Home Blog Page 54

America’s Biggest Death Cult

Hint: It’s cars.

By Darrell Owens — I was split on whether gun deaths or traffic deaths are the biggest death cults in the United States, but I’ve decided it goes to cars. However neutered gun control is, it’s not a popular mandate in polling but rather a quirk in effective lobbying. Car deaths and automobile manufacturer deregulation are a completely different level of insanity. Unfortunately, car centrism is the popular mandate in that most Americans really don’t care about people being killed by cars, even if the victims are their own family members, and are seemingly resistant to taking the necessary systemic steps to save lives.

Photo by Thue, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

 

Controlling the mayhem that vehicles cause is suffering defeats all over the country. Most prominently, the delay of congestion pricing in New York City, the one city in this country where living without a car is common. No American city has made notable strides in reducing car dependency with the best of the worst being Jersey City, which has impressively developed a better bike network but little else. Why can’t the anti-car movement get up and over this issue? 

Firstly, I’ve realized that popular and widely held beliefs often trickle down from intelligentsia and academia first before becoming popular among the masses. I don’t think that major institutions like news sites take traffic violence seriously. They lust after shootings but if someone’s hit by a car it makes a bulletin in the round-up, only if the person died. Not much care in the world for the lifelong injuries, only fatality statistics. Even the New York Times published someone trying to blame teenage cyclists for their deaths by drivers recently.

The latest version of the climate movement also screwed up by pretending that individual transportation changes wasn’t necessary to reduce carbon emissions. This in part feels like it was because a lot of the climate movement was led by young people rather than climate scientists. Their most famous slogan: “70% of emissions are caused by 100 companies” purposely obscures that those 100 companies are oil companies. Oil company’s emissions are primarily evident in mass transportation; particularly cars. When the climate movement did discuss traffic violence, they mostly spoke in the context of popularizing EVs, which is good, but uncomfortably ignored particle and manufacturing emissions EVs also contribute to. It would’ve been a better message to do what a lot of European cities did and push cities to decarbonize by transitioning the population towards mass transportation, bikes, walking and EVs. It was a prime opportunity to inform liberal urbanites both of the climate harm of cars but also the health toll in traffic deaths.

Instead, the 2010s climate movement pushed the idea that transportation consumption was less important than going after fossil fuel suppliers. Now they’re busy spray-painting Stonehenge or doing weird stunts. Thus, most liberal cities that considered themselves pro-climate made these meaningless climate declarations and have proven cowardly to implement any of them if they impede parking or driving. The intensity that urbanite Americans will go through to defend the right to drive a car on every inch of public space is unbelievable, and unlike other issues, isn’t polarized between liberal and conservative.

My hometown of Berkeley, California is an interesting display of this. Berkeley has a high concentration of climate scientists due to the University of California. Even the former U.S. Science Envoy has opined on our city’s zoning policy. The town is notoriously liberal, and the vast majority of the population has a four-year degree or greater. Berkeley is fairly non-car dependent compared to most California cities, second only to San Francisco of all cities west of the Mississippi. Despite the city being highly educated, the populace is just as prone to reactionary defenses of “the right to drive and park wherever and however” as any climate denier town in Republican America.

Our town suffers from a regular issue of drivers crashing into each other, pedestrians and cyclists. Like most cities in the United States, the lockdown unleashed a wave of anti-social activity that has caused severe reckless driving and a major spike in traffic deaths. If there’s any time to focus on people dying from automobile crashes, it’s now, as car-based death remain at 21st century highs

Flexible plastic posts or bollards reduce cyclist crashes and injuries within segregated bike lanes. Photo by Aimee Custis Photography, 2018, Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0).

Yet in the numerous local meetings I’ve attended to propose minor street improvements—typically involving the addition of bike lanes and the removal of a few parking spaces—people don’t appear to be concerned about traffic fatalities. They say they care of course, but they’re unwilling to make any changes to save lives in the name of parking and driving more easily. These are ordinary liberals who with any other issue would be critical of corporations, capitalism and carbon-intensity, but not with their cars.

Anti-Hopkins Street bike lane sign in Berkeley, California. Photo by Dave Iltis

When a simple bike lane (on Hopkins Street) was proposed in my neighborhood next to an old commercial district covered with ample parking lots, I didn’t even bother to comment. Yet this issue has blown up to become the single most divisive issue in Berkeley. It’s beyond Israel-Palestine, beyond taxes or anything else. Simply scrapping some on-street parking spaces so bicyclists could safely travel east and west resulted in:

    • Conspiracy theories sourced from Alex Jones about Agenda 21 being plastered on respectable small businesses. 
    • The complete and total gutting of our transportation department because no staff could sustain the torrent of abuse.
    • Every other lawn in the city — and out of the city — espousing support or opposition for a small bike lane.
    • Two dueling ballot measures, one which proposes road paving only so that drivers can speed easier. And one that proposes street paving with safety improvements for bus riders, pedestrians and cyclists as well as drivers.

I was talking to national news reporters who told me how these projects wouldn’t even make the back page in Asia or Europe. Yet this liberal town is ready to go to war over it. Many of the opponents of bike lanes, wider sidewalks and bus lanes are the same people with vague climate signs on their front lawns and windows.

Pro-Hopkins Street bike lane sign in Berkeley, California. Photo by Dave Iltis

Of course, people are allowed to disagree without it being some cult issue, but the counterarguments in defense of automobile domination are rather selfish. It’s a weird switch that flicks on with otherwise empathetic people. Spending an extra 30 seconds to search for parking or 5 extra minutes driving makes drivers go nuts in ways extra time for everyone else doesn’t. If we can’t do bike improvements in an educated city like Berkeley, where can we do it? If we can’t get congestion pricing in New York City where a handful of commuters drive, where can it be implemented in this country?

40,000 people are killed by cars annually; 100,000 are injured and millions die from exhaust pollution. Yet it just isn’t a problem for people and that’s depressing. People’s minds have been so warped by generations of fossil fuel and automotive lobbies. An entire generation on a family tree — a mother, father, and their kids — were obliterated by a reckless driver in San Francisco at a major transit hub. The local businesses didn’t respond by making it easier for most of their customers to patronize without parking or driving. They defended the right for a small minority of their customers to take their vehicles at high speeds full of areas where children walk, people ride bikes, and transit riders congregate. 

I don’t know how else to describe that other than cultish. 

And critics respond by saying: well, it’s America, people have to drive. But they don’t! They have to because these people make it so. When valuable public space is given exclusively to cars, of course, alternatives are not competitive! It’s very straightforward issue yet otherwise sophisticated people suddenly get overridden by the cult and clutch to their parking spot and highway lane, no matter how many people die to maintain it.

Rest In Peace to Yuan Cong, a man on a bicycle who was killed by a driver at an intersection in Berkeley, California (Virginia Street and San Pablo Blvd) that had 32 collisions and injuries before him. It took another person being killed after Yuan was hit for the city to bother activating the inactive safety signal after building it. The family is rightly suing the city, and I think victims of traffic violence must sue cities until people’s lives, not the ability to speed, are prioritized in traffic engineering.

 

Bikepacking Cathedral Valley – The Bicycle Art of Seth Bradley

Title of piece: BikePacking Cathedral Valley
Name of artist: Seth Bradley
Medium and size: Digital Procreate/iPad pro

Bikepacking Cathedral Valley. Art by Seth Bradley

About the artist: I graduated from the U of U with BFA specializing in illustration. I spend my days as a graphic designer so I have to challenge myself to make art just for me, for no other reason than the love of creating. I work in as many mediums as I can get my hands on. I experiment in printmaking, painting, drawing, digital and sculpture. Bike art is a way to combine two of my greatest loves.

About the piece: This art was created to celebrate a bikepacking trip through Cathedral Valley last year.

Social media for your art: Instagram @sethpaints

 

Riley and Urban Sweep Elite XCO and XCC National Titles at the 2024 USA Cycling Cross-Country Mountain Bike National Championships

Lopez de San Roman, Welcker, Waite, and Hampton win Junior 17-18 and U23 XCC National Titles and Bear National Team sweeps the U23 Men’s podium.

MACUNGIE, Pennsylvania (July 22, 2024) – The 2024 USA Cycling Cross-Country Mountain Bike National Championships concluded on Sunday with the Short Track races. Clear skies greeted the riders, spectators, and staff to end a great week of racing at Bear Creek Mountain Resort. All the categories of the day would race 20-minutes on the same fast and curvy course.

AMATEUR XCC

In Masters Men 40+, Seth Zaluski (Boynton Beach, Fla.) pushed a blistering pace up the start hill and initiated a break of seven riders in the first lap. The group would dwindle to four riders after attacks from Corey Stelljes (Madison, Wis.; Neff Cycle Service). Stelljes attacked into the last lap, but it was Jake Hollenbach (Richmond, Vt.; Velocio Northeast) who would come out of the woods in first and power to the win. Stelljes would hold on to silver finishing 3-seconds behind.

A group of six rode to the front of the Masters Men’s 30-39 race. Gus Michaels (Brevard, N.C.; Dirt Camp Racing) controlled the front for the first lap, but three lead changes occurred during the 20-minute, 4-lap race. Cory Peterson (Annapolis, Md.; Annapolis Bicycle Racing Team), showing great form from his XCO win on Friday, attacked late into the third lap and rode to claim his second National Title of the week. Michaels held on to second place.

In Masters Women 30+, the 35-39 XCO National Champion, Teresa Laird (Richmond, Va.; Carborocket), and 45-49 XCO National Champion, Kristen Smith (San Clemente, Calif.; BagHouse), rode away from the field and worked together for the first lap. Laird pulled away from Smith on the second lap and continued to ride her own race to the finish, claiming her second gold of the week.

A smiling Paula Coyos (Elkridge, Md.; Patapsco Bicycles/Knobby by Nature) was content to ride her own race in the Amateur Women 19-29. However, a determined Wren Capra (Steamboat Springs, Colo.; Avout Racing) would not make the day easy for Coyos as she put on the pressure and ate away at Coyos’ lead with each pedal stroke. Wren was able to overtake Coyos on the final lap and took home the Stars and Stripes jersey.

Relentless accelerations had riders dropping off the pace each lap in the Amateur Men’s 19-29 race. On the final lap, Jordan Porter (St. George, Utah; ACCEL Cycling) launched out of the remaining group to take the National Title, his second of the week.

JUNIOR XCC

The Junior Women’s 15-16 race was the day’s first championship event, and 38 riders lined up at the start. Through the first lap, a group of three formed, led by Zanna Logar (Davis, W.Va.; The Gravity Collective), Raina Logar (Davis, W.Va.; The Gravity Collective), and Friday’s XCO National Champion, Aida Linton (Missoula, Mont.; Bear National Team). A strung-out line of chasers followed close behind. Going into the fourth and final lap, Linton made the decisive move and won her second National Title of the week. Z. Logar took silver and R. Logar earned bronze.

The Junior Men’s 15-16 race had the largest field of the day with 76 starters. It was a hectic start but once things calmed down, a group of 16 formed at the front. With temperatures and humidity increasing as the day progressed, riders took more time to recover after the hard accelerations. On the last lap, Michael Ziomek (Albuquerque, N.M.; Bear National Team) launched an attack and sprinted to the line to the win the Stars and Stripes. Logan Drevlow (Golden Valley, Minn.) finished second and Rowan Nistal (Boise, Idaho; National Bear Team) rounded it out in third.

A field of 42 talented riders lined up for the Junior Women’s 17-18 race. There was a feeling of déjà vu in the crowd as the top three from Saturday’s XCO race, Vida Lopez de San Roman (Petaluma, Calif.; Bear National Team), Alice Hoskins (Charlottesville, Va.; The Gravity Collective), and Ingrid McElroy (Danville, Pa.; Bear National Team), immediately went to the front. Hoskins controlled the pace and hit the singletrack first. Early in the 20-minute race, Maddie Fischer (Midlothian, Va.; WE Development) and Estelle Slingsby (Asheville, N.C.; The Gravity Academy) were the only riders able to keep up with the leaders’ pace. Ultimately, Fischer and Slingsby lost pace on the third lap after an acceleration by Lopez de San Roman. Hoskins tried to put in a dig up the hill on the last lap, but Roman was too strong, and she sprinted to the finish to win her second National Title of the week. Hoskins crossed the line 2-seconds later and claimed silver. McElroy rounded out the podium with bronze.

The Junior Men 17-18 would be one of the most exciting races of the day. From the whistle, there was a fury of attacks, dwindling the field down to around 10 riders by the third lap of the five-lap race. With one lap to go, River Valdez (Sedona, Ariz.; Bear National Team) put in a huge effort for his teammates with Oliver Welcker (Boise, Idaho; Bear National Team) staving off a chasing pack. It came down to a group sprint where Welcker and Nicholas Konecny (Breckenridge, Colo.; Bear National Team) finished just feet apart in first and second, respectively. Colin O’Neil (Franklin, Tenn.; The Gravity Collective) rounded out the podium in third.

UNDER-23 XCC

The U23 Men’s race was a hard-fought battle from the start. Last year’s Junior Men’s 17-18 National Champion, Dan English (San Ramon, Calif.; Santa Cruz RockShox) took the early lead, but would fall off the pace going into lap two. The Bear National Team train took control of the race after the second lap. It all came down to a group sprint where Carson Hampton (Boise, Idaho; Bear National Team) and Toby Hassett (Golden, Colo.; Bear National Team) went head-to-head with Landen Stovall (Eagle, Colo.; Bear National Team) right on their heels. Hampton crossed the line first to win his second National Title of the week. Bear National Team swept the podium with Hassett claiming silver and Stovall earning Bronze. 

