new cycling sponsor that’s not questionable”: Soft drink Orangina set to partner with Tour de France

In what is undoubtedly the biggest cycling news story of the day, everyone’s favourite French soft drink, Orangina, has announced that it will become a partner of the Tour de France and Tour de France Femmes for the next three years.

The drink – which, incidentally, is one of cycling-mad comedian David O’Doherty’s gig ‘sponsors’ (just don’t ask him how to pronounce it) – will be sold at the Tour from this July, as well as featuring in the publicity caravan and in the race’s support cars.

To mark this most French of partnerships, the new official soft drink supplier will also launch three special edition cans later this year, based on this year’s stages, to celebrate “the most shaken roads of the Tour de France”.

It’s not yet known whether Orangina will also replace Coca Cola as the peloton’s emergency rescue fizzy fuel of choice, however.

In a not-at-all-overblown statement released this morning, ASO’s Yann Le Moënner said: “You can recognise a bottle of Orangina at first sight, or even in a blind test. Both the container and the drink inside it have become part of our collective psyche. It is hard to overlook its powerful synergies with the Tour de France, and the alliance between these two ‘monuments’ of French culture is only natural. We expect this to be a refreshing and bubbly relationship, of course.”

Hmmm, synergy…

The news has been welcomed with unfettered joy by most cycling fans, just happy that their sport is, for once, not being used by some moustache-twirling oil company for its latest greenwashing project.

However, some are concerned about the immediate threat posed by those famous glass bottles, soon to be launched from a moving publicity vehicle by an overzealous student towards an unsuspecting public…

21 February 2023, 14:08
‘15-minute city conspiracy theories debunked’

A handy 60-second guide from Carlton Reid here, in case you’re ever in Oxford and encounter a large crowd banging on about communism and dystopian prisons…

21 February 2023, 13:17
Just popping out to the shops to get some lunch, should definitely be more than 15 minutes

No idea what Ned could possibly be referring to…

21 February 2023, 12:45
“Did they print Plapp’s skin suit inside out?”

Perhaps the young Australian’s bout of post-race effin’ and jeffin’ wasn’t actually about the TTT itself, but was instead referring to the manic scene in the team bus which resulted in him wearing his white young rider’s skin suit inside out…

Or maybe the race organisers are just massive fans of Pringles?

21 February 2023, 12:41
“Boys, get the f*** out of the way!” Luke Plapp takes GC lead – complete with sweary post-race debrief – as Remco powers Soudal Quick-Step to TTT win at UAE Tour

You can forgive Luke Plapp for being a touch over-excited after today’s team time trial at the UAE Tour.

The 20-year-old Australian road race champion – who was, with rather impeccable timing, caught on live TV giving a typically Aussie (in other words, sweary) post-race debrief to his Ineos teammates – was instrumental in securing third place on the day for the British team, which proved just enough for the precocious Plapp to don the first stage race leader’s jersey of his young career.

After yesterday’s “dead heat” sprint, the UAE Tour continues to be a race of extremely fine margins, as Plapp has assumed the overall lead despite being locked on the same time as world champion Remco Evenepoel, who powered his Soudal Quick-Step team to the stage.

The Belgian team, the beneficiaries of that tightest of calls on yesterday’s stage won by Tim Merlier, once again came out on the right side of a squeaky bum situation, pipping long-time hotseat attendees EF Education-EasyPost by one measly second for the win, despite being 10 seconds down at the intermediate time check.

Who says team time trials are boring? Not when “passions are running high” anyway…

21 February 2023, 11:12
Vancouver drivers deflate hire bike tyres (Mihai Cirstea)
“Us motorists want our parking spots back, bitch!” Angry drivers deflate hire bike tyres and tell cyclists to “buy a car”

We’re all used to frank and vitriolic exchanges between cyclists and motorists by now, usually exchanged out on the road or in a particularly toxic Twitter thread.

But we don’t often see those kinds of exchanges occurring via note form…

But that’s what is happening over in Canada, where a group of Vancouver-based motorists, apparently angry that a Mobi cycle share station has replaced a handful of car parking spaces on a relatively quiet street, has resorted to deflating the hire bikes’ tyres.

In response to this pro-car, less climate-conscious version of the Tyre Extinguishers, two locals attached notes to trees beside the shared bikes imploring the drivers to “stop taking the air out of the tires [sic]. I need these bikes to get to work”.

