A competitor preparing to ride Unbound Gravel, one of the United States' premier off-road events, was hit and killed in a collision with a motorist on Friday night.
Kansas State Highway Patrol broke the news in a report, saying that Gregory Bachman, 61, was killed by the driver of a Chevrolet Silverado pick-up truck in a collision at a junction at around 5:30pm on Friday 3 June.
The incident happened at the junction of two gravel roads on the west side of Emporia, the city which hosts the event, and resulted in the rider from Colorado being pronounced dead at the scene.
According to the report, Bachman was riding northbound on country road F when he approached a junction with country road 190. The driver who was travelling west struck the rider due to compete the following day before stopping at the side of the road.
The driver has since been named as 52-year-old Cory Smith of Emporia, and Unbound released a statement: "Race organisers at Unbound Gravel extend our deepest condolences to Gregory’s family."
The event went ahead in testing conditions, with rain leaving parts of the course puddle-strewn and muddy. In the women's 100-mile race, Sofia Gomez Villafañe won by over eight minutes from defending champion Lauren De Crescenzo.
Dutchman Ivar Slik became the first non-American to win the event, taking the men's 200-mile race in a little under nine and a half hours, Unbound's fastest time by nearly an hour. Keegan Swenson, last year's winner Ian Boswell, and Laurens Ten Dam were beaten by Slik in the sprint. Swenson and Boswell completed the podium places.
Peter Sagan completed the men's 100-mile race, finishing 63rd out of 1,072 competitors in a time of 5:55:17.
Image: Police tape (CC licensed by Tony Webster on Flickr)
Just a reminder that one of the relevant councillors dropped in to the comments of the story linked in the last paragraph to say that it wasn't...
I wouldn't let a mallet anywhere near my tent pegs either.
Are you riding them on British roads? In which case that's indistinguishable from gravel anyway.
I think it very much depends what we're talking about. For "people now using cycling as part of their transport" it's a small percentage ...
Not quite I think (again, element of guesswork, could be wrong), I think they would have tried to claim he thought they were participating in a...
American history
Thanks. Seems like this could have been included in the review....
*takes head out of bucket of cold water* No harm done, needed waking up anyway.
The trouble with that, desirable as it would appear, is that manslaughter has a pretty high bar; the defendant has to be proven to have been ...
Harsh to arrest somebody, just because their car decided to flip over.