• WWW.BIKERADAR.COM
    Shimano brings Clean Cockpit tech to more bikes it could be a boon for bike designers
    Shimano has announced its Clean Cockpit design will be made available for a wider range of mid-spec flat-bar hybrid and mountain bikes. The new Clean Cockpit shift levers will be available in 9, 10 and 11-speed variants for CUES-compatible bikes. Clean Cockpit was introduced when higher-spec CUES components were launched in 2023 and enables hydraulic brake and shift levers to be more closely aligned with the handlebar. In turn, this allows for better lever placement, cleaner cable routing and a tidier-looking cockpit. It's likely to be a boon to bike designers because it will enable them to port design features from higher-spec mountain bikes and hybrid bikes to lower-priced models more easily. Small changes in shifter cable and brake hose positioning make for tidier routing. Although the changes to the new components are small, theyre an example of Shimanos trickle-down of its component enhancements to lower-spec groupsets. For example, it has just launched Deore M7200 and M6200 mechanical MTB components, with tougher derailleurs and updates to the brakes and shifters. Shimano has recently ported its Shadow ES rear derailleur design from its electronic groupsets to the new Deore XT M8200 mechanical groupset. Kevin Fickling Shimano has also recently launched the Deore XT M8200 groupset, again with mechanical shifting, but with the Shadow ES rear derailleur profile of its electronic groupsets. It has a revised shifter architecture. There have also been recent launches of new, lighter drop-bar CUES components, offering better options for lower-tier road bikes and borrowing tech from its higher-performance groupsets. Shimano says the new Clean Cockpit brake lever models work with its Optical Gear Display when its part of a shift lever with the display under the handlebar. Alongside the new Clean Cockpit options, it will continue to offer its current range of brake levers, which work with shift levers where the gear display is shown above the handlebar. Availability of Shimano's new Clean Cockpit components will vary by geography, but expect to see tidier cable routing appearing on mid-spec bikes as bike brands update their ranges.
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  • GRANFONDO-CYCLING.COM
    GRAN FONDO Reader Survey 2026 Win a Merida REACTO PRO!
    Your opinion counts! By taking part in the GRAN FONDO Reader Survey 2026, youre actively helping shape the future of the bike industry. Be part of the evolution and enter our prize draw for a chance to win a Merida REACTO PRO worth 7,699!By taking part in our reader survey, youre helping us make GRAN FONDO Magazine even better. Your feedback will not only influence the direction of our magazine but will also help the industry build better, safer, and smarter bikes.Needless to say, your data stays private we will only use your responses anonymously for statistical analysis.Head straight to the 2026 reader survey hereAnd because we know how valuable your time is, we want to give something massive back. Together with our partners, were giving away a true dream bike worth 7,699 this year!Were dropping a real asphalt rocket into the prize draw for the drop-bar segment: the brand-new MERIDA REACTO PRO! Weve already rallied the flagship model of this aero platform extensively on the pristine tarmac around the cycling mecca of Girona, and our entire team was absolutely thrilled. The best part? The race-proven DNA and outstanding riding characteristics carry over one-to-one to the PRO version!The REACTO PRO turns heads with its sharp, angular silhouette, breaking radically away from the sea of generic, rounded aero bikes. Out on the asphalt, it reveals itself as a pure speed machine: it accelerates crisply, glides almost weightlessly, and delivers a perfectly balanced handling mix of agility and composure. No complex setup, no nonsense: just hop on, clip in, and fly! You can read our full impressions in our MERIDA REACTO review.Head straight to the 2026 reader survey here!It takes less than 15 minutes to complete. The reader survey runs until 31 August 2026.Der Beitrag GRAN FONDO Reader Survey 2026 Win a Merida REACTO PRO! erschien zuerst auf GRAN FONDO Cycling Magazine.
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  • CYCLINGUPTODATE.COM
    Positive news for Visma - Key Tour de France domestique given the green light after high-speed crash
    Team Visma | Lease a Bike has confirmed one of the most anticipated updates of recent days: Edoardo Affini has been given the go ahead for the Tour de France. The Italian will be able to travel to Barcelona to ride the 2026 Tour de France, dispelling doubts after his crash in the Italian Championshi...
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  • Something a little different from Rotwild on the Avinox stand at Eurobike
    Always a brand with an interesting, unique take on e-bike design, Rotwild showed its R.XX model at Eurobike on the Avinox stand ...
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  • CYCLINGUPTODATE.COM
    OFFICIAL: Cian Uijtdebroeks leads stage-focused Movistar into 2026 Tour de France
    The 2026 Tour de France is here. On the 4th of July a very special edition for Movistar Team begins, with the Grande Boucle rolling out from Barcelona in a team time trial where the Spanish squad will be the main local hope alongside Caja Rural - Seguros RGA. The long-awaited Spanish lineup is out,...