In the U23 Women’s race, Greta Kilburn (Burlington, Vt.; Bicycle Express Racing) rode at the front nearly the entire race with Makena Kellerman (Escondido, Calif.; Bear National Team), Sofia Waite (Durango, Colo.; WE Development), and Bayli McSpadden (Vail, Colo.; Bear National Team) in tow. Kilburn pushed hard into the third lap and dropped Waite and McSpadden. Waite went into damage control, kept the duo in sight, and slowly clawed back time. In the last half-lap, Waite made contact and was able to outsprint Kilburn for the National Title. Kellerman would take third.

ELITE WOMEN XCC

With the heat and humidity peaking, the Elite Women were ready to battle it out for the coveted Stars and Stripes jersey. In the first lap, a lead group of five formed containing; Kelsey Urban (Kentfield, Calif.; Team 31), Kate Courtney (Portola Valley, Calif.; Scott-SRAM MTB Race Team), Gwendalyn Gibson (Waterloo, Wis.; Trek Factory Racing – Pirelli), Madigan Munro (Waterloo, Wis.; Trek Factory Racing – Pirelli), and Bailey Cioppa (Durango, Colo.; Bear National Team). On the fourth lap, Courtney attempted an attack, but was quickly brought back by the group on the hill. In the final stretch, it was Urban, Courtney, and Gibson fighting for victory. Urban gained a small advantage through the last turn and won her second National Title of the week. Courtney claimed silver, and Gibson took bronze.

When Urban was asked how it feels to win two National Titles, she replied, “It feels really good. I’ve been on a patience journey, and I think it’s a testament to accepting the timeline and trying to enjoy the little wins along the way, and focusing on sensation more than a result, and trusting that if I’m hitting those sensation pieces and working on little process goals, the results end up coming.”

Results:
  1. Kelsey Urban (Kentfield, Calif.; Team 31)
  2. Kate Courtney (Portola Valley, Calif.; Scott-SRAM MTB Race Team)
  3. Gwendalyn Gibson (Waterloo, Wis.; Trek Factory Racing – Pirelli)

ELITE MEN XCC

The Elite Men would take the line in the final race of the day. The field mostly stayed together during the first lap. The action started on lap two when Bjorn Riley (Boulder, Colo.; Trek Future Racing) and Robbie Day (Evergreen, Colo.; Bear National Team) went clear with a small gap. Riley took that opportunity to push hard, distance himself from Day, and ride in solo for his second National Title of the week. Day laid it all out on the course today to limit his losses and came in only 11-seconds down to earn silver. Devon Feehan (Windsor, N.Y.; Chenango Point Cycles) would have another stellar race and claimed the bronze medal.

Riley wasn’t immune to today’s heat saying, “My strategy really was going with two laps to go [on the hill] carrying speed and passing. But Day went through, and we had a small gap so I thought I would take that opportunity to really go hard and see if I could, if anything, get a small gap so I could recover a little…and go again.” While pouring water over his head, Riley continued, “I noticed I felt pretty good, and I was getting a gap, so I thought I might as well keep it going. But then it kind of came back to bite me because the last two laps I was suffering a lot more. In a lot of the World Cups, you wait for the last two laps, and they hurt, but they aren’t super deep, I think I dug a little too deep, just lucky that there wasn’t another lap.”

Results:
  1. Bjorn Riley (Boulder, Colo.; Trek Future Racing)
  2. Robbie Day (Evergreen, Colo.; Bear National Team)
  3. Devon Feehan (Windsor, N.Y.; Chenango Point Cycles)

“Paws & Pedals” Mountain Bike Clinic Offers Skills Training for Riders and Their Dogs

Limited spots available for the first-of-its-kind professional clinic, set to take place in September

PARK CITY, Utah (July 15, 2024) — For those mountain bikers who love hitting the trail with their canine companion – or who’ve always wanted to do so but weren’t quite sure where to start, a unique new clinic offers the perfect opportunity for riders and their pups to develop their skills together: Paws & Pedals, debuting September 12th and 13th in Park City.

Photo courtesy Erica Tingey

Co-hosted by professional dog trainer Molly Avrin, owner of Pete’s Adventure Pack and the Adventure Dog Channel, and Erica Tingey, professional mountain bike coach and the founder of Women in the Mountains, Paws & Pedals is the premier mountain bike clinic designed to collectively teach both bikers and their dogs the skills they need to be able to ride together safely and successfully.

“Trail riding is the ultimate fulfillment activity for dogs, and I’ve seen firsthand through my work that many people are eager to ride with their dogs but don’t feel like they have the knowledge and confidence they need to get started,” says Avrin. “We wanted to create a program to help break down those barriers and give both dogs and their owners the essential tools they need to ensure a positive riding experience and share the deep connection that comes with it. We don’t believe there’s ever been a clinic like this one before, and we could not be more excited to provide this special opportunity.”

Paws & Pedals features a comprehensive two-day event format. On day one, riders will receive a six-hour mountain bike clinic with Tingey, where they’ll focus on key fundamentals like body position, braking, tackling corners, and riding efficiently over obstacles. Meanwhile, canine participants get a full day of training with Avrin, where they’ll learn how to bike in the ‘safe spot’ next to their owners, practice basic leash work, and go through specific drills for riding. On day two Avrin and Tingey will bring riders and their dogs together to apply their new skills and work on riding confidently and safely as a unit on the trail, as well as proper bike and trail etiquette.

Registration for the Paws & Pedals clinic is open now, with only 10 spots available. Cost for the two-day clinic is $850, and also includes a follow-up Zoom call with Avrin and Tingey two weeks after the event.

To learn more and to sign up, visit petesadventurepack.com/pawsandpedals.

In addition, Erica has posted videos on the 5 skills you need to ride your mountain bike.

And finally:

Small Group Clinics Available in Park City

BOOK A SKILLS CLINIC (and forever upgrade your skills and mountain bike confidence!)

These sessions meet from 8:15-11:15 AM in Park City, Utah.

August 6th Fundamentals
August 7th Intermediate
August 28th Fundamentals
August 29th Intermediate

MADE 2024 Handmade Bike Show Returns to Portland August 23-25

0

World’s Largest Gathering of Builders and Fans Returns to Portland’s Zidell Yards August 23-25

PORTLAND, Oregon (July 22, 2024) — MADE (https://made.bike), the leading industry and consumer event highlighting the craft of handmade bicycles, today announces that tickets are now on sale for MADE 2024, taking place on August 23-25 at Portland’s iconic Zidell Yards venue.

Building on the success of the inaugural 2023 MADE show and MADE Australia, MADE 2024 will bring together over 200 builders and exhibitors from around the globe, creating the world’s largest gathering of builders and the public. The confirmed list of builders will be announced soon.

Photo courtesy MADE/ECHOS Brand Communications

“The momentum with MADE continues to grow, and we’re absolutely honored by the support and excitement of builders, exhibitors and the fans who make it all happen,” said Billy Sinkford, MADE Co-Founder and Director of Show. “For 2024 we’ve expanded the floorplan and have ample space for new builders and brands to join the community. We have new brand partnerships and activations with BikeFlights, Campagnolo, Chris King, ENVE, Shimano and Yakima, builders coming in from all across the world, and a full schedule of events. MADE 2024 is going to be a fantastic event and one not to be missed.”

Photo courtesy MADE/ECHOS Brand Communications

MADE 2024:

  • Dates: August 23 – 25, 2024 
  • Location: Zidell Yards, Portland, Ore.
  • 200+ builders and supporting brands
  • Evening activations supported by Chris King, Shimano, and Yakima
  • Iconic covered venue with indoor and outdoor expo space
  • Elevator Coffee provided by Shimano
  • Cold treats provided by ENVE
  • Sparkling water provided by Campagnolo
  • Beer garden supported by Block 15 Brewing
  • Multiple food and beverage options on-site, with many more in walking distance of the venue
Photo courtesy MADE/ECHOS Brand Communications

Additional details:

  • Single- and multi-day tickets available
  • On-site parking available with ticket purchase
  • On-site bike parking 
  • Public transit: Zidell Yards is a half-block away from a bike-specific bridge and directly on the waterfront bike path. Multiple train and bus options are less than a block away

GET MADE 2024 TICKETS HERE

Urban and Riley Win Elite XCO Titles at the 2024 USA Cycling Cross-Country Mountain Bike National Championships

Lopez De San Roman, Konecny, Munro, and Hampton win the Junior 17-18 and Under-23 categories.

MACUNGIE, Pennsylvania (July 21, 2024) – The 2024 USA Cycling Cross-Country Mountain Bike National Championships opened Saturday with perfect weather and fast trails. Today was important for athletes and spectators with the Junior 17-18, Under-23, and Elite races.

JUNIOR WOMEN 17-18 XCO

The Junior Women 17-18 were the first to roll out with 55 starters. Vida Lopez de San Roman (Petaluma, Calif.; Bear National Team) and Alice Hoskins (Charlottesville, Va.; The Gravity Collective) gained an advantage on the rest of the field in the first lap. On the second lap, Hoskins fumbled on a technical section in the woods, allowing Roman to create distance between the two. Hoskins worked hard to keep Roman in her sights but would eventually lose time over the 3-lap race. Roman won in a time of 1:00:45, with Hoskins coming in 1:05 down for the silver medal. Ingrid McElroy (Danville, Pa.; Bear National Team) would overcome stomach issues and overexertion in the second lap to round out the podium and take bronze.

Results:
  1. Vida Lopez de San Roman (Petaluma, Calif.; Bear National Team)
  2. Alice Hoskins (Charlottesville, Va.; The Gravity Collective)
  3. Ingrid McElroy (Danville, Pa.; Bear National Team)

JUNIOR MEN 17-18 XCO

The 120-rider Junior field powered up the start hill, each with the goal of winning a National Title. In the first lap of four, an elite group formed which included Erza Caudell (Acworth, Ga.; The Gravity Collective), River Valdez (Sedona, Ariz.; Bear National Team), Luke Mosteller (Tunnel Hill, Ga.; Bear National Team), and reigning Men’s 17-18 XCO National Champion Nicholas Konecny (Breckenridge, Colo.; Bear National Team). After the first lap, they had a gap of 29-seconds on the rest of the field. Mosteller dropped off the pace on lap two leaving three riders to battle it out. Even with a broken shoelace, Konency, riding for the late Magnus White, was feeling good enough to attack up the main climb on the third lap. He pulled away from the rest of his group and held it to the finish to defend his National Title. Caudell limited his losses to only 19-seconds to take second. Valdez rode in for third only 1:33 back.

Results:
  1. Nicholas Konecny (Breckenridge, Colo.; Bear National Team)
  2. Erza Caudell (Acworth, Ga.; The Gravity Collective)
  3. River Valdez (Sedona, Ariz.; Bear National Team)

UNDER-23 WOMEN XCO

Madigan Munro (Waterloo, Wis.; Trek Factory Racing-Pirelli) was one to watch today in the Under-23 Women’s race. The returning National Champion quickly distanced herself from the rest of the field just minutes after the start. When asked what her strategy was for the race, Munro replied, “With the technical features and the humidity, I kind of just wanted to get in my own space and be able to ride my own race. I just tried to go right from the start and take it from there to see how the others were feeling. I ended up getting a gap and holding it for the rest of the race.” Munro continued to put time into her competition each lap. She finished 1:23 up on second place and added another National Title to her collection.

Once Munro was out of sight, the battle for second was between Sofia Waite (Durango, Colo.; WE Development) and Makena Kellerman (Escondido, Calif.; Bear National Team). The pair worked together to keep a steady pace in the early laps. Those early efforts caused Kellerman to burn a few too many matches, giving Waite a chance to come around on lap three and ride to the silver medal. Waite, who was recovering from a serious illness, said “I wasn’t sure what to expect, but I rode my own race and that’s all I can say so I’m happy with it.”

Results:
  1. Madigan Munro (Waterloo, Wis.; Trek Factory Racing-Pirelli)
  2. Sofia Waite (Durango, Colo.; WE Development)
  3. Makena Kellerman (Escondido, Calif.; Bear National Team)

UNDER-23 MEN XCO

A sea of pink is all one could see on the start line of the Under-23 Men’s race with the Bear National Team making up nearly a fifth of the starters. The pace was high going up the start hill and a group of nine formed before the first singletrack. Defending National Champion, Brayden Johnson (Littleton, Colo.; Santa Cruz Rockshox Pro Team) benefitted from a mistake by Carson Beard (Durango, Colo.; Team Durango Segment 28) in the woods on lap one and attacked hard into the downhill section. Johnson stayed away for the next two laps and averaged sub-16-minute laps. “I came in with a goal of nothing but to win again. You’ve done it before so you want to do it again, you know you can do it again,” said Johnson.

Teammates Carson Hampton (Boise, Idaho; Bear National Team) and Lasse Konecny (Breckenridge, Colo.; Bear National Team) traded pulls to bring back Johnson near the end of lap three. Johnson attacked again on the downhill going into lap four but would suffer a flat and lost time, which opened the door for Hampton to ride away to the gold medal. “It was two laps off the front by myself, which was a long time to be solo up there,” Hampton said. “I was getting scared seeing the time gaps, but ended up sticking it out to the end and couldn’t be happier”.

Konecny, finishing 12-seconds behind his teammate said, “I’m pretty stoked for Carson, he’s had a pretty rough year, so coming out on top was something really good for him.” Johnson would hold on to third place 49-seconds down.

