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David Beckham strips off for H&M Bodywear Line

David Beckham may have earned his rippling torso thanks to his sports career, but he’s been putting it to much better use than on the football field.

david-beckham-hm-advert
The father of four has flexed his muscles and showcased oodles of skin for the latest venture from brand Beckham.

[See also: David Beckham is our mid-week eye candy]
[See also: David Beckham wants to coach kids in Africa]

David has teamed up with HM to launch a pants range, called Bodywear which erm, provides plenty of support for his package!

To celebrate (and no doubt sell more pants) the hottie stars in an ad for the underwear with the focus firmly on his hot bod.

David Beckham HMThe look of love: David gives good ‘eye’ in the video

The camera zooms in first to the footballer’s flawless face before he gives several suggestive looks to the camera.

It then rotates around David’s buff body so that his muscles can be admired from every angle. His many tattoos are also heavily featured, just so we can be sure it’s him.

And if that wasn’t enough eye pleasing viewing for one session, we get a nice zoom in of his pants too — NICE.

david beckham for HMBum deal: David shows off his pert behind in the new ad

David Beckham Bodywear for HM is available from 2 February (David Beckham is not included in your purchase unfortunately.)

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Surrey to get back in the saddle with post-Olympics cycling festival

Surrey to get back in the saddle with post-Olympics cycling festival

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Pedal power is set to rule in Surrey next year with the announcement of a cycling festival.

For a year after the Olympics cyclists’ events venture into Reigate and Banstead borough, looping Box Hill and drawing in what is expected to be massive crowds at the roadsides, the county will
again be welcoming thousands of bike fans.

The event will be a two-day festival of cycling building on the legacy of this year’s London Games, to be held in August 2013.

It will be the first large-scale event to use the Olympic Park when it reopens after the Games.

Outlining the plans for London and Surrey to host the ambitious event in a speech to business leaders at the World Economic Forum in Davos last week, the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, said it is
expected that it will bring up to 35,000 cyclists to the county. A launch event to celebrate the announcement was also held in London.

Denise Saliagopoulos, Surrey County Council’s cabinet member for community services and the 2012 Games, said: “We are delighted to be working with London to build on the 2012 Olympic legacy.”

Coun Saliagopoulos said: “The festival will add to Surrey’s growing reputation as a top cycling destination.

“It will drive tourism, boost the Surrey economy and I’m sure people will love the chance to get involved in such an exciting event.”

She said: “Surrey will be the cycling capital of the UK when we host the Olympic road races and cycling time trial.

“This event will help us build on the Olympic legacy. It’s going to be fantastic.

“It will allow cycling enthusiasts like Boris Johnson to follow in the tracks of Olympic greats.

“It will drive tourism, boost the Surrey economy and encourage residents to get on their bikes and lead healthier lifestyles.”

The first day of the festival will involve a family fun ride for up to 70,000 cyclists on an eight-mile loop of roads around London landmarks.

On the second day, up to 35,000 amateur and world class elite cyclists will tackle a 100-mile course that will begin in the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in London, and be based on much of the route
of the Olympic road race, incorporating Surrey.

Mr Johnson said the weekend festival could attract more than 200,000 visitors from outside the capital to London for the weekend, and generate tens of millions of pounds in economic benefit.

Organisers hope the festival will become an annual international event.

Iain Edmondson, head of major events at London and Partners, and the project director for the festival of cycling, said: “After months of planning and feasibility studies, we are now ready to seek
proposals from the world’s best event organisers to deliver this world class event.

“They will have the support and resources from partners across the city and Surrey to make this exciting vision a reality.”

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Greenville, SC selected to host 2014 UCI Para-Cycling World Championships

The world governing body of (UCI) selected Greenville, S.C. to host the UCI Para-Cycling Road in September 2014. This event is projected to include more than 450 athletes and 200 coaches and staff from over 45 countries. The Para-Cycling Road have not been hosted by an American city since Colorado Springs, Colo. in 1998.

The five-day competition is scheduled for August 28-September 1, 2014, which is Labor Day weekend. Races will include the and road race disciplines for men, women and teams. The handcycle relay is a team discipline that has become a showcase event for spectators. All athletes compete in categorized events using bicycles that are adapted to his/her abilities: traditional or adapted bicycle, tandem, tricycle or handcycle.

“The UCI is delighted to be returning to the United States with the UCI Para-Cycling Road World Championships in 2014. The UCI particularly looks forward to this event in South Carolina, as a World Championship event brings a high level of global attention and acts as an important vector for growth of cycling at regional and national level,” said UCI President . “The huge interest in this major international event further confirms the growth of the Para-cycling movement worldwide.”

