• CYCLINGUPTODATE.COM
    "My chest cavity was filling with blood, I couldnt breathe" - Former Tour de France winner Chris Froome opens up about career-ending crash
    Chis Froome suffered a career-changing crash in 2019, which divided his career. The British rider, former four-time winner of the Tour de France, revealed in a recent interview that the last fall he suffered last summer - which ended his career - was worst and had him fighting for his life in the ho...
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  • WWW.CYCLINGWEEKLY.COM
    Bikes are becoming more like Formula 1 cars every day, but were still sending them to Kwik Fit for servicing
    The Saturday job in a bike shop is no longer a viable route into the industry, according to a recent Cycling Weekly article, with a host of store owners citing the complexity of modern-day bikes as the cause of this dying career path. We havent been able to employ any Saturday staff for some time, said Sid Soanes from Soanes Cycles, adding bikes are just too technical these days for an untrained young person to do anything meaningful with.The comments really rang true for me. We had a work-experience kid in last week, and there was very little we could let him do. There are only so many cups of tea I think were allowed to get them to make.The article cited the likes of electronic gears, hydraulic brakes and tubeless tyres as developments that require far more experience to work with than most part-time students have in their arsenal. All of this is at odds with what made most of us fall in love with bikes in the first place.I have fond childhood memories of getting old wheels from the tip, taking them to pieces and rebuilding them for fun; we didnt have Instagram back then to keep us entertained. Bikes used to be a simple piece of engineering, a delight to behold, ride, and work on yourself. Now, only a hardy few continue to tinker at home.It is consumer demand thats driving all this change. Riders want lighter bikes, and they want more aero bikes all of this means greater integration and more complexity. Customers also want bikes to be cheaper. Manufacturers ultimately have to cut corners somewhere, and often the cost saving comes from engineering solutions that might have improved the maintenance experience. Decent workshop instructions for those who are going to work on these bikes also fall by the wayside. Quite often, modern bikes feature complicated systems - we only find the correct procedure for servicing them when they break, and the warranty department at the brand talks us through how to repair them. Im being vague on brands and models because this is an endemic problem. Bikes are becoming more like Formula 1 cars every day, but theyre still sent to Kwik Fit for servicing. In the past, wed joke about component T&Cs which stated that incorrect fitting could result in injury or death. The harsh fact is that this used to be funny, but its increasingly true. There are now far more opportunities for dangerous mistakes to be made by untrained individuals; putting mineral oil into a DOT oil brake system, for example, would be very easy to do but could be catastrophic, causing total brake failure.So, weve identified the problem - whats the solution? Firstly, find a good local mechanic and be loyal to them. There are only so many times you can ask your mechanic to fit parts you bought on the internet. Secondly, take a long hard look in the mirror and decide if you actually need to be riding around on the two-wheeled version of a Formula 1 car. In our workshop, we are seeing our long-term cyclists edging back to simpler, metal bikes with non-integrated cockpits. These bikes are more robust, easy and fun to ride, with the weight penalty of about three gulps of the water bottle. And my advice for manufacturers? Slow down. Nobody is demanding a new aero carbon gravel bike every year. Make the design well thought out and test it properly, not just in the wind tunnel, but also in the workshop. When Shimano launches a new product, its always accompanied by good solid training materials, ready to go when the new parts hit the market. And thank the Lord, as watching Shimano Tec courses online is one of the very few things we could get our work-experience kid to do, risk-free.
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  • ROAD.CC
    Skoda repeats new tradition of modifying Tour de France penis drawings to promote Tour de France Femmes; Forest has cheeky dig at Londoners sweltering on the tube + more on the live blog
    With Callum taking a well-earned break today, Jack Sexty has been drafted in as a defensive substitution to try to see us over the line. That usually goes really well, doesn't it?
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  • CYCLINGUPTODATE.COM
    "We're paid to win bike races" - Michael Matthews doesn't share anti-UAE sentiment at the Tour de France
    The 2026 Tour de France has been thus far dominated by UAE Team Emirates - XRG, who have won four out of eleven stages; but have also helped control stage 9 in which their ambitions weren't overly obvious - which at the time, earned the most criticism. Michael Matthews doesn't share that sentiment a...
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  • When the team bus is running out of space to keep all the prizes
    TNT Sports marks a new era in sports broadcasting in the UK and Republic of Ireland across TV, streaming, digital and social ...