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  • ROAD.CC
    Castelli Superleggera Bibshorts
    Lovely lightweight summer shorts with a great pad
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  • CYCLINGUPTODATE.COM
    Discovery of the Alpe d'Huez and improving on explosivity - Cian Uijtdebroeks reveals his unfinished business ahead of his first Tour de France with Movistar
    The 2026 season marks a major turning point in Cian Uijtdebroeks career, with a change of teams and goals - marked by a Tour de France debut, as a leader no less. After a turbulent end to his spell at Visma and a campaign start hampered by an elbow injury, the young Belgian climber seems to have fo...
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  • WWW.CYCLINGWEEKLY.COM
    Is there a place for an all-rounder in todays gravel world? Looks G85 Cezal says yes
    The gravel category has reached an interesting, and perhaps inevitable, point in its evolution. What began as cycling's answer to the n-1 bike has gradually fractured into a collection of increasingly specialised subcategories. Riders are now routinely asked to choose between aerodynamic race bikes built for podiums and adventure rigs capable of disappearing into the wilderness for days at a time.Take, for example, the evolution of the Specialized Crux. Once celebrated for its versatility and cyclocross roots, the latest version has evolved into something closer to a fat-tyred Tarmac, prioritising speed, efficiency and aerodynamics above all else. At the opposite end of the spectrum sit slacked-out bikes with suspension forks, mountain bike geometry and huge tyre clearances, to the point where they're often little more than hardtails with drop bars attached.In specialising, most new gravel bikes have drifted away from the all-round versatility that defined the category in the first place. Yet a handful of brands still seem interested in solving the original gravel equation: building a true all-rounder. Look believes its newest gravel platform, the G85 Cezal, is exactly that."The G85 Cezal is a fast and versatile carbon bike designed for all-around gravel rides, bridging the gap between amateur racing and long-distance adventure," says the French manufacturer."Amateur racing" is a curious positioning. After all, Look ambassador Russell Finsterwald has spent much of the season racing the G85 Cezal at some of gravel's biggest events, including Unbound Gravel and The Traka. He even opened the year with victory aboard the bike at Belgian Waffle Ride Arizona, so it's clearly at home at the sharp end of modern gravel racing as well.On paper, the G85 Cezal appears to sit directly between gravel's increasingly polarised identities. It combines progressive geometry, generous tyre clearance and suspension-corrected design with the responsiveness and efficiency traditionally associated with Look's road-racing pedigree. Look has not, however, placed much emphasis on aerodynamics, which are becoming increasingly important across the vast, flatter stretches of Kansas and Girona.Is there still a place for an all-rounder gravel bike in today's market? I rode the Look G85 Cezal for several weeks across Oregon's fast gravel roads, chunky doubletrack, technical singletrack and long mixed-surface days to find out.Meet the Cezal(Image credit: Anne-Marije Rook)At The Traka and Unbound this year, we witnessed a purposeful move away from versatility in the pursuit of all-out speed. Big tyre clearance is in, yes, but other rider-friendly features such as round seatposts, 2x compatibility, cockpit options, suspension-fork compatibility and even in-frame storage have largely disappeared from the latest race machines, including the Specialized Crux 5, unreleased Factor and Giant prototype.The G85 Cezal, therefore, stands out because it deliberately leans into versatility. It's also a significant departure from the French brand's previous gravel efforts, which sat decidedly on the road side of the spectrum.The G85 Cezal arrives with a geometry, feature set and aesthetic that place it firmly within the modern progressive gravel conversation.There's a slack 70-degree head angle paired with a relatively short wheelbase, a large front triangle with ample storage options, 50mm tyre clearance (57mm in the fork), integrated frame cable routing paired with a semi-integrated cockpit and boatloads of versatility built into the platform.1x or 2x drivetrains, suspension forks, wireless or mechanical groupsets, a 27.2mm round seatpost, integrated storage and stack and reach figures that accommodate a wide range of cockpit options the G85 Cezal is yours to configure however you see fit."With the G85 Cezal, we wanted to move away from the white lines and marginal gains, returning to why we ride in the first place: expression... This bike doesn't ask you to follow a path or a trend; it adapts to your style, your terrain and your rules," said Romain Simon, Bike Product Manager at Look.While part of me feels this bike may be two or three years behind the curve, it's refreshing that the Cezal was purposefully not designed for the pointy end of racing and therefore comes with features the average consumer racer or not will very much appreciate."Early on in my conversations with Look, it became clear they were serious about re-entering the gravel space. The G85 Cezal delivers on that in a big way," said racer Russell Finsterwald. "It checks all the boxes of a modern gravel bike: generous tyre clearance, geometry corrected to accommodate a suspension fork and a racy platform."Specs:(Image credit: Anne-Marije Rook)UDH compatibleInternal downtube storageBottom bracket: