Who? UAE?
No... obviously.
The race organisers, or local authorities.
Who? UAE?
No... obviously.
The race organisers, or local authorities.
Things like random potholes on 260k routes aren’t ever going away. Using that as an example of the need for increased safety is not an accurate reflection of what can actually be fixed. Other things sure, better designed finishes and potentially certain other things.Who? UAE?
One thing i know for sure is and that is currently nobody is obsessive about safety in pro peloton. Is the last thing on the list and nobody wants to be bothered about it. From personal point of view i can't even believe on how bare minimum discussions we are having about this aspects. And even that is like Mont Everest to some. It's like the safety culture is obsessive with not doing anything else but to ignore safety.
Cycling will like always survive just fine. In my opinion what will change is such lack of responsibility and disregard to taking safety seriously. This in my opinion will change. The sooner the better.
In general if i remember correctly Sagan said he won't say anything due to making things worse. But at least he said that. Now a cyclist like Tao says it out loud and in general there is no real backslash involved anymore. So things are improving. But obviously at snail pace. All in all we will get there. UCI No.1 brakes a bone way to often. To keep it under the rug.
Exactly. We assume somebody did. But is that true? And if yes which one and did they actually? There should be some report about such incident made publicly available somewhere?
There generally aren't reports about potholes being fixed. Mostly people just pass by where they used to be, and notice they've been fixed.
So UCI should in your opinion not investigate such safety incident in more detail and to make a final report available to the public about it?
The race organization.Who? UAE?
One thing i know for sure is and that is currently nobody is obsessive about safety in pro peloton. Is the last thing on the list and nobody wants to be bothered about it. From personal point of view i can't even believe on how bare minimum discussions we are having about this aspects. And even that is like Mont Everest to some. It's like the safety culture is obsessive with not doing anything else but to ignore safety.
Cycling will like always survive just fine. In my opinion what will change is such lack of responsibility and disregard to taking safety seriously. This in my opinion will change. The sooner the better.
In general if i remember correctly Sagan said he won't say anything due to making things worse. But at least he said that. Now a cyclist like Tao says it out loud and in general there is no real backslash involved anymore. So things are improving. But obviously at snail pace. All in all we will get there. UCI No.1 brakes a bone way to often. To keep it under the rug.
Maybe airbags for around the wrists should become mandatory!@RedheadDane
Such reports are good for analytics and possible future prevention. And at minimum shows somebody is actually doing something.
@Extinction
Helmet is one thing we all agreed in that other thread about crashes. It was a good thing helmets were enforced in the peloton. But still that was done in another era. And not much was done since in regards to safety and apparel. All in all best if we discuss this further over there.
Well I remember in the US crit scene back in the 80s guys put pads on their hips and shoulders. It did nothing, also because they were usually the guys least cognizant of causes, but made them feel "safer".@RedheadDane
Such reports are good for analytics and possible future prevention. And at minimum shows somebody is actually doing something.
@Extinction
Helmet is one thing we all agreed in that other thread about crashes. It was a good thing helmets were enforced in the peloton. But still that was done in another era. And not much was done since in regards to safety and apparel. All in all best if we discuss this further over there.
Maybe airbags for around the wrists should become mandatory!
Listen, the very first lesson I was given about racing on a bicycle was foremost to stay on your bike, then stay on the front and then try to win. At times it seems the first rule is no longer considered.Exactly. One more claiming that takes safety seriously. And in safety oriented discussion this is the best we get.
@Extinction
If you are interested we already discussed this same thing here:
Crashes, what can be done?
I feel like cycling is in the dark ages on this. Every one keeps saying 'this can't keep going on like this' but it always does. My sense is that one of the core issues is the riders are basically exploited labour - they're treated like pack fodder so that the show can keep going on...forum.cyclingnews.com
I agree that "pur pads" offer less protection. That is on why in other sports, for the area you mentioned, they went with an air bag technology. And statistics proved it works. Cycling is currently still stuck in helmets era. We will get there.
Pogacar out for 4-6 weeks, probably no altitude training in May:
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UPDATED: Doctors confirm six-week recovery for Tadej Pogačar after Liège-Bastogne-Liège surgery
Slovenian star undergoes successful surgery, crucial pre-Tour de France altitude camps at question.www.velonews.com
Not good but it still depends on how quickly it actually heals. He can skip Slovenia and spend the whole June at an altitude. If the preparations turn out to be not enough there's still Vuelta.
Certainly, but everyone takes on their own risk in classics in light of Grand Tours.Well, he had no plans to race for the next month and a half
Certainly, but everyone takes on their own risk in classics in light of Grand Tours.
That's cycling. If you want to win you have to race, If you race you can crash. Pog had never crashed out of any race before, which was rare.
What about Vingegaard? I don't remember him crashing out of any race.
Things like random potholes on 260k routes aren’t ever going away. Using that as an example of the need for increased safety is not an accurate reflection of what can actually be fixed. Other things sure, better designed finishes and potentially certain other things.
Bad news. Probably no Tour de France for him. he can't recognize Tour climbs if he will do an alttitude camp in JunePogacar out for 4-6 weeks, probably no altitude training in May:
![]()
UPDATED: Doctors confirm six-week recovery for Tadej Pogačar after Liège-Bastogne-Liège surgery
Slovenian star undergoes successful surgery, crucial pre-Tour de France altitude camps at question.www.velonews.com
Not good but it still depends on how quickly it actually heals. He can skip Slovenia and spend the whole June at an altitude. If the preparations turn out to be not enough there's still Vuelta.