The economic impact and exposure for the Upstate will be significant. Based on a recent economic impact study from the data collected from participants and spectators at the Para-Cycling Road World Championships held in Canada 2010, Greenville should anticipate more than $4.5 million for the local economy.

Duane Parrish, Director of the South Carolina Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism, noted, “The selection of Greenville and South Carolina for this prestigious and inspiring event is another indication of the respect our state is gaining as a venue for major sports competition. In addition to being able to experience firsthand this world-class event, the citizens of the upstate will benefit from the money spent directly in the community and the considerable value of the global media coverage it generates.”

The Greenville 2014 bid was a collaborative effort between the City of Greenville, U.S. Handcycling (Evergreen, Colo.), Medalist Sports (Atlanta, Ga.), and Notus Sports, a developing South Carolina non-profit organization focused on bringing events to the Upstate. Medalist Sports is the agency that has produced the in Greenville for the past six years, which has included the U.S. Handcycling National Criterium Championships. In 2009, Medalist partnered with U.S. Handcycling to bring two national races to Greenville. The U.S. Handcycling Series continues to be part of the each year.

In Para-Cycling time trials, athletes start individually in staggered intervals and race against the clock. In Para-Cycling road races, athletes have mass starts for each category and distances will vary, with distances as long as 65 kilometers. Male and female athletes compete in categories related to defined disabilities, such as amputation/limb loss, blindness/visual impairment, spinal cord injury/wheelchair-users and cerebral palsy/brain injury/stroke.

“We are honored as a contributor to worldwide Olympic and Paralympic sport, to continue to host world events on U.S. soil, and especially in Greenville, which has a rich history of hosting successful national cycling races,” said UCI Executive Board member and U.S. Olympic Committee Board member, Mike Plant.

The City of Greenville hosted a press conference earlier today to recognize members of the Greenville 2014 bid committee and Para-Cycling partners. Footage will be archived at www.greenville2014.us. Louis Barbeau, president of the President of the UCI Para-CyclingCommission, made the formal announcement with Stan Healy of Notus Sports and Ian Lawless, executive director of U.S. Handcycling, about Greenville winning the bid for 2014. Also present were Greenville Pro Tem Mayor David Sudduth, Greenville County Council Chairman Butch Kirven, Edmonds of SCPRT, five-time para-cycling world champion Oz Sanchez and three-time U.S. Race champion . Last year, Hincapie, a resident of Greenville, presented the “ Racing to Excellence Award” to an American handcyclist, and helped Notus Sports with its bid for the World Championships.

“We are extremely excited to be hosting the 2014 Para-cycling Road World Championships in Greenville, SC,” said USA Cycling President Chief Executive Officer Steve Johnson. “The city of Greenville has been an outstanding host of the USA Cycling Professional National Road Championships for the past six years and I know the support and enthusiasm shown by the Greenville community will carry over into hosting the Para-cycling World Championships.”

With the 2012 London Olympic and Paralympic Games taking place this September, many of the top para-cyclists are already excited about having the Worlds in the United States. One such star is world champion handcyclist and U.S. Paralympic gold medalist Oz Sanchez.

“I’m thrilled to hear the U.S. will be hosting UCI Para-cycling World Championships in 2014! Racing on U.S. soil at this world series, with a promising win, holds numerous personal opportunities. More importantly, it is a testament to the continued growth of the sport within the U.S. which will inevitably help all involved,” said the five-time World Champion, a former U.S. Marine who lives in . While serving as a U.S. Marine and transferring to become a Navy Seal, Sanchez was involved in a hit-and-run motorcycle accident, which resulted in a spinal cord injury (SCI). He has since become a successful professional athlete in the adaptive sport of handcycling and Triathlon.

“Most of my personal excitement stems from what it will mean to the wounded warrior community. There is no question in my mind that sports are the best and most effective therapy injured individuals can utilize. My hope is for this event to be mass publicized and grand scale exposure to occur within the community, in addition to attracting new, significant talent. My hat is off to Greenville, SC for setting the stage for what is to come. There are ‘No Limits’ to the momentum this event will generate!”

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Shared space is the future for London’s roads

Shared space is the future for London’s roads

Simon Jenkins

31 Jan 2012

Slowly we are getting there. Tomorrow, after seven years of planning and three of digging, London gets a truly new public space, new in concept and new in appearance. It is the “shared-space” of Exhibition Road in South Kensington, a handsome boulevard through the midst of museum land, and much needed.

It is 20 years since towns and cities across Europe began redesigning their streets, moving from the traffic- circulating zones festooned with railings and traffic lights beloved of British town planners. Some 400 European towns have converted thoroughfares to spaces adapted for all to use, with redesigns that respect rather than abuse the buildings facing onto them.