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  • WWW.BIKERADAR.COM
    Im now 10g lighter Chris Harper loses part of his thumb and abandons Tour de France
    PinarelloQ36.5s Chris Harper has withdrawn from the Tour de France after a crash on Tuesdays stage 10 meant he lost part of his thumb.The Australian crashed on the descent from the Puy Mary with around 25km to go on the stage to Le Lioran.He fell on the same corner as his teammate Tom Pidcock, who complained about the white shit organisers had sprayed on the road to stop the tarmac from melting in the extreme heat. Visma-Lease a Bikes Matteo Jorgenson was another rider who slipped out on the bend. You may like: Tour de France stage 11 was the fastest in the races historyPidcock eventually finished ninth on the day. But Harper came down the hardest of them all and was left clutching his left hand before. He finished more than an hour behind Tadej Pogaar, who won the stage in indomitable fashion.Harper underwent surgery in the evening and withdrew from the race.Pulling out of any bike race sucks but hurts a bit more to pull out of the biggest one of them all, he wrote on Instagram.Thanks to the team for the support and fingers crossed for a quick recovery and back into some racing for the second part of the season.Harper then quipped about what the injury could do for his performance: On a positive note think Im now 10g lighter #marginalgains.Well let you click through to Harpers Instagram post below to see the state of his thumb. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Chris Harper (@chrisharper94)
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  • CYCLINGUPTODATE.COM
    "We've seen Pogacar crack in the Alps before..." - Can the yellow jersey be at risk despite Tour de France dominance?
    The domination of UAE Team Emirates - XRG has been difficult not only for the direct rivals of Tadej Pogacar, but the entire competition at the Tour de France. XDS Astana Team is one of those looking to win stages from the breakaways in the hills and mountainous, but thus far, UAE's way of racing is...
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  • WWW.BIKERADAR.COM
    What happens when you wear the Tour de France's yellow jersey? The perks, pressure and all-time record
    No garment in professional sport emits a power like the yellow jersey, or le maillot jaune, of the Tour de France. Since 1919, its been awarded daily to the rider leading the race and as the ultimate prize to the winner of the general classification come the races denouement.Highly prized by those chasing it, those who do earn it can be both inspired by it and end up in thrall to it, like the Lord of the Rings eponymous treasure.Julian Alaphilippe in 2019, for example, was empowered by it, wearing yellow for 11 stages in a row and coming close to an unlikely overall win in Paris. The stage 13 time trial in Pau was a prime example of how much of a driving force the jersey can be, powering a decent if hitherto unspectacular time triallist to victory over rivals, such as 2018 winner Geraint Thomas, with far greater pedigree in the discipline.On the contrary, in 2011 Thomas Voeckler, says Cyrille Guimard in Peter Cossins 2019 book The Yellow Jersey, rode tactically in the opposite way to how he should, and ended up losing the jersey prematurely.Whether a rider captures yellow early and wears it all the way to the finish (no single rider has worn it for the entire race), wears it for one day, or anything in between, the yellow jersey will have a profound effect on their career.Read more on the Tour de France Stage 11 was the fastest in the races history with a remarkable average speed of 50.9kph How much does a Tour de France bike weigh in 2026? We put 7 pro bikes on the scales to find out The Tour de France has lost some of its magic and that could spell trouble for cyclings futureCommanding respect but at a cost The yellow jersey commands respect not least if you're Tadej Pogaar but wearing the race leader's jersey has it's drawbacks, too. Tim de Waele In terms of in-race perks, the yellow jersey takes pride on place on the start line ahead of each stage alongside the other jersey wearers and commands the respect of the peloton. Rivals teams and riders often give the yellow jersey a little more breathing room in the bunch but, when it really matters and the race is on, any yellow-induced etiquette is thrown out of the window, of course. Every rider is there to win.You have more respect because they give more room to you, especially around the team, but when its a fight for position then nobody cares, Thor Hushovd told Cycling Weekly. Hushovd won ten individual Tour stages (and two team time trials), topped the point classification twice, and wore the yellow jersey in three editions of the race: 2004, 2006 and 2011. He's now the general manager of the Uno-X Mobility team.However, the jersey also brings added stress and inconvenience, including extra media commitments, anti-doping requirements, and the knowledge that there is a target on your back. After all, its the jersey that holds the power, not the rider. Who has worn the yellow jersey the most? Eddy Merckx holds the record for wearing the yellow jersey most. AFP via Getty Images Eddy Merckx 96 days in yellow Bernard Hinalt 75 Tadej Pogaar 61Currently, more than 300 riders in the Tours 123-year history have worn it for at least one day, with Torstein Tren (of Hushovd's Uno-X Mobility squad) the latest rider to earn the honour for the first time.As you might expect, Eddy Merckx has worn the yellow jersey the most on 96 occasions. Another five-time Tour de France winner, Bernard Hinault, is second, having worn yellow for 75 stages and Tadej Pogaar now lies third, with 61 days in yellow at the time of writing.Fabian Cancellara holds the record for the most yellow jersey days without winning the race overall 29 which puts him 13th on the all-time list, level with Jonas Vingegaard.Cancellara, a well-known patron, or leader, of the peloton, didnt need the jersey to hold outsized influence, but for most others, it exudes a presence that isnt afforded elsewhere.
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  • CYCLINGUPTODATE.COM
    LIVE - Tour de France Stage 12 - Last chance for the sprinters as green jersey battle heats up
    Good morning and welcome to the liveblog of the Tour de France! After yesterday's stage rewrote the history books by becoming the fastest road stage in the 113-year history of the race, the question now is whether the peloton will tackle today's route with the same determination. We'll find out over...
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