Results:
  1. Carson Hampton (Boise, Idaho; Bear National Team)
  2. Lasse Konecny (Breckenridge, Colo.; Bear National Team)
  3. Brayden Johnson (Littleton, Colo.; Santa Cruz Rockshox Pro Team)

ELITE WOMEN XCO

The Elite Women’s race was expected to be a nailbiter with a roster of talented World Cup riders, including Kate Courtney (Portola Valley, Calif.; Scott-SRAM MTB Race Team), Gwendalyn Gibson (Waterloo, Wis.; Trek Factory Racing-Pirelli) and eventual winner, Kelsey Urban (Kentfield, Calif.; Team 31). By the end of the first lap, the gaps between the trio were close. Urban led Gibson by 2-seconds, and Courtney by 6-seconds. On the climb going into the second lap, Urban put in a big attack and dropped Gibson. As the laps counted down, Urban put more time into her competitors, with Courtney down 15-seconds going into the third lap.

Speaking with Urban about her strategy she said, “I just led into that first downhill and I was confident that if I rode it smooth, I would open up a little gap and just held it from there and tried to build on it the best I could.” Urban completed the 4-lap race in a time of 1:15:23, winning the National Title. Courtney, only 54-seconds down, took silver for another year. Gibson earned bronze.

Results:
  1. Kelsey Urban (Kentfield, Calif.; Team 31)
  2. Kate Courtney (Portola Valley, Calif.; Scott-SRAM MTB Race Team)
  3. Gwendalyn Gibson (Waterloo, Wis.; Trek Factory Racing-Pirelli)
Bjorn Riley wins the Men’s Elite XCO Race. Photo courtesy USA Cycling

ELITE MEN XCO

In the Elite Men’s race, all eyes were on Bjorn Riley (Boulder, Colo.; Trek Future Racing), who returned from the UCI MTB World Cup earlier this month, having swept the U23 Men’s XCC and XCO races. When Riley was asked about his race and the course he said, “I wanted to do the same as I did in Les Gets, where I get in front to where I can pace myself. There are some sections where I feel I can push harder and others where I have to step off the gas. When I’m with people, it’s hard to do that. So, I just pushed harder on the first lap because I noticed my main competitor Robbie Day was a little further behind, so it was an opportunity to get a gap before he caught up.” Riley did what he set out to do. He charged up the start hill and established the front position early on, to finish the first lap with a 32-second gap. Riley continued to build his lead and won gold by a margin of over 3-minutes, in a time of 1:22:02. “I was just excited to come race, to be at a home crowd back in America. To come away with a win is pretty exciting but, at the end of the day, I’m just happy that I’m racing.” said Riley.

Robbie Day (Evergreen, Colo.; Bear National Team) and Devon Feehan (Windsor, N.Y.; Chenango Point Cycles) battled it out for silver. Day made an acceleration in lap three, managed to make a gap, and kept pushing it to the finish to take second place with a time of 1:25:19. Feehan earned bronze with a time of 1:25:46.

Results:
  1. Bjorn Riley (Boulder, Colo.; Trek Future Racing)
  2. Robbie Day (Evergreen, Colo.; Bear National Team)
  3. Devon Feehan (Windsor, N.Y.; Chenango Point Cycles)

 

2024 Tour de France Stage 21: Sublime Pogačar Seals Third Tour Victory in Nice

TOUR DE FRANCE 2024 | STAGE 21 | MONACO > NICE

NICE, France (July 21, 2024) — Sunday’s final stage of the 2024 Tour de France saw Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) confirm his third overall Tour victory with first place in the ITT from Monaco to Nice. On a balmy afternoon on the Côte d’Azur Pogačar made light work of the climbs to La Turbie and Col d’Èze to take the time trial win by a considerable 1’03” margin from Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) for his sixth stage bouquet of this year’s race and his third overall Tour triumph. In the Yellow Jersey again, Pogačar finally finished the 2024 Tour 6’17” ahead of his great Danish rival, having dominated the race. Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-Quick Step) was in tears at the end of his Tour debut in Nice’s Place Massena, finishing the final stage in third, behind Pogačar by 1’14”, leaving him also third overall, 9’18” adrift of the unstoppable Slovenian. The GC top five was rounded out by Joao Almeida (UAE Team Emirates) at 19’03” and Mikel Landa (Soudal-Quick Step) at 20’06”.

Cavendish takes a bow

141 riders took part in the final stage of the 2024 Tour, a 33.7km Individual Time Trial from Monaco to Nice with everything on the line. Mark Cavendish was the second rider to start – after his Astana Qazaqstan teammate Davide Ballerini – and the veteran British rider achieved his objective of finishing his final Tour de France. With a record 35 stage victories in the Tour to his name, Cavendish ended his historic relationship with this race as a rider in the most beautiful way possible, concluding it for the 8th time in his 15 participations. Intermarché-Wanty’s Biniam Girmay also knew that he would not win this ITT stage, but he too made it to the finish in Nice in style, to the cheers and support of the crowd, becoming the first African rider to win a ranking in the Tour de France, in his green jersey.

21/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 21 – Monaco / Nice (33,7 km CLM) – CAVENDISH Mark (ASTANA QAZAQSTAN TEAM) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
21/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 21 – Monaco / Nice (33,7 km CLM) – CAVENDISH Mark (ASTANA QAZAQSTAN TEAM) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters
21/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 21 – Monaco / Nice (33,7 km CLM) – CAVENDISH Mark (ASTANA QAZAQSTAN TEAM) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Martinez sets a marker

Groupama-FDJ’s young Frenchman Lenny Martinez completed the course at an impressive average speed of 41.8 km/h and in a time of 48’24” to position himself as the provisional leader, where he would remain for well over an hour, until Harold Tejada (Astana Qazaqstan) took over in the top spot, beating Martinez by 10”. In tears yesterday after his final Tour de France stage in the mountains, French hero and Yellow Jersey wearer on Stage 2 Romain Bardet (Team dsm-firmenich PostNL) was given huge support by the fans on his last ever day on the Tour. Due to retire just before the 2025 Tour, Bardet finished today’s stage in 37th place and was 30th in the final GC.

21/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 21 – Monaco / Nice (33,7 km CLM) – BARDET Romain (TEAM DSM-FIRMENICH POSTNL) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

Carapaz in polka dots

Ecuadorian star Richard Carapaz (EF Education-EasyPost) finished a highly successful Tour as the winner of the Mountain classification with 127 points, compared to 102 for Pogačar and 70 for Vingegaard. It is Ecuador’s first victory in any final ranking of the Tour de France.

21/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 21 – Monaco / Nice (33,7 km CLM) – CARAPAZ Richard (EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST)

The GC favourites fight for final win

Riders such as Harold Tejada (Astana Qazaqstan), Derek Gee (Israel – Premier Tech) and Matteo Jorgenson (Visma-Lease a Bike) all enjoyed a moment with the provisional lead before the GC top 3 finished their runs. Pogačar was already the fastest man in the first sector, 7” and 26” ahead of Vingegaard and Evenepoel, increasing those respective advantages to 24” over Vingegaard and 51” on Evenepoel at the second intermediate marker on Col d’Èze. Pogačar was absolutely flying by the time he reached the Place Île de Beauté in Nice (km 28.6), the third and final intermediate marker, with 1’04” over Vingegaard and 1’28” over white jersey winner Evenepoel, going on the wrap up the victory and a third overall GC success in superb style.

21/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 21 – Monaco / Nice (33,7 km CLM) – EVENEPOEL Remco (SOUDAL QUICK-STEP) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters
21/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 21 – Monaco / Nice (33,7 km CLM) – VINGEGAARD Jonas (TEAM VISMA | LEASE A BIKE) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
21/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 21 – Monaco / Nice (33,7 km CLM) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
21/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 21 – Monaco / Nice (33,7 km CLM) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Biniam Girmay (Intermarché-Wanty): “For The Young Kids Keep Working Hard, Everything Is Possible”

“What can I say? To be honest I really tried to enjoy it but sometimes, the feeling of emotion it was more than I expected. Just like everything is just so wonderful. I feel like I’m floating through the sky. It’s super nice. I just want to say for the young kids, keep working hard and everything is possible. I really would like to share my happiness and all the emotions. There are a lot of people here and it is super happy, all the fans, I’ve seen all the Eritrean flags. Then when I went to the team bus I saw all my people and it’s great that they can be here to enjoy it too. We did a great job as a team and I want to thank everybody. From the start of the Tour I’ve had such incredible teammates you know. All the staff, the team manager, the bosses, I want to say thank you to them, because from the start we had a great atmosphere, good team spirit. We did such an incredible job to protect this jersey. We gave everything we had. We have really the smallest budget of the World Tour teams, so to have three incredible victories and the green jersey, it’s just amazing. Especially for Laurenz Rex and Hugo Page it’s the first Grand Tour for them and they are just great riders and I’m happy to have them.”

21/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 21 – Monaco / Nice (33,7 km CLM) – GIRMAY Biniam (INTERMARCHÉ – WANTY) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Richard Carapaz (Ef Education-Easypost): “I Am Very Proud To Be Able To Bring This Jersey To My Country”

“I am super happy with my Tour de France: it has been a success. We have grown little by little until finishing the race very well, and that is a great feeling to go home very happy. In Ecuador there are very few top-level athletes, but we have achieved great things. I am very proud to be able to bring this jersey to my country.”

21/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 21 – Monaco / Nice (33,7 km CLM) – CARAPAZ Richard (EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Remco Evenepoel: “A Big Step Forward In My Career”

“It’s pretty good for my first Tour de France. Today I gave it my all, but I realized that I no longer really had my best, even if I was still in good shape, as I finished third in this time trial. And if I take stock, I finished on the podium in the general classification, with the white jersey for best young rider and a stage victory, I can be proud of myself and my team. Tadej is in another world, and Jonas was also superior to me. But it’s a big step forward in my career. There is still a gap to close with them, but it opens up the perspective. With Tadej, we are from the same generation, we get along very well and I think it’s also because we have a bit of the same way of riding.”

21/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 21 – Monaco / Nice (33,7 km CLM) – EVENEPOEL Remco (SOUDAL QUICK-STEP) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease A Bike): “I Would Have Loved To Go A Bit Further”

“Under normal circumstances, I would be disappointed with my Tour de France. But, after everything I’ve gone through, I can’t be disappointed. I didn’t have a good preparation towards this race, yet I still managed to regain a good fitness level. I would have loved to go a bit further, but it is what it is. I would like to come back to the Tour de France and win it again. The Tour de France is the race I love the most, the most beautiful one – it just has something special. I believe the yellow jersey is the most beautiful jersey in road cycling. Even if I feel proud of what we achieved this year, I’m looking forward to come back.”

Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates): “We Have To Enjoy This Beautiful Era Of Cycling”

“I am super happy. I cannot describe how happy I am after two hard years in the Tour de France, in which we always made some mistakes that cost us the race. This year, everything went to perfection. I’m super happy, it’s incredible. This is the first Grand Tour on which I have been totally confident every day. Even on the last Giro I had one bad day – I won’t say which one. This Tour de France has been amazing. I have enjoyed it from day one until today. Today I started with a good vibe. It was lovely to start from the F1 grid of the best F1 circuit ever! I was only listening to my times compared to Remco. I was feeling super good over the top of the first climb. In my head, I had my girlfriend Urska’s words – that she hated me because I always did this road on training. But it was not wasted time, as it was useful today. These last few years we have been hearing that this is the best era of cycling. If I was not competing, I would say the same. This kind of competition with Remco, Jonas, Primoz… is just incredible. And many young guys are coming, more and more. We have to enjoy this beautiful era of cycling. Next up… I know that Mathieu looks good in the rainbow jersey, but I want to take it from him.”

21/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 21 – Monaco / Nice (33,7 km CLM) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters
21/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 21 – Monaco / Nice (33,7 km CLM) – VINGEGAARD Jonas (TEAM VISMA | LEASE A BIKE), POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES), EVENEPOEL Remco (SOUDAL QUICK-STEP) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

TOUR DE FRANCE 2024 | STAGE 21 | MONACO > NICE | DAILY STATS

6: A HISTORICALLY DOMINANT TOUR

With a 6th stage win to cap off his 3rd overall triumph, Tadej Pogačar beats Laurent Fignon’s reference from 1984 (the overall + 5 stage wins) and follows the tracks of Bernard Hinault, winner of 7 stages when he won the race in 1979. Pogačar is the 7th rider to win at least 6 stages and the overall: – François Faber, 6 stages in 1909 – André Leducq, 6 stages in 1932 – Gino Bartali, 7 stages in 1948 – Eddy Merckx, 6 stages in 1969, 8 stages in 1970, 6 stages in 1972 and 8 stages in 1974 – Luis Ocaña, 6 stages in 1973 – Bernard Hinault, 7 stages in 1979 Tadej Pogačar is also the first rider since Charles Pélissier in 1930 to win the last 3 stages. But the Frenchman was 9th overall that year. With his 17th stage win since his debut in the Tour 2020, Pogačar joins Jean Alavoine at the 8th spot of the all-time ranking. No rider had ever won that many stages before turning 26 (Cavendish and Faber had 15).   