London has, over the years, pedestrianised some of its shopping streets, such as South Molton and Carnaby and Leicester Square. It has attempted a few, highly dangerous, bus lanes and contraflows, such as in Oxford Street and Piccadilly, the latter now abandoned. The boldest council was Tory Kensington and Chelsea, first dipping a toe in the water at Kensington High Street.

This was partly stripped of signs, railings and clutter. Bike refuges were put down the centre to encourage people to linger in the roadway and junctions were raised. Pedestrians now wander at will, slowing the traffic and rendering the neighbourhood people-friendly. There has been a 60 per cent drop in accidents and a relative pick-up in retail lettings.

Shared space, or “naked streets”, is a concept still little understood by a British public steeped in the old religion of urban traffic. This holds that road space is for vehicles alone, their drivers being, by definition, irresponsible, stupid, selfish zombies whose safe driving can be assured only by physical barriers, lights, signs, road marks and highway codes. Potential victims – that is, other road users – must be corralled and caged along congested sidewalks in what is an iniquitous allocation of space.

The transport guru, John Adams of UCL, is a follower of the Dutch engineer Hans Monderman, progenitor of a traffic revolution. He stands conventional theory on its head. “Shared space assumes a road user who is responsible, alert and responsive to evidence of safety or danger.” It assumes that the number of drivers who wish deliberately to run down strangers is minimal and uses the design of streets to help them not do so, mainly through ensuring eye contact. Most accidents occur when drivers are distracted by signs, notably traffic lights. “Shared space,” says Adams, “deliberately creates uncertainty as to who has the right of way, letting road users work it out for themselves in a civilised fashion.”

Counter-intuitive as it may be, a mountain of evidence from across Europe shows that such sharing is safer than traffic separation. The most extensive version in England, at Ashford in Kent, has slashed accident rates. The new streets are also efficient in that everyone uses them faster.

Walkers do not have to go via barriers and signalled crossings. Drivers do not have to wait, burning fuel at lights, with unoccupied road space ahead. Rather than drive at a stop-start rate of 12mph they can usually drive at a steady 15.

Everyone just gets on with it. In Germany, Denmark, Holland, France, where shared space is commonplace, traffic speeds have increased along with safety.

This is an intellectual as much as practical revolution. Petrolheads such as Jeremy Clarkson, used to years of transport exclusivity, oppose shared space with vehemence. Clarkson cried against a proposed scheme behind Harrods, “Someone is going to die, you idiots.” Tell him that shared space is actually faster for cars and he simply will not believe it. The classic shared space is a street in an Italian hill town, where few people die.

The architects Dixon Jones have spent 18 million transforming Exhibition Road. What was a dirty avenue of parked and fuming cars has been replaced by a pattern of black and white lozenges laid out like a giant carpet, from street wall to wall. This has brought to life the faades of the VA and science museums. Dire modern faades have been dressed in banners and a new dignity brought to the northern residential half of the road. A line of tall lighting masts down the centre brilliantly articulates its rise and bend.

The only disappointment is how often the designers have clearly had to concede to the conservatives. There is too much parking and ugly stabling for bikes. An alliance between drivers and disabled lobbyists has required a visual divide where the kerb used to be, thus implying separate corridors reserved for pedestrians and drivers. This reduces confusion and increases traffic speed, making the space more not less safe for the disabled.

The designers have pushed boldly south to South Kensington Tube station but there their nerve has failed. At the start of Old Brompton Road is a confused mess of traffic lights, kerbs and bollards. This illustrates the one serious risk with shared space: half-heartedness.

That said, Exhibition Road is the new town planning. It treats citizens as adults, requiring drivers to negotiate their occupancy of space with other users, rather than bullying and fuming their way along designated corridors. It treats cyclists and jaywalkers, the motorists’ demons, as the street’s most effective policemen.

Shared space now operates across Europe. It is no longer experimental. It has led to fewer accidents and shorter journey times. It is a civilised, communal approach to city living that clearly works. Its time has come. London has gone so slowly down this road because, until now, it has lacked civic leaders with the guts to stand up to the motoring lobby and their reactionary allies, the traffic engineers. At last someone has called their bluff.


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Pop vicar Richard Coles preaches the virtues of cycling

The accomplishments of Rev Richard Coles – writer, broadcaster, chart-topping musician with the Communards, and now Vicar of Finedon, Northants – are so diverse that it came as no surprise to discover life’s cleanest pleasure among them. He has, he tells me, “always loved cycling“. From his earliest cycling experiences, “I liked that it took you further than your unaided legs would go.”

Turning points in his life have often been reached by bike. “I once ran away on a fat-tyred little bike and got as far as Martin’s the newsagent on the new estate before turning back,” he recalls. “One Christmas (1974?) I got an orange Raleigh Chopper and that was my first experience of ‘cool’.”

