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 Independent columnist downgrades speed of “Lyrca-clad red-light jumpers” from 52mph to 40mph

“These speed freaks make the rest of us good guys look bad – they tarnish the cyclist brand and take away from all the wonderful things about biking”

After the Telegraph’s headline of “lycra lout cyclists” going “52mph in a 20mph zone”, a columnist writing for the Independent has claimed that there’s a large crossover between “those nearly killing walking commuters and the head-to-toe [Lycra]-clad red-light jumpers going 40mph in a 20mph zone”.

The column belongs to Ellie Harrison, the Independent’s TV Editor and is titled “I ride a bike to work – but I’m sick of reckless cyclists ruining it for everyone”. She starts by painting a picture of crossing a road while walking to work on a bleary Monday morning with a cup of flat white in hand, but as a cyclist whizzes past her, she drops the scalding hot beverage on her leg — an experience she claims “anyone living in a UK city will know all too well”.

“Walk anywhere in central London these days, and you’ll see swarms of cyclists buzzing by. Pedestrians are suffering. Things need to change,” she writes.

However, Harrison gives a disclaimer that she “mostly cycles to work”, sometimes even wearing Lycra shorts. However, as a fairly responsible and normal person, she feels genuine shame most mornings, when she comes across cyclists nearly mowing down pedestrians as they jump red lights at high speed.

The column reads: “In the Venn diagram of types of bike people, there tends to be a large crossover between those nearly killing walking commuters and the head-to-toe Lyrca-clad [sic] red-light jumpers going 40mph in a 20mph zone. These speed freaks make the rest of us good guys look bad – they tarnish the cyclist brand and take away from all the wonderful things about biking.

> Telegraph journalists told "check your research" after front page claims cyclists hit 52mph chasing London Strava segments... despite that being faster than Olympic track cyclists

However, Harrison confesses that she’s no saint — in fact, she says that she runs red lights occasionally – at about 5mph, when there are no pedestrians trying to cross and no cars in sight. She even argues in favour of “head starts” for cyclists in traffic junctions, which allow cyclists to go before traffic, and hold the left-turning traffic for longer.

The most dubious claim made in the piece, however, is the throwaway line of cyclists doing 40mph in a 20mph zone, much similar to the headline Telegraph ran in its newspaper on Friday 17 May this year: “52mph in a 20 zone... Lycra lout cyclists are creating death traps all over Britain.”

Telegraph front page/ cyclists in Richmond Park (Simon MacMichael/Telegraph)

The headline led to a lot of backlash with the publisher even changing the headline on its website eventually, albeit the newspaper one had been set in stone, as it easily became known that doing 52mph in London traffic was a little bit too unbelievable, given six-time Olympic champion Sir Chris Hoy’s fastest ever speed was 80km/h, achieved on an optimal indoor velodrome in the keirin, a track cycling event where riders slipstream behind a derny to achieve faster speeds.

However, it looks like the Independent has downgraded that ludicrous speed to something slightly more believable of 40mph, or 64km/h, although we would still like to repeat a comment made by a cyclist on social media under the Telegraph post: “If you can ride through London at 52mph 40mph, please contact your local professional bicycling team. They may be interested in your skills.”

> 20 of the most hysterical Daily Mail anti-cycling headlines

Running a red light, meanwhile, can be of course be dangerous while also being illegal at any speed, as noted by another commenter under the column. They additionally wrote: “I query the remark about ‘Lyrca(sic)-clad red-light jumpers going 40mph in a 20mph zone’. How can she be sure they were doing 40mph? That speed is not at all easy for a moderately able cyclist to attain on a level road. Perhaps she had some sort of radar device? How can she be sure it wasn't logging a motor vehicle?

“This has all the hallmarks of a classic anti-cycling rant. The fact that the writer claims to (occasionally, one presumes) get in the saddle, is no excuse.

“Today I came close to being run down by a bus. Its driver saw fit to overtake a parked vehicle and approach straight into my path. I had to hit the brakes hard - more so because it was a slight downhill. I suppose it was my fault for going downhill in the first place, wasn't it?!”

> "Mums, dads, sons and daughters being labelled as killers. It’s just got to stop": Chris Boardman comments on Telegraph '52mph in a 20mph zone' article as it emerges co-author is former BBC fact-checker

According to the Highway Code, it is illegal to jump light red lights for cycles, and the number of pedestrians hit by cyclists has also increased by a third since 2020, as per data released by police in May. However, road casualty statistics show that bikes are involved in just 2 per cent of pedestrian casualties reported to and by the police.

