Hugo Hofstetter has called for the UCI to better protect riders from disc brake injuries after he needed 35 stitches to treat a cut to his ear sustained during a crash.
The Arkéa–Samsic sprinter fell with four kilometres to the finish of the final stage of 2.1 Circuit de la Sarthe, and suffered a large cut to his head and ear.
Speaking to Dernières Nouvelles d'Alsace, the former Israel Start-Up Nation rider said he has felt better "but there's nothing we can do about it. I received around thirty stitches in my right ear, at least 35, and two in my right hand at Le Mans hospital."
Hofstetter shared a photo of his sliced Ekoi helmet on social media, before later posting an Instagram story showing his bandaged head.
He asked: "When will the UCI put protections for disc brakes? It would have saved me 35 stitches?"
Someone claiming to be a former UCI employee replied to the 28-year-old's concern, suggesting the pro riders' union AIGCP and World Federation of the Sporting Goods Industry has refused the world governing body's safety proposals in the past.
"We rarely hear the teams on this subject. However, the teams (employers) are responsible for your safety. My best wishes for recovery for this injury which is always one injury too many on a cycling race," they said.
Hofstetter's place at Paris-Roubaix now seems unlikely due to the injury, a setback to his strong start to life at the French team which has seen him rack up podiums at Belgian one-day races: Kuurne-Brussells-Kuurne, Le Samyn and Bredene Koksijde Classic.
Disc brakes' emergence in the peloton led to multiple pro riders claiming the rotors had caused them injury. In 2016, Fran Ventoso reported a disc-related injury at Paris-Roubaix, prompting the UCI to halt its trial of the technology.
Ventoso recalled: "I didn’t actually fall: it was only my leg touching the back of his bike. I kept riding. But shortly afterwards, I had a glance at that leg: it didn't hurt, there was not a lot of blood, but I could clearly see part of the periosteum, the membrane or surface that covers my tibia.
"I got off my bike, threw myself against the right-hand side of the road over the grass, covered my face with my hands in shock and disbelief."
Then, in October of the same year, Sam Bewley shared a now-deleted picture of a burn or scrape that he said was the result of a hot rotor touching his skin.
In 2018, Cyclo-cross racer Katie Compton's husband shared a gory picture of her knee "cut to the bone", apparently caused by a disc brake rotor.
Chris Froome has also raised issues with discs, but the four-time Tour de France champion's problems are less safety-related and instead down to his rubbing.
Speaking in a video posted on his YouTube channel Froome said: "My entertainment with disc brakes continues. I think they're sort of work in progress. I think the technology is improving but the margins are so slim. You do a big descent and the alignment moves completely so I need to stop and readjust everything again.
> Chris Froome STILL has disc brake problems
"We're riding Shimano at the moment. I hear the new 12-speed Shimano has sorted out some of these issues but… with the 11-speed [we're] still getting a lot of rubbing, getting one piston firing more than the other one, which always puts things out of alignment.
"No matter how many mechanics I’ve spoken to or taken the bike to, you just can't get 100 per cent on top of that. [You] always… start getting a few issues as soon as you start doing some some really big descents.
"But c'est la vie, for the time being. Just put the earphones in and pretend I can't hear it."
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17 comments
I am Jack's complete lack of surprise. Disc brakes cause lasceration injuries; disc brake disciples deny existence of injury.
Rule #1 of disc brake club - you do not talk about rotor injuries.
Rule #1 of disc brake club... is 'Wow! These brakes are much better'
How can a brake disc impact a helmet seemingly perpendicular to the helmet surface? Was someone lobbing them around like shuriken?
Is it perpendicular, though? On the side of the damage to the top of the photo there's a bit of bent in plastic that suggests to me that something flat could have impacted at about the angle of that bend - about 20-30 degrees, maybe? Then as it's bent in it's sheared away at the other side.
It was only at the weekend that I was wondering, "Whatever happened to the killer disc break fears of a few years ago?"
I'd love to see the full helmet, work out where exactly it was on said helmet and then my question would be...How does a disc go directly into a helmet at that angle with a wheel surrounding it??
If a disc did hit the helmet, it would not be straight in like that unless it was right on the edge of the helmet. Also, look just above that damage, there is another smaller hole, a disc rotor couldn't do that.
Not sure the circled area disproves the disc impact claim - you'll easy get multiple knocks in a big crash, so could be from a second non-disc impact.
It doesn't disprove it, but I believe it calls into question, also the impossible angle to this hit the helmet straight on like that, half the helmet would have to be through the spokes.
Has to be the disc. Unless there is some other thin sharp thing that extends radially across the wheel, that could act like a cheesewire?
Chainwheel, sprocket.
One of the advantages of the 1x systems is that, unless you lose the chain, there are much less pointy bits near where your right leg is.
Spoke too soon?
I thought for a moment there that Hugo had a chin injury. FFS! Another Patrick Bateman wannabee.
Anyhow.
I'll say it again. Rimming is winning...!
Maybe that sounded better in your head...
Avoid the gash. Stay on the rim.
Any better?
Would be interesting to see a nice little graph showing number of riders in every race, and then a plot against each type of injury received for that race.
Mountain bikers reading this story.