25: THE YOUNGEST 3-TIME WINNER

At 25 years and 10 months, Tadej Pogačar is the 8th rider to claim a 3rd overall victory in the Tour de France, and the youngest to do so: – Eddy Merckx took his 3rd win at 26 years, 1 month and 1 day – Bernard Hinault, 26 years, 8 months and 5 days – Jacques Anquetil, 28 years, 6 months and 7 days – Miguel Indurain, 29 years and 9 days – Greg LeMond, 29 years and 26 days – Philippe Thys, 29 years, 9 months and 20 days – Louison Bobet, 30 years, 4 months and 18 days – Chris Froome, 31 years, 2 months and 4 days

8: POGAČAR REVIVES THE GIRO-TOUR DOUBLE

75 years after Fausto Coppi was the 1st rider to win both the Giro and the Tour de France in the same season, Tadej Pogačar became the 8th, reviving a feat that had not been achieved this century. The Slovenian cannibal was born 50 days after the last Giro-Tour double was achieved and, at 25 years and 10 months, he is the 2nd youngest rider to do so, behind Eddy Merckx (25 years, 1 month and 2 days). The list of riders who achieved the double: – Fausto Coppi (1949, 1952) – Jacques Anquetil (1964) – Eddy Merckx (1970, 1972, 1974) – Bernard Hinault (1982, 1985) – Stephen Roche (1987) – Miguel Indurain (1992, 1993) – Marco Pantani (1998) – Tadej Pogačar (2024) En route to his double triumph, Pogačar claimed 39 leader’s jerseys (19 Maillot Jaune, 20 Maglia Rosa), more than any rider ever did in a single season. Eddy Merckx had 37 in 1970.

1-2: POGAČAR – VINGEGAARD, A HISTORIC SHARED RULE

Jonas Vingegaard winning two Tours (2022, 2023) right after Tadej Pogačar did so (2020, 2021) was already an unprecedented series in the Tour de France. Now the duo extend their rule to a 5th overall victory in a row. They are also the 2 riders who have featured the most often together at the very summit of the Tour: – 4 times together in the first 2 places of the Tour, Tadej Pogačar and Jonas Vingegaard (2021, 2022, 2023, 2024) – 3, Bernard Hinault and Joop Zoetemelk (1978, 1979, 1982) – 2, Firmin Lambot and Jean Alavoine (1919, 1922), Eddy Merckx and Joop Zoetemelk (1970, 1971), Bernard Hinault and Greg LeMond (1985, 1986), Chris Froome and Nairo Quintana (2013, 2015).

1: GIRMAY, A GREEN LIGHT FOR AFRICA

Already a history maker as the first Eritrean stage winner (stages 3, 8 and 12) and the first African leader of the points standings, Biniam Girmay brings the green jersey home and thus becomes the first African rider to win a standing in the Tour de France. With 17 green jerseys, he has the 33rd highest tally in the history of the race. Jasper Philipsen is just one jersey away, with the 18 he claimed in 2023.  

12: CARAPAZ, AN ATTACKER AND A HISTORY MAKER

After he overcame a 67th categorised climb – adding up to 438.8km of climbing, that he covered at an average of 22.3km/h – on the final stage of the Tour 2024, Richard Carapaz brings Ecuador their first victory in a Tour standing, after he already gave his nation a first Maillot Jaune and a first stage win. 11 nations had won the polka-dot jersey so far in the history of the race. French climbers lead the way with 20 victories, while Slovenia was the latest addition, with Tadej Pogačar’s successes in 2020 and 2021. Richard Carapaz was also named the most combative rider of the Tour 2024, after he spent 575km at the front of the race.

24: EVENEPOEL DELIVERS FOR BELGIUM

At 24 years, 5 months and 26 days, Remco Evenepoel succeeds Tadej Pogačar as the best young rider of the Tour de France and becomes the youngest Belgian to finish in the overall top-3 since Eddy Merckx (24 years, 1 month and 3 days) won the race in 1969. Without considerations for the age, Jurgen Van den Broeck was the last Belgian to step on the overall podium of the Tour (3rd), in 2010.

1-2-3: A TRIO ALREADY SET IN HISTORY

The Tour de France finished with an ITT for the 10th in the history and the last battle confirmed the dominance of Tadej Pogačar, Jonas Vingegaard and Remco Evenepoel. The “big 3” finished together in the stage top-3 for the 4th time this year (after stages 11, 14, and 15) before they stepped together on the overall podium. They match the record set by Lucien Petit-Breton, Georges Passerieu and François Faber in the Tour 1908: 4 times together in stages top-3 and then in the overall. No other trio in the history of the race has featured so many times together in the top-3, even across several editions.

35-141: CAVENDISH, LEADER AND LANTERNE ROUGE

Taking the start of a Tour de France stage for the 227th time of his career, Mark Cavendish completed his 15th Tour de France participation with an emotional farewell. The stage, two weeks after he claimed a historic 35th win, was only a matter of making it to the finish for the British icon, who registered the 134th time on the day… and thus dropped to the 141st and last position in the overall standings. For the first time of his career, Cavendish is the lanterne rouge of the Tour!      

8: A GLOBAL TOUR

The Tour de France 2024 has crowned stage winners from 8 different nations, the lowest value since 2014. But 2 of these countries – Biniam Girmay’s Eritrea and Richard Carapaz’s Ecuador – claimed their maiden win, becoming the 35th and 36th nations to win in the Tour. Denmark has won stages in the last 3 editions, Great Britain in the last 4, Slovenia in the last 5, Belgium in the last 6, the Netherlands in the last 9… And France in the last 25, i.e. in every edition this century. There are only 2 editions with French win: 1926 and 1999. In between, French riders achieved their longest winning streak: 65 editions in a row. Belgians won in 71 consecutive editions, from 1911 to 1993.

Interstate System Must Consider Cyclists and Pedestrians At Access Roads

By Charles Pekow — The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) has proposed regulations requiring states to consider bicyclists’ needs whenever they seek to change access to the interstate highway system. Currently, states must seek federal approval for modifications to egress from interstate highways. To address confusion in existing regulations, FHWA aims to clarify that any changes made by states should not compromise access or safety “for all roadway users.” The proposal specifically mandates that, when altering access, states must take into account the needs of bicyclists when crossing access roads.

When designing or updating Interstate access roads, proposed regulations would require that bicycle safety be considered. Photo by Oregon Department of Transportation. Attribution (CC BY 2.0)

In response to a call for public comments, 18 responses were received. Of these, two expressed concerns about accommodating cyclists and pedestrians, exhibiting a degree of skepticism. The Maryland State Highway Administration raised apprehensions, stating that such considerations could “add time to project scoping.” The California Department of Transportation criticized the proposed language for not clearly specifying where cyclists would need accommodation.

Meanwhile, the transportation departments of Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming issued a joint statement that did not address the needs of alternate road users.

When questioned about the potential impact of the regulations on cyclists in rural areas using the Interstate system, FHWA responded, “FHWA is currently in the process of an Interstate System Access rulemaking and is unable to comment at this time.” Further details can be found at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2023-09-19/html/2023-20218.htm

 

2024 Tour de France Stage 20: Pogačar’s Couillole Glory in Yellow

TOUR DE FRANCE 2024 | STAGE 20 | NICE > COL DE LA COUILLOLE

ROUBION, France (July 20, 2024) — Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) was unstoppable again on the Col de la Couillole as he took his fifth stage win of the 2024 Tour de France with a powerful finish. Pogačar and Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) picked off the remainder of a depleted breakaway over the final kilometres, leaving Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-Quick Step) behind them on the way up the Couillole, before the man in the Yellow Jersey accelerated in the final metres to beat his Danish rival to the line by 7”. Having confirmed his triumph in the Mountain classification Richard Carapaz (EF Education-EasyPost) finished the stage third at +23” in his polka dot jersey and Evenepoel (Soudal-Quick Step) crossed the line fourth, 53” off the winner Pogačar. Going into Sunday’s final Monaco to Nice time trial stage Pogačar leads by 5’14” overall from Vingegaard, with TT specialist Evenepoel in third, now 8’04” from the leader.

A trio take the lead on the Col de Braus

The peloton gathered in Nice with 141 riders at the start line for the penultimate stage of the 2024 Tour. In the opening kilometres, as is often the case, it was the Uno-X and EF Education Easypost teams who took the initiative. However, a breakaway group which included several members of the GC top 10 formed on the approach to the first climb of the Col de Braus, provoking an immediate reaction from the top three in the general classification. A big Yellow Jersey group therefore counter attacked from the peloton and brought things back together at the front, with the polka dot jersey Richard Carapaz (EF Education Easypost) not wanting to miss out on the party. Then, Bruno Armirail (Decathlon-AG2R) and Wilco Kelderman (Visma-Lease a Bike) escaped from the regrouped collective of leading riders, this time without provoking any reaction. They were quickly joined by Enric Mas (Movistar), with the Maillot Jaune group then following them calmly, soon 55” adrift.

20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

Two counter attacks expand the breakaway

It was Mas who went over the Col de Braus first and on the descent a chasing group of Jan Tratnik (Visma-Lease a Bike), Marc Soler (UAE Emirates), Richard Carapaz (EF Education First), Clement Champoussin (Arkea-B&B) and Romain Bardet (dsm-Firmenich) went after the trio at the front, while spirits relaxed within the group of favorites. The three leading men set off to attack the Col de Turini (Cat. 1, km 59.8) with a 35” lead over their closest pursuers and 2’00” over the peloton which had returned to a more traditional size for the start of a mountain stage. Although Champoussin was left behind, his previous companions from the cashing group caught the three in the lead 9 km from the summit. Subsequently, three more chasers Kevin Geniets (Groupama-FDJ), Tobias Johannessen (Uno-X) and Jasper Stuyven (Lidl-Trek) increased the breakaway to 10 riders in total, 1 km from top of the Col de Turini. In the KOM jersey Carapaz was the first to reach the Turini summit, almost guaranteeing his triumph in that competition.

20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – JORGENSON Matteo (TEAM VISMA | LEASE A BIKE), CARAPAZ Richard (EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters
20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – CARAPAZ Richard (EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST), MAS Enric (MOVISTAR TEAM) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Intermediate sprint and more climbing

Stuyven was first at the Saint-Martin-Vesubie intermediate sprint (km 87.8), followed by Johannessen, Kelderman and Bardet, with the peloton arriving 3’50” after them, before the riders took on the Col de la Colmiane climb (Cat. 1, km 95.9). 7.5 km of ascending at an average gradient of 7.1% awaited, with Carapaz once again making it to the top first, demonstrating his climbing prowess and virtually sealing his victory in the KOM ranking, provided he simply finishes Sunday’s Stage 21 time trial. The peloton topped the penultimate climb of the stage 2’45” later. 

20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – MAS Enric (MOVISTAR TEAM) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters
20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – CARAPAZ Richard (EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Onto the Col de la Couillole

As the breakaway riders started the final Col de la Couillole climb (Cat. 1, km 132.8) they still had that 2’45” lead, but the group was soon decimated. Mas and Carapaz attacked 11.4 km from the finish and only Bardet was able to follow them briefly, before the two went clear at the front. With just over 5km to go Vingegaard attacked from a depleted GC group and Pogačar responded by sticking tightly to his wheel, whilst Evenepoel dropped behind. Pogačar and Vingegaard caught Carapaz and Mas 2.5 kilometres from the finish line and only Carapaz could follow the GC favourites, with Mas unable to take the pace. In the final kilometre it was only Pogačar and Vingegaard left to fight for the win, with the Slovenian proving strongest once again.

20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – MAS Enric (MOVISTAR TEAM), CARAPAZ Richard (EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters
20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – VINGEGAARD Jonas (TEAM VISMA | LEASE A BIKE) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters
20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters
20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Biniam Girmay (Intermarché-Wanty): “We Did Such an Incredible Job to Protect This Jersey”

“From the start of the Tour I’ve had such incredible teammates you know. All the staff, the team manager, the bosses, I want to say thank you to them, because from the start we had a great atmosphere, good team spirit. Especially the riders, they are super nice guys and we don’t have time to celebrate tomorrow on the time trial, so we said ok guys we have enough time, so let’s celebrate now, because for sure we deserve it. We did such an incredible job to protect this jersey. We gave everything we had. We have really the smallest budget of the World Tour teams, so to have three incredible victories and the green jersey, it’s just amazing. Especially for Laurenz Rex and Hugo Page it’s the first Grand Tour for them and they are just great riders and I’m happy to have them. If you see it on paper the last two days were incredibly hard days and we could not gain any points and also Sunday it’s not in Paris, so you also can’t gain any, so the only thing we needed to do was survive and reach the finish line. That’s why I didn’t want to talk about the green jersey, I just wanted to enjoy my day and survive.”

20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – GIRMAY Biniam (INTERMARCHÉ – WANTY) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Enric Mas (Movistar Team): “A Different Taste in The Mouth Than Other Years”

“We could see that victory was going to be a little harder than we thought and it wasn’t to be. Richard Carapaz and I fought a bit like cat and mouse. There was no understanding between us and they caught us from behind. However, the reason why the breakaway did not make it to the end was not that moment, but rather the lack of cooperation at other moments and that some teams prevented us from gaining a bigger advantage. In any case, we were close to victory. I enjoyed this stage and this Tour, discovering a totally different cycling to what I had experienced until now. I’ve been able to help my teammates: Fernando in the sprints, others looking for a breakaway… and today they helped me. However, they pay me to fight for the general classification, so we will go for it in La Vuelta. The Combativity award is not why I want to be on the podium. However, it is nice for the Tour organization to recognize and value my way of competing these days. We are going home with a different taste in our mouths than in other years.”

20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – MAS Enric (MOVISTAR TEAM) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Richard Carapaz (EF Education-Easypost): “My Tour de France Has Been a Success”

“This has been a very good Tour de France for me. Today we secured the Mountain classification by going into the break because there was a possibility that Tadej Pogačar would win at the finish line and get some points that would put me in trouble. I was lucky enough to go clear on a descent and was first to go through two passes. Today I knew that I had good legs, that my physical condition had improved as the days went by, and I also wanted to go after the stage victory. I tried to collaborate with Enric [Mas], but we have not understood each other. The two strongest riders in the race came from behind and I tried to hold on for the last push, but it wasn’t possible. I am super happy with my Tour de France: it has been a success. We have grown little by little to finish the race very well, and that is a great feeling to go home very happy.”