There has also been the recent controversy around the "dangerous cycling bill" that received cross-party backing from both Labour and the Conservatives during the previous government's tenure and could be passed under Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

On becoming law, it would introduce the specific offence of “causing death by dangerous, careless, or inconsiderate cycling, and causing serious injury by careless or inconsiderate cycling”, which would lead to tougher penalties for those who kill or injure while riding bikes, e-bikes, electric scooters, unicycles, and “personal transporters”.

A recent survey done by active travel charity Cycling UK also found that almost two-thirds of the UK are supportive of encouraging others to cycle more, with 70 per cent respondents also wanting to see more cycle-friendly routes across the country.

The charity also called on the Labour government to show its commitment to improving active travel in the country by allocating 10 per cent of the total transport budget to cycling and walking, while also moving away from the "culture war" and the “divisive rhetoric” around the topic stirred by the previous government to bed once and for all.

Adwitiya joined road.cc in 2023 as a news writer after graduating with a masters in journalism from Cardiff University. His dissertation focused on active travel, which soon threw him into the deep end of covering everything related to the two-wheeled tool, and now cycling is as big a part of his life as guitars and football. He has previously covered local and national politics for Voice Wales, and also likes to writes about science, tech and the environment, if he can find the time. Living right next to the Taff trail in the Welsh capital, you can find him trying to tackle the brutal climbs in the valleys.

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95 comments

Avatar
mark1a replied to wtjs | 4 months ago
1 like
wtjs wrote:

I think this is the woman who used to be on Countryfile but who has, I'm pleased to see, now left. What a dimwit! I suppose she's angling for a job on the Mail.

No it's not, there's more than one Ellie Harrison. 

https://uk.linkedin.com/in/ellie-harrison-88362b99

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellie_Harrison_(journalist)

 

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wtjs replied to mark1a | 4 months ago
1 like

Thanks, but she's definitely a dimwit.

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mattw | 4 months ago
7 likes

I didn't realise the Independent had a "mouth-breathing cycle-troll" layer, but we live and learn.

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ktache replied to mattw | 4 months ago
2 likes

It's moved a long way from it's fine broadsheet days.

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eburtthebike | 4 months ago
15 likes

From her article "There’s already a culture war between cyclists and motorists." 

No, there's a culture war between cyclists and the MSM, which sees attacking cyclists as a cheap, easy, legal way of getting lots of clicks so that advertisers will cough up.

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stonojnr replied to eburtthebike | 4 months ago
2 likes

A cheap easy way of getting lots of clicks for ad revenues you say, surely not just the MSM is it

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Tony W. | 4 months ago
15 likes

Unfortunately, we live in a society where it's acceptable and expected to drive at 35 mph in a 30 mph zone, but if you drive at 25 mph you will be flashed and honked at to speed up or move over. Until society flips this on it's head, children are going to be continuously killed on a daily basis, good luck society, people would rather kill their own children than adhere to the highway code and speed limits.

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jaymack replied to Tony W. | 4 months ago
19 likes

No Tony that's rather harsh, drivers would rather kill someone else's children than slow down.

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belugabob replied to jaymack | 4 months ago
0 likes
jaymack wrote:

No Tony that's rather harsh, drivers would rather kill someone else's children than slow down.

They don't discriminate - quite often see them with their kids not strapped in or (worse) holding a small child on their lap, between themselves and the seatbelt.

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OldRidgeback replied to Tony W. | 4 months ago
17 likes

Last week I was trundling into the office on my Suzuki sportsbike, making a point of sticking to the 20mph speed limit. The car driver behind me decided that this was an affront to his manhood and started beeping his horn, before rushing past me on the inside with a dangerously close pass. All he did of course was to get to the rear of the same queue of cars at the next set of lights a little earlier than he would have otherwise. I came alongside him and menitioned in a very calm voice that he was lucky I didn't have my helmet cam on as that would've resulted in six points on his licence otherwise. 

It's not just cyclists who get close passes from stupid drivers.

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Rat West | 4 months ago
1 like

You may wish to change your headline to correct the word "LYRCA"

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Jack Sexty replied to Rat West | 4 months ago
11 likes

You may wish to keep reading...