T47Suspension-corrected geometryTyre clearance: 700 x 50 rear, 700 x 57 fork. 45mm in a 2x setupWheels: FULCRUM Soniq Carbon 2WFTyres: Hutchinson Touareg 700X45CSeatpost: LOOK LS1 UD Carbon - 27.2mmCockpit: DEDA SuperZero Gravel Alloy & LOOK LS3 stemDrivetrain options: The test bike came with a 13-speed SRAM Force AXS XPLR groupset and retails for 6,190 / $7,500. LOOK also offers builds with Shimano'sGRX Di2 2x option and GRX 1x mechanical set up. The latter is priced at 3,499 / $4,300. Framesets retail for 2,300 / $2,750.The Ride(Image credit: Anne-Marije Rook)First things first: the G85 Cezal has presence.The roomy front triangle, rounded lines, purple-speckled paint and contrasting red graphics make it a bike that demands a second look. Personally, I love it. In a sea of increasingly monochrome gravel bikes, the Look feels unapologetically fun.Secondly, it's respectably light. Despite topping out at a SRAM Force XPLR build rather than the flagship SRAM Red groupset, my test bike tipped the scales at 8.5kg ready to ride, complete with bottle cages.I rode this bike on all my favourite local loops, as well as a big day in the Columbia Gorge where I battled the infamous headwinds from start to finish. What stood out almost immediately was how at home I felt on the bike.Half an hour into my first ride, I knew we were going to get along. And that feeling came down largely to the handling.The Cezal is lively.In the pursuit of stability, tyre clearance and off-road capability, too many gravel bikes have become muted. They're smooth and competent, certainly, but not always particularly engaging to ride. The G85 Cezal is an exception, and one that I, as a former cyclocrosser, very much appreciate.(Image credit: Anne-Marije Rook)The bike accelerates eagerly, carries speed well and responds instantly to rider input. There's a responsiveness that's clearly influenced by Look's road-racing heritage. Yet unlike many road-derived gravel bikes, that responsiveness never comes at the expense of control.The slacker front end and generous tyre clearance bring confidence once the terrain becomes rougher or the descents more technical. On loose surfaces, the bike remained composed and predictable, but never dull.What impressed me most was how seamlessly it adapted to whatever ride I asked of it.It's steady on climbs and efficient on long drags into a headwind. It's controlled on loose surfaces but still playful enough to encourage the occasional singletrack detour. It feels equally comfortable lining up for a gravel race, heading out for an all-day adventure or taking the long way home simply because a trail looks interesting.In short, it's fun and capable.And that's a difficult balance to strike. Most bikes excel at one thing and merely tolerate the rest. The Cezal genuinely seems to enjoy all of it.The versatility of the platform only reinforces that impression. Thanks to the 27.2mm round seatpost, suspension-corrected geometry and generous tyre clearances, riders can tailor the bike to suit their priorities. Racers can keep things relatively lean and efficient, while riders interested in rougher terrain, underbiking adventures or backcountry exploration have plenty of room to experiment.For those looking to race vast courses like Unbound Gravel, it is important to note that one thing the Cezal doesn't do is chase aerodynamic gains.There are no aero talking points, no truncated tube profiles and no obvious attempts to squeeze marginal gains from the wind tunnel.Instead, the emphasis remains firmly on ride quality, handling and versatility. It can race, but it's made for riding.Whether that's a disadvantage depends entirely on your priorities, but it feels refreshingly confident in a market increasingly focused on optimisation.Value & Verdict(Image credit: Anne-Marije Rook)So is there still a place for an all-rounder gravel bike in today's gravel market?After several weeks aboard the G85 Cezal, I'd argue there's more need for one than ever. While much of the category has split into increasingly specialised race and adventure machines, the Cezal is a reminder that most riders don't neatly fit into either camp. Most of us simply want a bike that's fun, capable and versatile enough to handle whatever ride we have planned that day.At $7,500 for the SRAM Force XPLR build tested here, the G85 Cezal is still an investment, but it feels appropriately priced. You'll get a lot of bike for the money, with a decent build. What makes it so good is its refusal to chase extremes.It's light and lively without feeling twitchy, stable without feeling dull, fast enough to pin on a race number, versatile enough for an all-day adventure and capable enough to make questionable route choices along the way.Riders focused purely on racing or, conversely, on multi-day expeditions will find more specialised options elsewhere. But if I were shopping for a new gravel bike tomorrow, the G85 Cezal would be on my shortlist.Anne-Marije RookAnne-Marije RookAnne-Marije RookAnne-Marije RookAnne-Marije RookAnne-Marije RookAnne-Marije RookAnne-Marije RookAnne-Marije RookAnne-Marije RookAnne-Marije RookAnne-Marije Rook
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  • CYCLINGUPTODATE.COM
    Merlier, Paret-Peintre and a new GC option: Soudal - Quick-Step announce their Tour de France '8'
    Soudal - Quick-Step have unveiled their lineup for the upcoming Tour de France. The Belgian team will back up Tim Merlier once again to fight for stage wins but have varied ambitions into the Grand Boucle - although the team is missing Mikel Landa. The Basque rider will put his focus on the Vuelta...
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