20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – CARAPAZ Richard (EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-Quick Step): “Tadej and Jonas Were Stronger Than Me”

“I wanted to put some pressure on and see if I could do something today. But Tadej and Jonas were stronger than me, it’s that simple. Once we were together I found myself on the edge again and when they attacked I couldn’t keep up with them. But I had to try, and in the end I lost a little time but it’s not that important. Tomorrow, I want to make a final effort at maximum intensity to win the final stage. I know the route, as I had a look at it after Paris-Nice and I like it. But I think Tadej knows it very well too, it’s home for him. In my opinion, the stage will be fought for between the top three in the general classification. But it’s not a pure time trial, it’s a mountain time trial. So Tadej will be the man to beat.”

20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – EVENEPOEL Remco (SOUDAL QUICK-STEP) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates): “Jonas Showed Us that He is a Real Fighter.”

“I did enjoy this day a lot, although it didn’t go according to plan. I’m really happy I got another stage win. Just one more day to go – the ITT. That one, I’m going to enjoy it too. I will just try to come home safely to Nice, as it is a very hard course. I hope I can enjoy the crowds. I was really surprised with how the race exploded at Col de Braus, which is one of my favourite training climbs. Our guys did a super good job so we all got together at the bottom of the next climb. Soler going to the breakaway was fine for us. We wanted to bring as many guys as possible to the final, but Soudal wanted to try and take time on Jonas or go for the stage and that played in my favour. If you had told me this before the Tour de France, I wouldn’t have believed to. I’m lost for words. So happy… I hope I can share this victory with my teammates today, and also tomorrow. Five stage wins are more than enough. One and the yellow jersey would have been enough, really. But you never brake in cycling. Jonas has gone through some tough days, but he showed today that he is not easy to crack and that he is a real fighter. He did a really good ride and was super strong.”

20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters
20/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 20 – Nice / Col de la Couillole (132,8 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

TOUR DE FRANCE 2024 | STAGE 20 | NICE > COL DE LA COUILLOLE | DAILY STATS

6+5: POGAČAR BREAKS A NEW BARRIER

With a 5th stage win in the Tour de France, after he won 6 in the Giro d’Italia, Tadej Pogačar is the first rider ever to win at least 5 times in each of these races the same year.

Pogačar’s tally of 11 wins across the Giro and the Tour 2024 matches that of Eddy Merckx in 1970, when he won 8 stages in the Tour and 3 in the Giro.

129: POGAČAR’S HUGE COLLECTION OF JERSEYS

With his 39th Maillot Jaune – matching Antonin Magne at the 7th spot in the all-time ranking – to go along with his 15 polka-dot jerseys and 75 white jerseys, Tadej Pogačar has now claimed 129 distinctive jerseys in the Tour (out of 104 stages he’s raced). That’s one less than Bernard Hinault (79 Maillot Jaune, 28 green jerseys, 23 polka-dot jerseys), who’s currently the rider with the 3rd highest number of distinctive jerseys in the Tour. Only Eddy Merckx and Peter Sagan are ahead of them.

1979: 4 WINS WITH THE MAILLOT JAUNE

With a 4th win with the Maillot Jaune on his shoulders in a single edition, Tadej Pogačar is now up to Bernard Hinault’s achievements from the Tour de France 1979.

The French icon won 7 stages that year, but “only” 4 of them as the leader of the overall standings, in Pau (stage 3), Dijon (stage 21), Nogent-sur-Marne (stage 23) and Paris (stage 24). Pogačar’s yellow successes in the Tour 2024 were claimed at Saint-Lary-Soulan Pla d’Adet (stage 14), Plateau de Beille (stage 15), Isola 2000 (stage 19) and Col de la Couillole (stage 20), after he claimed the Maillot Jaune in Valloire (stage 4).

50/96: SLOVENIA’S RULE IN THE TOUR

Slovenia waited until stage 9 of the Tour 2020 to lead the overall standings of the Tour de France for the first time ever, with Primoz Roglic rising to power in Laruns. Since then, Roglic and his countryman Pogačar collected 52% (50/96) of the Maillot Jaune:

    • 50 for Slovenia
    • 27 for Denmark
    • 6 for the Netherlands
    • 5 for Belgium
    • 4 for Great Britain
    • 2 for France
    • 1 for Australia and Ecuador
12: CARAPAZ ALL BUT SEALS THE POLKA DOTS FOR ECUADOR

With a tally up to 127 points, Richard Carapaz has all but sealed victory in the KOM standings, as there are only 5 points up for grabs on Sunday, at La Turbie, and Tadej Pogačar trails by 30 points. After he brought his nation a first Maillot Jaune (stage 3) and a first stage win (stage 17), he is set to be the first Ecuadorian rider to bring home a distinctive jersey. 11 nations had won the KOM standings so far in the history of the race. French climbers lead the way with 20 victories, while Slovenia was the latest edition, with Tadej Pogačar’s successes in 2020 and 2021.

19: POGAČAR’S BEST YEAR

With his 19th win of the season, Tadej Pogačar matches the scores of Jasper Philipsen in 2023 and Mark Cavendish in 2013. With the overall triumph on the line in Nice, a 20th victory would be a first since Alexander Kristoff did it in 2015. What makes it even more impressive is that Pogačar took all his successes in UCI WorldTour races.

16: HARDER, FASTER, YOUNGER

With a 16th Tour stage win, Tadej Pogačar enters the all-time top-10, matching Jacques Anquetil, René Le Grevès and Charles Pélissier at the 9th spot. Jean Alavoine is just ahead of them with 17 victories. But no rider had ever won that many stages before turning 26 years old. Mark Cavendish and François Faber had 15 wins, Eddy Merckx followed with 14 and Bernard Hinault had taken 13.

38: POGAČAR’S UNPRECEDENTED LEADER’S JERSEYS TALLY

With a 38th leader’s jersey in Grand Tours in 2024 (18 in the Tour, 20 in the Giro), Tadej Pogačar moves past Eddy Merckx (37 in 1970) as the rider with the biggest tally in a single season. Chris Froome follows with the 34 leader’s jerseys he claimed in the Tour and La Vuelta in 2017.

1-2-3: BACK IN 2021

As they took the first 3 spots at Col de la Couillole, Tadej Pogačar, Jonas Vingegaard and Richard Carapaz revived their battles from the Tour 2021. That year, Pogačar had won the last 2 mountain stages, at Saint-Lary-Soulan col du Portet (stage 17) and Luz-Ardiden (stage 18), with Vingegaard in 2nd position and Carapaz in 3rd.

2024 Tour de France Stage 19: Pogačar, the King of Isola 2000

TOUR DE FRANCE 2024 | STAGE 19 | EMBRUN > ISOLA 2000

ISOLA 2000, France (July 19, 2024) — On a crucial day in the battle for the GC Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) strengthened his position with two days of racing remaining, by conquering Isola 2000 and gaining an additional 1’42” over his podium rivals Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) and Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-Quick Step). A fourth stage win and his third in yellow at this year’s Tour saw Pogačar finish 21” ahead of Matteo Jorgenson (Visma-Lease a Bike) and 40” in front of Simon Yates (Jayco-AlUla), who had both been in the breakaway. After Pogačar attacked from and decimated the GC favourites group and picked off what remained of the breakaway on the final climb, Evenepoel and Vingegaard crossed the line fifth and sixth respectively, behind fourth placed Richard Carapaz (EF Education-EasyPost), who now has the polka dot jersey. Going into the final two stages this weekend Pogačar now leads by 5’03” overall from Vingegaard, with Evenepoel in third, 7’01” from the leader.

An early breakaway

There were two non-starters announced ahead of the stage, with Jake Stewart (Israel – Premier Tech) out of the race due to illness and Stefan Küng (Groupama FDJ) also unable to start, meaning there were 143 riders on the start line in Embrun. An early breakaway group of 22 riders formed, with Bryan Coquard (Cofidis) the first of them to reach the line at the intermediate sprint in Guillestre (IS, km 21.1). Coquard was amongst the riders who then fell back as the lead group was decimated on the first climb of the day to Col de Vars (km 42.6, HC, 18.8 km at 5.7 %, 20 Mountain classification points).

A smaller lead group forms

Richard Carapaz (EF Education-EasyPost) and Simon Yates (Jayco-AlUla) left the peloton on the climb and made it to the front group to join Matteo Jorgenson, Wilco Kelderman (Visma-Lease a Bike), Nicolas Prodhomme (Decathlon-Ag2r La Mondiale), Ilan Van Wilder (Soudal-Quick Step), Jai Hindley (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), Cristian Rodriguez (Arkea-B&B Hotels) and Oscar Onley (Team dsm-firmenich PostNL) on the gruelling ascent. Olympic champion and Stage 17 winner Carapaz topped the Col de Vars first, ahead of Jorgenson, Kelderman and Van Wilder, with the peloton by that point 3’30” behind.

19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – CARAPAZ Richard (EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST), Col de Vars – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – EVENEPOEL Remco (SOUDAL QUICK-STEP), Col de Vars – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES), Col de Vars – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

Tough Cime de la Bonette climb

As the breakaway riders began the brutal ascent of the Cime de la Bonette (km 87.5, HC, 22.9 km at 6.9 %) their lead over the bunch had grown to 4’30”. Onley, Prodhomme and Van Wilder were dropped on the climb, with Carapaz again reaching the summit first to take 40 Mountain classification points and put him in the polka dot jersey, with the main GC group getting there 3’40” later.

19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – MEINTJES Louis (INTERMARCHÉ – WANTY) Col de la Bonette – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – Col de Bonette – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – CARAPAZ Richard (EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST), Col de la Bonette – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES), Col de la Bonette – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – EVENEPOEL Remco (SOUDAL QUICK-STEP) Col de la Bonette – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

Isola 2000 showdown

Cristian Rodriguez was dropped by the five remaining breakaway riders – Jorgenson, Keldermann, S. Yates, Hindley and Carapaz – early on the final climb to Isola 2000 (km 144.6, Cat.1, 16.1 km at 7.1 %, 10 Mountain classification points). Then 13.5km from the summit Hindley also lost ground and a few metres later Jorgenson attacked, going solo at the front. But 9.5km from the summit Pogačar also attacked, with Evenepoel and Vingegaard trying to follow him and unable to hold his wheel. Within 2km the Yellow Jersey quickly built up a 20” advantage over his two rivals on the provisional podium. 1.9km from the summit Pogačar caught and overtook Jorgenson for another fantastic victory, cruising to the finish unrivalled.

19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – VINGEGAARD Jonas (TEAM VISMA | LEASE A BIKE) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

Richard Carapaz: (EF Education-Easypost): “This Mountain Jersey is Prestigious”

“Our main objective today was to get the Mountain jersey. My team did a great job to allow me to get into the breakaway on the day and once I was there, I fought to get as many points as possible. Once I arrived at Isola 2000 with an advantage, I tried to fight for the stage victory. I was aware that the climb is very tough, and I tried to stay as close to Jorgenson as possible. However, I couldn’t… and Tadej came from behind, to take away any chance of victory. Anyway, I am very happy with how the day went. This Mountain jersey is a prestigious prize. All riders in my country dream of it because in Ecuador there are many mountains. Being the king of the Mountain means a lot to me. I’m going to try to keep this jersey until the end. It is my great personal goal, and the team is also supporting me a lot to achieve it.”

19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – CARAPAZ Richard (EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – CARAPAZ Richard (EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – GIRMAY Biniam (INTERMARCHÉ – WANTY) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-Quick Step): “It’s a Key Moment in My Career”

“Tadej was once again above everyone else today. Already when he started to raise the pace, he put everyone on the limit and he hadn’t even attacked yet. Then I couldn’t follow him and I set my own pace and as I saw that it was almost the same as Jonas’, I waited for him so that we could ride together, but I lacked a bit of cooperation. I tried my luck to see if I could get it, but it didn’t work. But for me it’s another good day, I increased my advantage over Almeida. I performed well on this difficult stage with such high climbs. It’s a key moment in my career, because I’ve reassured myself about my abilities. Now I know in which direction I want to go, I know that I still have room to improve. Tomorrow we will have to stay focused, not make any stupid mistakes that could cause me to lose time. I will just ride for the podium. Then on Sunday, I will give my all to win the stage.”

19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – EVENEPOEL Remco (SOUDAL QUICK-STEP) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates): “Now I Have a Good Lead”

“After winning this stage, I can confirm that the Col de la Bonnette is a scary climb. When you use it in training, you can skip the last kilometre but in the race, today, it was very hard. Between the Giro and the Tour, I had a hard training period and I knew today’s last climb very well. With the team, we planned it well and we did exactly as we said. Our race was 100% perfect. My goal today was to win the stage, but as I approached the last two kilometres, I felt a little drained. I still caught Richard Carapaz and Simon Yates and I could catch up with Matteo Jorgenson. When it was time to pass him, I pushed as hard as possible to overtake him with speed. He was very strong today, as were all the guys in the breakaway. Hats off to them. I’m very happy. Reaching the score of fifteen Tour stage victories is quite formidable. Now I have a good lead. Tomorrow I can let the escape go to the end. I will do the last two days of the Tour on the roads where I have trained my entire professional career.”