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mdavidford replied to Jack Sexty | 4 months ago
5 likes
Jack Sexty wrote:

You may wish to keep reading...

Sic burn

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danthomascyclist | 4 months ago
8 likes

A Tour de France sprint finish will typically hit a maximum speed of  around 43mph whilst exerting around 1,500 watts.

Because of how aerodynamics work, resistance increases with the cube of the speed (i.e. to double your speed, you need to increase power by 8 times). To increase your speed from 43 to 53mph you'd need to output about 75% additional power - so somewhere over 2,600 watts.

I'd love to see these commuters who are putting out such numbers on their morning commute.

 

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Surreyrider replied to danthomascyclist | 4 months ago
1 like

So would every World Tour team!

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brooksby | 4 months ago
7 likes
Quote:

She starts by painting a picture of crossing a road while walking to work on a bleary Monday morning with a cup of flat while in hand, but as a cyclist whizzes past her, she drops the scalding hot beverage on her leg

So did she cross the road without looking?

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tootsie323 replied to brooksby | 4 months ago
1 like

And what is a flat while?

(almost sounds like a nasty insult to a rotund female in a South African accent...)

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brooksby replied to tootsie323 | 4 months ago
1 like

You know, I hadn't even noticed that!  I'd read it as "a cup of flat white".  Which I imagine was her intention but if she can't even spell "Lycra"…

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chrisonabike replied to tootsie323 | 4 months ago
7 likes
tootsie323 wrote:

And what is a flat while?

I don't know - ordered ages ago but still waiting.

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zweiblumen replied to brooksby | 4 months ago
5 likes

I do find it bizarre that her prime example of inconsiderate cycling involves someone stepping into the road into incoming traffic.

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brooksby replied to zweiblumen | 4 months ago
1 like

"Cyclists", innit…

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Surreyrider replied to zweiblumen | 4 months ago
1 like

And more to the point in London she's probably stepping into a cycle lane into bike riders travelling in said cycle lane.

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IanMK | 4 months ago
19 likes

Speaking as a driver I have to tell you that I'm ashamed of speeding / drink / disqualified * drivers...... Said nobody ever.
* delete as appropriate

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Rome73 | 4 months ago
9 likes

Coincidently, I was having this discussion with a colleague last week - how fast can you get your e-cargo bike to go downhill. (We are talking legal e-cargo bikes) We both have reached around 30 going down hill on a very long, wide road and with no wind, no parked cars, no side roads, relatively smooth surface - just a long straight run. When the bikes are loaded with our equipment  etc they are heavier and can pick up more speed. Obviously  what we were both forgetting to do was dress in Lycra - then we could have reached speeds of 50 plus. 

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stonojnr replied to Rome73 | 4 months ago
3 likes

30mph is easy for any cyclist on any type of bike down even relatively short not even that steep hills.

I usually lose my nerve at that point to go faster, as catch a bump wrong, have wildlife leap out in front of you, a crash is going to hurt just wearing lycra.

But on the flat those speeds are just an exaggeration.

Even if the point hidden in the article is valid, some cyclists can be dicks when they ride.

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brooksby replied to stonojnr | 4 months ago
4 likes
stonojnr wrote:

I usually lose my nerve at that point to go faster, as catch a bump wrong, have wildlife leap out in front of you, a crash is going to hurt just wearing lycra.

A crash would hurt no matter what you were wearing.

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Rome73 replied to stonojnr | 3 months ago
0 likes

30 is not easy on a cargo bike. You need a downhill section to get the speed up and to sustain the speed. 

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aledapeifion | 4 months ago
13 likes

Sadly, since the once respectable Independent became a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Kremlin, whatever an "Independent columist" has to say is as undeserving of attention as the words of anyone writing for the Telegraph, the Mail, the Express, the Sun, Reach group local newspapers... the list goes on. Please stop giving these people extra oxygen of publicity - or any oxygen, full stop.

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stonojnr replied to aledapeifion | 4 months ago
1 like

Prompts lots of discussion though don't it

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bluemoonday | 4 months ago
3 likes

It's possible for some cyclists to reach over 30mph on some downhill sections.
In another scenario, some e bikes are unrestricted to allow even higher speeds. Just this weekend I saw a guy riding a mono wheeled hover bike passing cars travelling at 30mph on both sides of the road. Admittedly, that's not a bike but the problem is still the same.

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