Intent on continuing this odd, and rather romantic (if you squint hard enough), pre-internet form of vitriolic road user correspondence, one of the apparent tyre slashers attached their own note to the tree soon after.

The Donald Trump-inspired motorist wrote: “Too bad, so sad. Us motorists want our parking spots back, bitch! Your options: Buy a car. Buy your own bicycle. Walk. Take transit. Join Evo [a car sharing platform in Vancouver].”

Very strange.

As cyclist Mihai Cirstea, who posted the notes on Twitter, acknowledged, it’s not as if the bike share station takes up the entire road, a road which doesn’t appear to be jam-packed at the best of times:

Some on Twitter have speculated whether the whole ‘Super polite cyclist v driver debate’ is simply a well-executed guerrilla marketing campaign from either Mobi or Evo.

Others, meanwhile, have taken the whole thing very seriously, and are advocating for escalation, disproving once and for all the notion that Canadians are unfailingly nice.

“If they want war, give them war. Their tyres are just as vulnerable. The deflating of the neighbourhood cars will continue until behaviour improves,” wrote one presumably battle-hardened cyclist on Twitter.

Oh dear, think of all the notes littering the streets…

21 February 2023, 10:29
“You’re bigger dorks than triathletes now”

Ouch, that one stings…

21 February 2023, 09:56
0.00028 seconds

I still haven’t quite wrapped my head around yesterday’s ludicrously tight finish at the UAE Tour…

This morning’s second stage is a 17.2km team time trial (a rare sighting out in the wild these days, I know), so expect the margins to be ever so slightly less fine, and the commissaires to be a touch more relaxed, when it comes to deciding today’s winner. Though you never know… 

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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44 comments

Avatar
Dnnnnnn replied to ChrisB200SX | 1 year ago
1 like

ChrisB200SX wrote:

]I went direct from Reading to Oxford about 2 weeks ago, has something changed?

Not you!

Avatar
Oldfatgit replied to brooksby | 1 year ago
2 likes

We had that up here too, following electrification of the Edinburgh/ Glasgow line.
The solution was to lift the bridges, or if that wasn't possible, put new bridges in.

Avatar
brooksby replied to Oldfatgit | 1 year ago
1 like

Oldfatgit wrote:

We had that up here too, following electrification of the Edinburgh/ Glasgow line. The solution was to lift the bridges, or if that wasn't possible, put new bridges in.

Did they fill under the old bridges with concrete?

Avatar
chrisonabike replied to brooksby | 1 year ago
7 likes

brooksby wrote:

Did they fill under the old bridges with concrete?

And if they did was there a measurable reduction in trolling?

Avatar
giff77 replied to chrisonabike | 1 year ago
1 like

Nah. They just found another bridge or rock. 

Avatar
lesterama | 1 year ago
3 likes

No one is ever more of a dork on a bike than a triathlete. Ever.

Avatar
Rendel Harris | 1 year ago
5 likes

To add to the sartorial elegance of the outsized titfer, Uno's socks/shoe cover combination makes it look uncannily as though the rider is wearing Crocs. 

Avatar
peted76 | 1 year ago
7 likes

The UCI should ban these helmets on the basis of 'bringing the sport into disrepute'. 

 

 

Avatar
SimoninSpalding replied to peted76 | 1 year ago
1 like

Don't encourage them! The rules on sock height are already a combination of aerodynamic and aesthetic considerations. Along with saddle angles, hand positions, maximum reach measurements, (and probably others I have missed) it will just give them another irrelevance to enforce rather than focussing on course safety, race organisation standards, TV helicopters, motorbikes, environmental footprint....

Avatar
peted76 | 1 year ago
12 likes

Wow just when you thought silly TT helmets couldn't get any sillier.. 

 

 

 

 

Avatar
Clem Fandango replied to peted76 | 1 year ago
3 likes

Spaceballs: The TT Helmet

Avatar
Pyro Tim replied to peted76 | 1 year ago
2 likes

Came here to put a pic up of the Dark Helmet. Glad you'd already done it

Avatar
NotNigel | 1 year ago
1 like

First helmet with built in spirit level?

Avatar
brooksby | 1 year ago
10 likes

Is this the helmet you're looking for?

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