It’s been a long, difficult 12 months, but the disc brake reign of terror is finally over (and before anybody jumps into the comments, it’s only a joke, I know it’s not really about the bike, you don’t need brakes for a hill climb… You know the rest).
Because at the annual two-wheeled masochism convention otherwise known as the national hill climb championships, the highlight for many of the British cycling calendar, Harry MacFarlane and Illi Gardner eschewed the tech conventions of the 2020s and secured a much-needed victory for rim brake traditionalists everywhere.
> “A dark day for hill climbing”: Widespread horror as British hill climb championships won for the first time using… disc brakes
On the Dipton Mill Road climb in Northumberland yesterday, all eyes (some of them peering through dinosaur costumes) may have been on reigning four-time national champion Andrew Feather, and his £17,500, disc-fitted SWI superbike.
(Andy Smith)
But it was the on-fire MacFarlane, off the back of five open hill climb wins this autumn, who upgraded his fourth from last year for a maiden national title, beating Feather by just two seconds with a blistering time of 3.09 on the 1.2km, 10 per cent brute.
Oh, and the TAAP Kalas rider did so while wearing sunglasses and mounting a 360 camera on his bike. Marginal weight weenie gains be damned.
And, use of old-school rim brakes aside, it’s fair to say that MacFarlane’s bike – a Cervélo R3 from the previous decade – is eye-catching in its own right:
(Simon Warren)
Quick mate, some bored GCSE student’s been at your bike!
Though, judging by MacFarlane’s design team, that may actually have been the case:
I hear David Lappartient has already launched an investigation into the culprits and their forthright critique of the world governing body.
And, if that wasn’t enough, according to cycling author and rim brake and hill climb enthusiast Simon Warren, the 27-year-old also immediately sunk two pints of Guinness while waiting for his national title-winning effort to be confirmed (and many more afterwards, and a few shots, by the looks of things).
Now, that’s what I call a national champion.
“Genuinely, I didn’t expect to win here. I thought I might get on the podium, so I’m over the moon to win. There have been lots of really strong riders this season who are going really well,” a stunned MacFarlane told Cycling Time Trials after his big win.
“Everybody comes from different areas of the country, and there are lots who you don’t race against until the Nationals, so it’s great to make it a real occasion, and you just never know what can happen.
“The crowds were amazing, lining the course the whole way up. It was a wall of people at the top and I was just in the moment. I could see objects rather than people as I was just in the red, trying to find the line.
“Conditions were OK, but there was a headwind which doesn’t suit me as I’m not the lightest rider so it was hard going.”
To underline the rim brake supremacy in Northumberland yesterday, Queen of the Mountain Illi Gardner secured her third consecutive national hill climb title, beating Lizi Brooke by 12.5 seconds in a repeat of last year’s podium.
“I didn’t feel confident at all after finishing, so I’m very happy to have won,” Cardiff-based Gardner, who tends to prefer the longer climbs of the Alps and Pyrenees, which she attributes to her “overdoing” the first minute on yesterday’s climb.
“I definitely got a bit carried away at the start which made the second half really difficult! The crowds were awesome though, I’m really pleased to win.
“The crowds were incredible in the last few hundred metres – I couldn’t actually see the road or finish line at all. It was definitely a bit overwhelming and I slowed down a little (well that’s my excuse for not having a super strong finish!) but it was a very cool thing to experience.”
(Andy Smith)
Meanwhile, 17-year-old Harrogate rider Harry Hudson won the junior men’s race – again on disc brakes – with a storming time of 3.12, which would have been more than enough to bag the third podium spot behind MacFarlane and Feather in the senior event. Remember the name.
The future is bright, the future is rim brakes… Well, in hill climbing anyway.
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15 comments
With regards to Hong Kong's proposed mandatory helmet laws, has there been an analysis of injuries/deaths for motor vehicle passengers/drivers and the potential for them to be required to wear helmets or other forms of protection...?
I'm guessing the numbers for those are far higher but the likelihood of any similar laws is... zero.
The last column in the table of Bouhanni's splits is completely wrong. They've calculated min/km, but then multiplied instead of divided (or vice versa) to convert to min/mi. Nobody is running 2:20 miles (nearly 26 MPH.)
I'm pretty sure that wasn't Sebastien Loeb driving the DS3 WRC, it was an ex Loeb car, but a Spanish privateer was driving it.
As for Hillclimbing, it's a bit of a farce, isn't it? No proper rules or regs. Should be proper regs, minimum weight, and a motorsport style BoP formula, so the lightest rider on the lightest bike isn't guaranteed to win, and stop it being a simple w/kg contest which is boring.
Neithere the lightest rider nor the lightest bike won.
Does Ton Pidcock lack morals by staying at Ineos?
I was on the hill yesterday, top fun and very noisy in the last two hundred metres. I'll have a full video out on my channel soon. Harry McF was absolutely delighted to win, he and his posse were celebrating beyond the finish line already. Andrew Feather looked a bit disconsolate. Illi G did look slow at the finish although by then she had a large time buffer in hand.
Some explanation as to why Mr.MacFarlane harbours such strong feelings about the UCI might be helpful?
It's more a comment on UCI weight limits and equipment restrictions.
I assume it's a nod to the UCI minimum bike weight rules? And, judging from the images, might not have been his doing.
I did wonder if it might be that although seems rather childish (maybe added by his young assistants as you suggest), not as if the UCI have tried to stop hillclimb championships…ironically the paint for the graffiti will provide extra weight…
I mean, if he's wearing sunnies and a camera and had 2 pints of Guiness beforehand, he's probably not that bothered about weight of the white pen.
I read it as that he'd drank 2 pints before at first, but it's actually before he was confirmed as champ.
My bad, lazy reading. That makes much more sense!
Harry Mac is legend, last time I heard he'd built up a super quick bike via assorted aliexpress bits. I suspect that might be the source of the non UCI approval and why reverting to an old Cervelo on rim brakes was the choice of bike for this.
I don't think UCI have any jurisdiction over hillclimb competitions in the UK. They usually come under CTT regulations instead, which for this example, only require two working brakes, operable from the widest part of the handlebars, which should be minimum 35cm wide, and front & rear lights.
See section 14 here:
https://www.cyclingtimetrials.org.uk/articles/view/11
Also, the "old Cervelo" looks like it's a prepared dedicated climber, i.e. 1x chainset, stripped paint, lightweight Cane Creek style calipers, no bar tape, etc.