19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
19/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 19 – Embrun / Isola 2000 (144,6 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

TOUR DE FRANCE 2024 | STAGE 19 | EMBRUN > ISOLA 2000 | DAILY STATS

15: POGAČAR MATCHES CAVENDISH AND PASSES MERCKX

With a 15th stage win, Tadej Pogačar joins Freddy Maertens at the 12th spot of the all-time rankings for most victories in the Tour de France. But if we look at successes claimed before the age of 26, the Slovenian cannibal joins Mark Cavendish and François Faber as the riders with most stage wins, 1 step ahead of Eddy Merckx (14) and 2 ahead of Bernard Hinault (13).

1984: A YELLOW WINNER LIKE FIGNON

With a 3rd stage win with the Maillot Jaune on his shoulders this year, Tadej Pogačar achieves a feat not seen in the Tour since 1984. That year, a flamboyant Laurent Fignon enforced his rule at La Plagne, Crans-Montana and Villefranche-sur-Saône. Pogačar’s yellow successes in the Tour 2024 were claimed at Saint-Lary-Soulan Pla d’Adet (stage 14), Plateau de Beille (stage 15) and Isola 2000 (stage 19), after he claimed the Maillot Jaune in Valloire (stage 4).

37: A MERCKXIAN RULE

With a 17th Maillot Jaune in the Tour 2024, to go along with 20 Maglia Rosa in the Giro, Tadej Pogačar has now claimed 37 Grand Tour leader’s jerseys this year, as many as Eddy Merckx in 1970 (23 in the Tour, 14 in the Giro). That’s the best tally ever over a single year. Chris Froome follows with the 34 leader’s jerseys he claimed in the Tour and La Vuelta in 2017.

2,802: CARAPAZ FLIES TO LA BONETTE

As part of the breakaway, Richard Carapaz went first over the highest summit in the history of the Tour de France, Cime de la Bonette, at a mighty 2,802m of altitude. The Ecuadorian history maker is used to altitude, as he comes from El Carmelo, at a similar height as La Bonette. He also went first atop Col de Vars (2,109m) earlier in the stage, after he had claimed Col de la Madeleine (2,000m) in the Tour 2020.

3: CARAPAZ REUNITES WITH THE POLKA-DOTS

With another strong stage in the mountains, Richard Carapaz is the new leader of the KOM standings, 14 points ahead of Tadej Pogačar. The Ecuadorian climber had already led the standings for 2 days in 2020, following his successful breakaway with Michal Kwiatkowski towards La Roche-sur-Foron (stage 18). At the time, he was just 2 points ahead of Pogačar. And the Slovenian overtook him on the penultimate stage, winning the La Planche des Belles Filles time trial. On the final day, Carapaz was still wearing the polka-dot jersey but Pogačar, shining in yellow, eventually took it on the podium.

2: JORGENSON’S LATE HEARTBREAKS

When Tadej Pogačar bridged the gap to him just inside the last 2km, after he had spent most of the ascent of Isola 2000 alone at the front, Matteo Jorgenson couldn’t resist. He eventually finished 2nd (+21’’), one spot ahead of his previous best Tour result, last year in Belleville-en-Beaujolais. But the American all-rounder mostly left his mark on the Puy de Dôme ascent, where he was still leading the race with 500 metres to go, before Michael Woods passed him. Jorgenson finished 4th on that day.

259: THOMAS IS A PROPER VETERAN

As he rode his 259th stage in the Tour de France from Embrun to Isola 2000, Geraint Thomas passed Edvald Boasson Hagen (258 stages) as the active rider with most stage starts. His record in the Tour started in 2007 and it includes 3 stage wins and the overall victory in 2018. He was already there in 2013, when a time-trial started from Embrun and saw his leader at the time Chris Froome all but seal his first GC victory. The all-time record is held by Joop Zoetemelk, with 403 stages between 1970 and 1986.

Ahead of Paris Olympic Games, SafeSport Issues Findings of National Athlete Survey

Results underscore need for sport culture change, will guide prevention strategies

DENVER, Colorado (July 18, 2024) — The U.S. Center for SafeSport (the Center) today released the findings of its second ever Athlete Culture and Climate Survey. The purpose of the survey was to gain a better understanding of the experiences of athletes, particularly when it comes to emotional, physical, and sexual abuse in sport.

“The benefits of sport can and should last a lifetime. That’s what all athletes deserve, but it is not what many experience,” Ju’Riese Colón, CEO, U.S. Center for SafeSport said. “These survey results reinforce our efforts to change sport culture and will guide the Center’s development of education and strategies for engaging athletes and survivors.”

While the 2020 survey included athletes 18 and older within the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Movement (the Movement), the 2024 version extended participation to adult athletes outside of this group to better understand the experiences of athletes of all levels as well as the potential differences between those participating within and outside of the Movement. Nearly 3,800 athletes representing 67 sports responded substantively to the survey.

“Data on safeguarding athletes from abuse is limited, and the Center is committed to conducting our own research to inform our prevention strategies as well as contribute to a better national understanding of the problem and solutions needed to ensure athletes can thrive and fulfill their potential without the fear of harm,” Monica Rivera, Vice President of Education and Research, U.S. Center for SafeSport said.

Summary of Key Findings

While the survey largely focused on questions specific to the challenges of abuse and misconduct in sport, the majority of athletes also had positive experiences.

    • Over 70% of athletes surveyed expressed strong agreement that their athletic experience had a positive impact on their life overall.
    • 62% of those surveyed felt athletes were treated fairly in their sport either frequently or very frequently.

Related to the challenges of abuse and misconduct:

    • 78% shared that they had experienced behaviors related to emotional harm and neglect during their sports involvement.
    • 11% of athletes indicated that they had experienced unwanted sexual contact or sexually explicit behaviors during their sports involvement.
    • More than 2 in 5 athletes (43%) who had unwanted sexual experiences during their sports involvement reported at least one experience occurring when they were under 18.
    • Nearly half (49%) of athletes who experienced mental health struggles during their participation in sports reported having suicidal thoughts.
    • 89% of athletes who experienced unwanted sexual behavior during their sports involvement did not submit a formal complaint or report.

The full 2024 Athlete Culture and Climate Survey details all the findings and includes a breakdown of the methodology. The results will guide the Center’s efforts to:

    • Continue evaluating and improving the approach to investigations of abuse and misconduct;
    • Enhance training, educational content, and ongoing engagement with athletes and survivors;
    • Host information sessions for national governing bodies (NGBs) and athletes to further explore the data;
    • Inform the broader abuse prevention landscape throughout the United States and abroad through research, analysis, and evaluation of the athlete experience; and
    • Prepare for a follow-up survey in 2027 to be released ahead of the 2028 Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games.

The 2024 survey was open January-February and was available in English and Spanish. The questions expanded on the first survey administered in 2020. Survey submissions were anonymous, and the results were compiled by Pacific Research and Evaluation.

Need for Abuse Prevention in Sport

The U.S. Center for SafeSport is the nation’s only independent organization dedicated to ending sexual, physical, and emotional abuse in U.S. Olympic and Paralympic sport. The Center emerged in response to high profile cases of sexual abuse of minor athletes within Olympic and Paralympic sport in the mid-2010s. With the mission of making athlete wellbeing the centerpiece of the nation’s sport culture, the Center has since been setting safety policies, and receiving, investigating, and resolving complaints of abuse and misconduct. The Center also serves as an educational resource for sports organizations at all levels, from recreational sports organizations to professional leagues.

With the goal of ensuring athletes within the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Movement are safe, supported, and strengthened, the Center:

    • Establishes safety policies, including the SafeSport Code and the Minor Athlete Abuse Prevention Policies (MAAPP).
    • Investigates and resolves allegations of abuse and misconduct and levies sanctions, including temporary and permanent bans from sport.
    • Delivers comprehensive abuse prevention education within and outside of the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Movement.

About the U.S. Center for SafeSport

The Protecting Young Victims from Sexual Abuse and Safe Sport Authorization Act of 2017 codified the U.S. Center for SafeSport (the Center), as the nation’s safe sport organization. It furthered the Center’s independence while underscoring its authority to hold individuals accountable. It also charged the Center with developing policies, procedures, and training to prevent abuse and misconduct in sport.

In October of 2020, the Empowering Olympic, Paralympic, and Amateur Athletes Act of 2020 became law, even further strengthening the Center’s independence and oversight functions while mandating minimum funding requirements for the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee.

The Center opened its doors in March of 2017.

Reporting and Resources

    1. Report here to the U.S. Center for SafeSport if you have experienced abuse or misconduct—or if you have reasonable suspicion of abuse or misconduct—inflicted by someone in the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Movement. You can also call the Center at: 833-587-7233.
    2. RAINN’s 24/7 online hotline is available for crisis intervention, referrals, or emotional support at any time. You can also call RAINN at: 800-656-HOPE (4673).
    3. The Suicide Prevention Lifeline provides 24/7 free and confidential support at 988lifeline.org or by calling 988.

2024 Tour de France Stage 18: Victorious Victor

TOUR DE FRANCE 2024 | STAGE 18 | GAP > BARCELONNETTE

Stage 18 of the 2024 Tour de France was won in style by Victor Campenaerts (Lotto-dstny) in Barcelonnette, with the Belgian outpacing his fellow breakaway companions Matteo Vercher (TotalEnergies) and Michal Kwiatkowski (Ineos Grenadiers) to the line. Campenaerts secured his first ever Tour de France stage victory, to add to the Giro d’Italia stage he won in 2021, collaborating well with Vercher and Kwiatkowski as they rode clear in the final 35 kilometres. Having been the most aggressive rider of the 2023 Tour, Campenaerts can now cherish a well-deserved and hard-earned Grande Boucle bouquet. Meanwhile, Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) remains in yellow, still 3’11” ahead of Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) and 5’09” in front of Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-Quick Step).

37 riders in the breakaway

The stage commenced with 145 riders on the start line in Gap, with the teams alert to the high probability of immediate breakaway attempts. That was exactly how the stage started, with the World Champion Mathieu Van der Poel (Alpecin – Deceuninck) amongst those highly active at the front of the bunch looking to escape. After constant attacks and counter attacks in the opening kilometres Van der Poel was finally not amongst the large group of about 20 riders who went clear at km 26, just before the first climb to the Col du Festre.

18/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 18 – Gap / Bercelonnette (179,5 km) – BURGAUDEAU Mathieu (TOTALENERGIES) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Talent in the breakaway

Finally 37 riders made it into the breakaway, namely: Bart Lemmen, Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease a Bike), Chris Juul Jensen, Michael Matthews (Jayco-AlUla), Michal Kwiatkowski, Geraint Thomas (Ineos Grenadiers), Julien Bernard, Toms Skujiņš (Lidl-Trek), Bruno Armirail, Dorian Godon, Nicolas Prodhomme (Decathlon-Ag2r La Mondiale), Wout Poels (Bahrain Victorious), Jai Hindley, Matteo Sobrero (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), Valentin Madouas, Quentin Pacher (Groupama-FDJ), Richard Carapaz, Ben Healy, Sean Quinn (EF Education-EasyPost), Victor Campenaerts (Lotto-dstny), Hugo Houle, Krists Neilands (Israel-Premier Tech), Guillaume Martin (Cofidis), Alex Aranburu, Oier Lazkano, Gregor Mühlberger (Movistar Team), Clement Champoussin, Raul Garcia Pierna (Arkea-B&B Hotels), Louis Meintjes, Georg Zimmermann (Intermarché-Wanty), Oscar Onley, Frank Van den Broek (Team dsm-firmenich), Tobias Halland Johannessen (Uno-X), Steff Cras, Mathieu Burgaudeau, Jordan Jegat and Matteo Vercher (TotalEnergies). Meanwhile, UAE Team Emirates, Soudal Quick-Step, Alpecin – Deceuninck and Astana Qazaqstan were the four teams without representation in the breakaway, all four having already achieved at least one stage win at this year’s Tour.

18/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 18 – Gap / Bercelonnette (179,5 km) – HEALY Ben (EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST), VAN AERT Wout (TEAM VISMA | LEASE A BIKE) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters
18/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 18 – Gap / Bercelonnette (179,5 km) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Five categorised climbs

Lazkano was the first over the Col du Festre summit (Cat. 3, km 32.2), as well as the Côte de Corps (Cat. 3, km 57.5) and the Col de Manse (Cat. 3, km 97.3), whilst Onley lost contact with the breakaway due to a series of mechanical problems. Matthews was first in the Saint-Bonnet-en-Champsaur intermediate sprint (IS, km 84.3), where the breakaway enjoyed a lead of 5’40” over a peloton controlled by UAE Team Emirates. There were numerous attacks at the front of the large breakaway on the Côte de Saint-Apollinaire (Cat. 3, km 121), which was topped first by Johannessen, with the leaders of the stage going over the climb 10’30” ahead of the bunch. On the final categorised climb of the stage it was Kwiatkowski who led the way over the Côte des Demoiselles Coiffées and after the descent a trio formed at the front of the race, 35 km from the finish line, as Vercher and Campenaerts joined the Polish rider of Ineos Grenadiers in the lead.

18/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 18 – Gap / Bercelonnette (179,5 km) – HINDLEY Jai (RED BULL – BORA – HANSGROHE), MATTHEWS Michael (TEAM JAYCO ALULA) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters
18/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 18 – Gap / Bercelonnette (179,5 km) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

A thrilling finale

Over a final sector of 25km of rising false flats Kwiatkowski, Vercher and Campenaerts collaborated well, to open up a gap over the chasing group behind them. With 15 kilometres to go the leading trio had managed to extend their advantage over the five closest chasers to over 40”. In the final metres of the stage Campenaerts proved too strong for his rivals and outpaced them to the line for the win.

18/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 18 – Gap / Bercelonnette (179,5 km) – KWIATKOWSKI Michal (INEOS GRENADIERS) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters
18/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 18 – Gap / Bercelonnette (179,5 km) – CAMPENAERTS Victor (LOTTO DSTNY) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters
18/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 18 – Gap / Bercelonnette (179,5 km) – CAMPENAERTS Victor (LOTTO DSTNY) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Victor Campenaerts (Lotto-Dstny): “My Girlfriend Is the Hero of This Story”

“Winning a stage in the Tour de France is everybody’s dream. I’m not a neopro and I’ve been dreaming of this for a very long time. The period after the Classics was very difficult for me. I had a verbal agreement with the team about extending my contract, but I got ignored for a long time. I was at a long altitude training camp. My girlfriend was there and she supported me every day, while pregnant, as I was struggling to even fulfil my training program. I doubted I had a future in cycling as I was about to become a father. Coming into the Tour de France we had a super motivated team, with a super good atmosphere in the team. This is just the sum of the atmosphere in the team and we’re gonna celebrate tonight. The support I’ve had from my girlfriend is incredible, she is always there for me. She is my girlfriend, not my wife. Not yet! We have been nine weeks in altitude together, at Sierra Nevada (Spain). She gave birth to our son in Granada, indeed, at the bottom of the climb. She is the hero of this story. I’m so grateful to her and to the team, which showed a lot of faith in me and allowed me to stay for nine weeks in altitude without doing any race on the build-up. I’ll be leaving the team this winter, but I’m happy I can finish my spell in the team with the highlight of my career.  I think I played it very smart and also the team gave me a lot of confidence. Everybody knew that I had very good legs and that this was a stage that I aimed for in December already. I knew this was the only stage that looked like I could win. In the breakaway, I only had one bullet and maybe played it a bit dirty, showing everybody that I was hurting a lot in order not to take many pulls. The final attack was great, and the trio at the front cooperated super well today. I’m lost for words. I’m looking forward to see my girlfriend and my son.”

18/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 18 – Gap / Bercelonnette (179,5 km) – CAMPENAERTS Victor (LOTTO DSTNY) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Biniam Girmay (Intermarché-Wanty): “Now the Hardest Stages Are Coming Up”

“Today was one of the hardest days to be honest for me, harder than the last two days. After the crash, now it hurts a lot. Today I had a lot of pain, so I went to the doctor to ask for some painkillers and also some new bandages. I managed quite well to arrive in the time. Now the hardest stages are coming up, especially with the shorter stages at high altitude, a lot of climbing. It’s going to be a really tough also with a lot of riders out of the race, so it means that we don’t have a lot of riders for the gruppetto, so it’s not going to be easy, but I hope my teammates are always with me. We need to deal with it and continue until Nice.”

18/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 18 – Gap / Bercelonnette (179,5 km) – GIRMAY Biniam (INTERMARCHÉ – WANTY) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters
18/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 18 – Gap / Bercelonnette (179,5 km) – JOHANNESSEN Tobias (UNO-X MOBILITY) Représenté par un membre de l’équipe UNO-X MOBILITY – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-Quick Step): “I Feel Comfortable at Altitude”

“Today’s stage went well. On our side, everything was under control in the team. We had to stay very focused, especially on the very technical descents. In the end we arrived without having experienced any problems, so all is well. I stayed two weeks in training at Isola 2000, because I knew that there are a lot of riders who live in Nice and Monaco and who know these roads very well. So I had to go too. Now I have clearly identified the routes of the three stages which are coming, these are the ones which will count enormously for the riders in the general classification. I feel pretty good, I have good legs and I was particularly confident in yesterday’s stage. Tomorrow will be a short stage and I feel comfortable at altitude, so it’s not a problem for me. There may be fireworks, but either way it’s the legs that will do the talking, there will be no secrets. If there is an opportunity to win one, I will try, but we will also have to see what the configuration of the breakaway group will be.”

18/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 18 – Gap / Bercelonnette (179,5 km) – EVENEPOEL Remco (SOUDAL QUICK-STEP) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates): “Do I Play With Home Advantage This Weekend? Not Really.”

“It feels good to have an easier day like this one. Actually, the course never allowed us to get too relaxed, as it was up and down the whole time and that made it hard. In any case, we were under control. I’m really enjoying my time at this Tour de France. The atmosphere within the team is great, and I love seeing so many Slovenian fans on the roadside. I don’t know if somebody has said what the queen stage of this Tour de France is, but it might well be tomorrow’s. La Bonette is a big, nice climb. As for Isola 2000, I’ve trained there ahead of the Tour and I know it well. Do I play with home advantage this weekend? Not really. My only advantage is those 3’11” I have on Jonas. As for my strategy, I will start on the defensive to later see if I can go on the offensive, as it can be a good stage for Jonas himself.”

18/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 18 – Gap / Bercelonnette (179,5 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters
18/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 18 – Gap / Bercelonnette (179,5 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Billy Ceusters

TOUR DE FRANCE 2024 | STAGE 18 | GAP > BARCELONNETTE | DAILY STATS

5-1: CAMPENAERTS, FROM SUPER-COMBATIVE TO SUPER-EFFICIENT

After he was named the most combative rider of the Tour de France 2023, Victor Campenaerts now claims his maiden stage win, adding up to another breakaway success in the Giro. Last year, the Belgian was part of 5 breakaways, with a 10th place as his best result (in Belleville-en-Beaujolais, stage 12). En route to Barcelonnette, he made his first breakaway of the Tour 2024 and capped a spectacular day with a strong sprint, hitting 65.3km/h in the last kilometre.

1.470: LOTTO DSTNY END THEIR DROUGHT

Deeply rooted in the history of the Tour de France, Lotto Dstny won their 1st stage in 1987, with Marc Sergeant, and their 41st on day 18 of the Tour 2024, thanks to Victor Campenaerts. Their last victory to date was Caleb Ewan’s, on 9 July 2020, i.e. 1.470 days ago!

2: VERCHER IS UNBREAKABLE

Participating in his first Tour de France 2024 at 23 years old, Mattéo Vercher claimed his best professional result with a place of 2nd Barcelonnette that highlights his resilience. The young Frenchman had a rough start of the Tour, with a severe dehydration en route to Rimini. His stage 18 also started off the wrong foot, with a crash in the neutral zone. And still, he was there to sprint for the win, after 179.5km of battle at 43.023km/h.

14: THE TOUR AND THE HOUR RECORD, A HISTORIC RELATIONSHIP

As he powered to victory in Barcelonnette, Victor Campenaerts became the 14th rider whose list of achievements features both a Tour stage win and a stint as the holder of the hour record. The first to do so was Lucien Petit-Breton, who even won the overall in 1907 and 1908. And the list includes names such as Eddy Merckx, Jacques Anquetil, Fausto Coppi.

Campenaerts set his hour record – 55.089km – in 2019, beating Bradley Wiggins’ reference from 2015. His record lasted until 2022, when it was beaten by Daniel Bigham and then Filippo Ganna. It should also be noted that the first rider to set the hour record, in 1893, was Henri Desgrange, founder of the Tour de France.

5-5: LAZKANO (SORT OF) EQUALS POGAČAR

As he took three KOMs today (Côte de Corps, Col de Manse and Côte de Saint-Apollinaire), Oier Lazkano has now gone first atop 5 categorised climbs in the Tour 2024, as many as Tadej Pogačar. The (huge) difference lies in the category of the ascents they conquered. Lazkano went first at the Tourmalet (HC) and atop 3 cat-3 and one cat-4 ascents. He has 41 KOM points.

Pogačar conquered the other 3 HC Climbs so far in the Tour (Galibier, Pla d’Adet, Plateau de Beille), as well as cat-1 and a cat-2 climbs. His tally of 77 points makes him the owner (but not the wearer) of the polka-dot jersey for the 8th day in a row. Only Jonas Abrahamsen took more KOMs than Lazkano and Pogačar: 18 (1 cat-2, 7 cat-3s, 10 cat-4s)

37: AND NOW POGAČAR JOINS FRANTZ

Tadej Pogačar keeps moving up in the all-time rankings of riders who led the overall standings of the Tour de France: 37 Maillot Jaune, as many as Nicolas Frantz, in the 8th position. Antonin Magne is 7th with 39 jerseys. In 6th place, Sylvère Maes (41 Maillot Jaune) is out of reach for this year even if Pogačar were to keep the jersey all the way to Nice.

14: GIRMAY IN THE TOP-40

With 387 points, Biniam Girmay is coming closer and closer to being the first African rider to win a ranking in the Tour de France. In the meantime, his 14th green jersey is the 37th best tally ever, tied with Sam Bennett, who won the points standings in 2020. Peter Sagan is the rider who has collected the most green jerseys in his career: 130! Among the riders participating in the Tour 2024, Mark Cavendish (43) leads the way ahead of Wout van Aert (20) and Jasper Philipsen (18).

4: JOHANNESSEN SHOWS UNO-X MOBILITY’S COMBATIVITY

After Jonas Abrahamsen (stages 2 and 8) and Magnus Cort (stage 13), Tobias Johannessen claimed a 4th combativity award for Uno-X Mobility, more than any other team in this Tour (Groupama-FDJ follow with 3). In line with his aggressive racing on challenging days, Johannessen made the breakaway and was part of the battle for the stage win when he crashed with 35km to go, at a speed of 55.3km/h. He eventually finished 18th.

7: KWIATKOWSKI, BACK IN THE TOP-3

After he provoked the decisive split in the finale, Michal Kwiatkowski came very close to a first professional success since he won stage 13 of the Tour de France 2023, 1 year and 4 days ago. The Polish will have to settle for a 7th top-3 in the Tour: 2 wins, 1 place of 2nd, 4 places of 3rd.

 

Remembering Howard Sutherland, Author of Sutherland’s Handbook for Bicycle Repair

Sutherland was the author of Sutherland’s Handbook for Bicycle Repair and a former member of Berkeley’s Missing Link Bicycle Cooperative

BERKELEY, California (July 18, 2024) — Howard Sutherland died peacefully in his room in Oakland, California, on June 19, 2024. He was 75. 

Howard Sutherland in 2016. Photo courtesy the Sutherland Family.

The eldest child of Betsy McCann Sutherland and William (Bill) Sutherland, Howard grew up in Kensington, Maryland, with his siblings Mac and Beth. Early on he learned to work with tools in the family’s basement workshop. The basement doubled as the practice space for his high school rock band, The Confusions, which performed for embassies in nearby Washington D.C. He earned Eagle Scout rank, was the editor of the high school literary journal, and rode a unicycle.

Howard dropped out of college in favor of travel, later quipping that he learned on the road. He took photography courses in London when his family lived in England. He led American Youth Hostel bicycle tours around Europe. In the States, he hitchhiked and rode freight trains several times across the country, eventually landing in the San Francisco Bay Area during the Summer of Love. 

Sutherland’s Handbook for Bicycle Mechanics is a standard for bike shops everywhere. Photo courtesy Andrew Sutherland

While working at the Missing Link Bicycle Cooperative in Berkeley as a member of the co-op, he began his career-defining effort to help bicycle shops run more efficiently, and by extension, help more people enjoy riding. Seeing the need to compile data on non-standardized bicycle parts, he wrote and self-published Sutherland’s Handbook for Bicycle Repair. He went on to publish six more editions of the book, widely considered the bike mechanics’ bible. For his book and other inventions, he was honored with a lifetime achievement award from the National Bicycle Dealers Association in 2014.

During the 40 years he ran his business he often biked to his office in Emeryville. He brought his binoculars on his commute, frequently stopping to watch birds along the East Bay waterfront. He loved the water, and he lived for several years in the early 1980s on his 1947 Chris-Craft boat at the Berkeley Marina. He continued to live and work within a mile of the shore until his advancing Parkinson’s forced a move to assisted living in 2016. 

In 1983 Howard married Nancy Linn. With their children, Kory and Andrew, they enjoyed hiking, camping, and exploring the West Coast. Howard cherished family dinners, trips to the Exploratorium, and reading aloud. He amassed a large library and regularly sought out workshops and classes, especially related to health and wellness. Twice he traveled to Mexico to visit a Huichol shaman. Later in his life he visited Hawaii with his partner Kate Brookes, delighting in slack key guitar music and snorkeling. Throughout his life he found community and self-discovery through a range of therapies, ceremonies, and rituals. 

Howard Sutherland in 2016. Photo courtesy the Sutherland Family.

Howard was predeceased by his parents and his brother Mac, with whom he had a shared experience of Parkinson’s. He is survived by his sister Beth Sutherland (Paul Kaplan), his children Kory Sutherland (Grant Chang) and Andrew Sutherland, granddaughter Olive Sutherland Chang, ex-wife Nancy Sutherland, partner Kate Brookes, nephews Jonah Sutherland, Alex Pajunas, Michael Sutherland, and Danny Kaplan, and many close friends.

A memorial service was held at the Berkeley City Club at 10 am on July 13, 2024. All who knew Howard are welcome. For those unable to attend, a recording is available at https://asuth.com/memorial.

While the Sutherland family is no longer connected to the Sutherland’s Handbook and other bike shop products, they can still be purchased here: https://www.sutherlandsbicycle.com

Howard Sutherland . Photo courtesy the Sutherland Family.

2024 Tour de France Stage 17: Super Carapaz at SuperDévoluy

TOUR DE FRANCE 2024 | STAGE 17 | SAINT-PAUL-TROIS-CHÂTEAUX > SUPERDÉVOLUY

The victory on Stage 17 of the 2024 Tour de France went to Richard Carapaz at the SuperDévoluy finish, with the EF Education-EasyPost rider outpowering his rivals on the final climbs. Securing his first ever Tour de France stage win, Carapaz launched an attack on the penultimate climb, to reach Simon Yates (Jayco-AlUla) and then overtake him 1.8km from the Col du Noyer summit, going on to reach the finish at SuperDévoluy, 37” ahead of the Briton and 57” ahead of Enric Mas (Movistar Team), who was third. The GC favourites also tested each other on the final two climbs, with Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) also attacking on the Col du Noyer, before Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) and Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-Quick Step) responded. Evenepoel then launched an attack on the final climb to SuperDévoluy earning him 10” on Pogačar and 12” over Vingegaard at the finish line. Pogačar remains in yellow, now leading second placed Vingegaard by 3’11” and Evenepoel by 5’09”.

High paced start

Of the riders who had finished Stage 16, Phil Bauhaus (Bahrain – Victorious) and Elmar Reinders (Team Jayco AlUla) were non-starters – in Reinders’ case because he had travelled home for the birth of his first child – meaning there were 148 riders on the start line in Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux. Early in the stage that number decreased, following the abandons of Sam Bennett (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale Team), Fernando Gaviria (Movistar Team) and Alexey Lutsenko (Astana Qazaqstan Team) who were unable to take the pace, as the bunch covered 49 km in the first hour of racing whilst also encountering crosswinds.

17/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 17 – Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Superdévoluy (177,8 km) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
17/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 17 – Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Superdévoluy (177,8 km) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
17/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 17 – Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Superdévoluy (177,8 km) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

A four-man breakaway

The breakaway did not form immediately and the Visma-Lease a Bike riders attempted an attack at km 9. Three UAE riders, Yates, Soler and Sivakov temporarily found themselves in a second group, but the peloton regrouped at km 17. Following this came a rapid succession of attacks and counter-attacks, with Wout Van Aert (Visma-Lease a Bike), Tobias Halland Johannessen (Uno-X), Jarrad Drizners (Lotto-Dstny) and Harold Tejada (Astana) going clear between km 30 and km 36 before they were reeled in. At km 57, it was Magnus Cort (Uno-X) who initiated an attack which saw Tiesj Benoot (Visma-Lease a Bike), Bob Jungels (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) and Romain Gregoire (Groupama-FDJ) follow him to form a strong four-man breakaway group. The chase was incessant behind them and caused significant splits and then regroupings in the peloton, with crosswinds also having an obvious impact on the main group.

17/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 17 – Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Superdévoluy (177,8 km) – VAN AERT Wout (TEAM VISMA | LEASE A BIKE) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
17/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 17 – Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Superdévoluy (177,8 km) – GREGOIRE Romain (GROUPAMA-FDJ) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
17/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 17 – Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Superdévoluy (177,8 km) – JUNGELS Bob (RED BULL – BORA – HANSGROHE), BENOOT Tiesj (TEAM VISMA | LEASE A BIKE), GREGOIRE Romain (GROUPAMA-FDJ), CORT Magnus (UNO-X MOBILITY) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

Cort first at the intermediate sprint

At the intermediate sprint in Veynes (km 114.8), it was Cort who arrived in first position, whilst the peloton were 45” behind the breakaway four, led by the green jersey Biniam Girmay (Intermarché-Wanty). Soon after that, at around km 120, a group of 47 riders counter attacked out of the peloton, which gave them the go-ahead. At the foot of Col Bayard (Cat. 2, km 145.7), the leading quartet had a 1’45” advantage over their pursuers and 4’50” over the GC group controlled by UAE Team Emirates. By the summit of that climb, which Cort was first to the top of, the leading quartet had a 30” advantage over the chasing pair of Guillaume Martin (Cofidis) and Valentin Madouas (Groupama-FDJ), who had left the other riders from the large counter-attack group behind. That group trailed the breakaway riders by 1’00” at the top of the Col Bayard, whilst the relaxed peloton in which the GC riders were present was +6’40” off the lead of the race.

17/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 17 – Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Superdévoluy (177,8 km) – CORT Magnus (UNO-X MOBILITY) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

Col du Noyer attacks

Martin and Madouas made it to the front at the foot of the Col du Noyer (PB, Cat. 1, km 166.3), where the chasing group was 40” from the head of the race. Simon Yates then attacked from that chasing group, the Briton from Jayco-AlUla soon catching and overtaking the leading six. Richard Carapaz (EF Education-EasyPost) was also in hot pursuit and he then caught Yates on the penultimate climb of the stage, the pair briefly ascending together, before Carapaz attacked and went solo 1.8 km from the Col du Noyer summit. The Ecuadorian hero and Olympic champion would not look back from there, relentlessly pedalling to a memorable victory at SuperDévoluy.

17/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 17 – Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Superdévoluy (177,8 km) – CARAPAZ Richard (EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
17/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 17 – Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Superdévoluy (177,8 km) – CARAPAZ Richard (EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

Richard Carapaz (Ef Education-Easypost): “I Will Remember This Forever”

“This victory means everything! I’ve been trying to get it since the start of the Tour, that was the goal. In the general classification we are very far away, but the hope remained of winning a stage. It was a very difficult day, with a lot of attacks, but in the end, a large group formed, I was able to come out at the right time and I managed to get this result which I will remember forever. I really made the most of the moment. I knew the final well having studied it with my sports director. I had won stages in the Giro and the Vuelta but the Tour de France is the race with all the best riders in the world. Each team comes with its best set-up and its best squad. The Tour is the best race. I am also happy for all the people who follow me. I’m proud to be here and represent all of America in the best possible way.”

17/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 17 – Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Superdévoluy (177,8 km) – CARAPAZ Richard (EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
17/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 17 – Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Superdévoluy (177,8 km) – CARAPAZ Richard (EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

Biniam Girmay (Intermarché-Wanty): “I’m Super Happy to Gain Some Points Again”

“Today to be honest my elbow and my knee were really hurting, especially my elbow, because with the stitches I could not move so well. So especially with today’s really fast racing we needed to accelerate more so it was super painful. Always the next day is the hardest, you feel the pain and it’s not nice to sleep, but mentally I’m highly motivated so that gave me a lot of strength today. Mentally I’m really strong and I’m super happy to gain some points again. It’s always the way, if you get closer you feel strong mentally, also because you say to yourself, this is the time, we are only two or three days away, so that gave me a lot of motivation and I am really happy I could finish in a good way today. You have to show the fighting spirit and if you are mentally strong nothing can stop you. I already said to my team yesterday, don’t worry it’s not yet finished and we’ll give it everything, just fight until Nice.”

17/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 17 – Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Superdévoluy (177,8 km) – GIRMAY Biniam (INTERMARCHÉ – WANTY) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
17/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 17 – Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Superdévoluy (177,8 km) – GREGOIRE Romain (GROUPAMA-FDJ) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-Quick Step): “I Had Good Legs and I Was Confident”

“I had done the reconnaissance for this stage so I knew the final well and that helped me. The start of the stage was very difficult, it took more than two hours to form a breakaway. Then I thought we were going to finish quite quietly, but Lidl-Trek launched an attack, then it was Tadej so there was a confrontation again. I was with Jonas and he did his best to come back, we were able to catch up on the descent with Christophe Laporte. At that moment, I felt like I had good legs and I was confident. So in the car they told me that I could try something. There was Jan Hirt at the front. I asked him to wait for me and then drop me off at the last kilometre and he did it perfectly. I took back 10” from Tadej and Jonas but that wasn’t the goal. I remain focused on my place on the podium, I’m good where I am but it allowed me to gain a little time on those behind me. I know that Tadej is defending his first place, but I am five minutes from him so I benefit from a little freedom and I took advantage of it.”

17/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 17 – Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Superdévoluy (177,8 km) – EVENEPOEL Remco (SOUDAL QUICK-STEP) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates): “Sometimes I Don’t Know the Reason Why I Attack”

“It’s one less day to go, and it has been a very good one indeed. It was a very fast stage – and it felt like a junior race for 120km! It turned out to be a very hard day, one of those on which you spend a lot of energy. Visma-Lease a Bike did a great race today, as they were very aggressive. I don’t know exactly if they wanted to trouble me, or stress us. Sometimes I don’t know the reason why I attack – even me, I don’t know anymore! I guess I was just enjoying the climb, as it was steep and super nice, and I felt like attacking to test my legs into this third week and see if I could get a gap or something. In the end, it was Remco who put in a super good attack and broke away. Without the Visma guys, he would have put even more time on Jonas and me.”

17/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 17 – Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Superdévoluy (177,8 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez
17/07/2024 – Tour de France 2024 – Étape 17 – Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Superdévoluy (177,8 km) – POGACAR Tadej (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) – Photo © A.S.O./Charly Lopez

TOUR DE FRANCE 2024 | STAGE 17 | SAINT-PAUL-TROIS-CHÂTEAUX > SUPERDÉVOLUY | DAILY STATS

35: CARAPAZ, MORE THAN EVER AN ECUADORIAN HERO

Already an Olympic Champion, a Giro winner, a podium finisher in the Tour de France and La Vuelta, Richard Carapaz made history when he became the first Ecuadorian wearer of the Maillot Jaune on day 3. And he achieves yet another unprecedented feat for Ecuador, now the 35th nation to win a stage in the Tour. The 34th was Eritrea, with Biniam Girmay’s success in Turin, the same day that Carapaz took the Maillot Jaune.

110: CARAPAZ’S TREBLE

Already a stage winner in La Vuelta (3 wins in 2022) and the Giro (1 in 2018, 2 in 2019), Richard Carapaz becomes the 110th rider with victories in all three Grand Tours. The 109th was Remco Evenepoel after his success in the Gevrey-Chambertin ITT (stage 7).

22.0: COL DU NOYER, CARAPAZ’S LAUNCHPAD

Forever associated with the legend of Luis Ocaña, Col du Noyer served today as a launchpad for Richard Carapaz to write history. The Ecuadorian was the fastest on the 7.5km ascent – 22.0km/h, 0.3km/h faster than Simon Yates – and he pushed his advantage on the downhill, with an average of 61.0km/h top speed of 84.2km/h. He was only the 5th fastest on the descent though… Jonas Vingegaard did 64.5km/h on average (max: 91.7km/h) and Remco Evenepoel went up to 95.1km/h as the duo replied to Tadej Pogačar’s attack.

36: POGAČAR’S YELLOW TALLY MATCHES BOBET’S

With a 15th Maillot Jaune in the Tour de France 2024, Tadej Pogačar brings his tally up to 36 and joins Louison Bobet at the 9th spot in the all-time rankings. Bobet won the Tour de France three times in a row and he took his last Maillot Jaune on the last day of the Tour 1955, 4 months and a half after his 30th birthday. Pogačar will turn 26 in September. A 37th Maillot Jaune would see Pogačar join Nicolas Frantz.

387-354: GIRMAY’S REPLY

On the day after he crashed at 59.8km/h in Nîmes, Biniam Girmay showed his stitches shall not slow him down, as he was the fastest from the bunch in the intermediate sprint, speeding up to 57.3km/h on a slightly rising road. The Eritrean sprinter is now 33 points ahead of Jasper Philipsen, with 150 points still up for grabs en route to Nice (including 60 points in the intermediate sprints). The last 15 Tours didn’t see a change of leader of the points standings after stage 18… But everything is possible until the end, as illustrated by the Tour 2003, when Baden Cooke edged Robbie McEwen on the very last day.

1-2: CARAPAZ-YATES, A SPECIAL DUO

The finish in SuperDévoluy saw Richard Carapaz and Simon Yates finish in the same top-3 for the 3rd time of their career. And each of them was a special one:

    • stage 14 of the Giro 2019, Richard Carapaz took Ecuador’s first Maglia Rosa and went on to win the overall
    • stage 14 of the Giro 2022, Yates wins in Turin (where Carapaz took the Maillot Jaune) and Carapaz (3rd) is back in Rosa
    • stage 17 of the Tour de France 2024.
1: GRÉGOIRE, A COMBATIVE ROOKIE

Romain Grégoire, the 3rd youngest rider in the Tour de France 2024, showed his strength as he made a very hard fought for breakaway. After 57km of early battles, the Frenchman covered 103km at the front, with an average speed of 43.3km/h, and eventually received the combativity award. 3 other riders participating in their first Tour de France also won the award this year: Frank van den Broek (stage 1), Oier Lazkano (stage 4) and Thomas Gachignard (stage 16).

1-1-1: FOLLOW THE LEADERS!

Following successes for bib numbers 1 (Jonas Vingegaard) and 11 (Tadej Pogačar), Richard Carapaz propelled his 111 to the summit. It’s the first time in the history of the Tour that these 3 numbers win a stage in the same edition.

99: MAS BREAKS IN THE TOP-3

Riding his 99th Tour de France stage since his debut in 2019, Enric Mas achieved his best result: 3rd, the first time he finishes in the top-3, after 11 previous top-10s.

Salt Lake City Bike Shop Goes Up for Sale

0

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (July 17, 2024) — Cranky’s Bike Shop, a locally owned business, in Salt Lake City, is looking for a buyer. The shop has been in business since 2014 and owner Cris Pereira is ready to explore other options in life.

Cris Pereira of Cranky’s Bike Shop in Salt Lake City. Photo by Dave Iltis

The shop is for sale for $999,000, which includes inventory and all fixtures. The shop has approximately 500 bikes in stock. For more information, contact Cris at the number below.

A flier below contains information on the sale.

Shop Info

Cranky’s Bike Shop
150 E 800 S
Salt Lake City, UT 84111
(801) 582-9870
crankysutah.com

Cris Pereira of Cranky’s Bike Shop in Salt Lake City. Photo by Dave Iltis