He has always enjoyed exploring by bike. “When I was fit and had the time, I used to cycle a lot, touring round Northamptonshire and off-road biking with Smiffy and Alison and a slightly mad bloke whose name I can’t remember who used to cheerfully cycle off precipices without looking. He told me a highly indecent joke about George Michael I’ve never forgotten. It still makes me laugh.”

God is also in his thoughts when he’s cycling. Like many cyclists, he finds time in the saddle a great opportunity for reflection. “One of my most enduring memories is cycling from Grafton underwood to Slipton on a sunny winter’s day and being struck, out of the blue, by a sense of the presence of God and that all would be well. More common is problem-solving. If I can’t quite get something to work out, I cycle on it. Forward motion under one’s own steam seems to work for me.”

Today he often combines cycling with trips in his camper van. He and his partner take a pair of Bromptons – “the finest achievement in British engineering since the Holborn viaduct” – to cycle wherever they park up. They have explored Britain thoroughly. “I love it round here in Northamptonshire – good cycling country – but I think we’d like to end up in Norfolk eventually. Scotland we love too, and try to take the van and the bikes up to the west coast once a year.”

Closer to home, Coles has rekindled his affection for Finedon, his current parish, while out cycling. “I’ve known Finedon all my life, but rediscovered it on my bike in recent years. I remember seeing the vicarage I now live in and thinking, ‘in another life I would have loved to be here’.” He adds that in Finedon, the bike is an “indispensable ministerial tool. I’m visible, but I’m not stopping, so if I have a lot to do and I’m half-time in a parish which could use my full-time attention – I can sail by with a cheery salutation,” he explains. “Most people like to see the vicar out and about, I think.”

I ask Cole how he regards the church’s stance on environmental issues. Though the Bishop of London, among others, has made the environment a priority, at local level the car tends to dominate. (In Westminster recently, several churches campaigned against the extension of parking restrictions.) As John Major infamously observed, the church has traditionally welcomed cycling: “I’d love to see old maids cycling to evensong,” Coles says, “but round here they’re more likely to come on a mobility scooter. We don’t really have a problem with cars because most distances in Finedon are walkable. Or scootable. As a church we try to be as environmentally responsible as possible – we are, after all, stewards of God’s creation, so more nurture, less exploitation would be good.”

With his rare combination of showbiz experience and the Church of England, Coles has been advising actor Tom Hollander in his role as Adam Smallbone in the BBC2 sitcom Rev. “I have helped Hollander with getting the technical stuff right. He was rather crestfallen when I once said he wielded his aspergillum like a Methodist.”

We agree that for a comedy filmed in Shoreditch, they’d be foolish not to have a cycling episode, in which Adam Smallbone, perhaps with Colin and Adoha, learns to cycle with the local fixed-gear posse, then goes on a critical mass ride. Coles is not persuaded that the deliciously intimidating archdeacon could be cut down to size a little by spending more time on a bike and less in the back of a cab. “He’s a very cab account sort of cleric – more likely to be seen on rollerblades than a bike. In Fire Island, perhaps?” he suggests.

But Coles has less sympathy for the procession of intimidating characters in dark vehicles down the road, at the Royal Courts of Justice. “I think one of the most enduring spectacles from the phone-hacking scandal has been the editors and proprietors and cops turning up to give evidence at the Leveson inquiry in black Range Rovers. They make them look like Balkan warlords – horrible,” he says. Though he resists the idea that cyclists are by definition any humbler, and won’t be drawn on my fanciful parallel between the bike and the biblical donkey, symbol of humility. “I’ve found cyclists to be no less prey to human frailty than motorists,” Coles says, “so I would hesitate to draw a direct parallel between two wheels and virtue.”

Aged 18, Coles was badly injured after being knocked off his bike by “a careless driver” – “that was the injury for which I got compensation and bought a saxophone – the beginning of my career in the music industry,” he points out – and was so nervous of the road afterwards that he “would flinch if a lorry passed as I walked along the pavement”.

While it made him “more aware of how vulnerable cyclists are”, he sees fault on both sides. “Considerate driving – and cycling – is rarer now than it used to be,” he suggests. “There’s more competition for space on the road and a general attitude of ‘fuck you’ doesn’t help. Cyclists not abiding by the law or the highway code does nothing to ameliorate that.”

He ends with an aspiration we should all share; one far too easily lost in the normalisation of road injury and death. “I think all road users are responsible for creating safer environments for cyclists – and reducing to zero the number of fatalities should be our urgent priority,” he says.

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London kicks off motorcycle season with MCN Show

The Ducati 1199 Panigale will be one of the many new bikes on display at the 2012 Carole Nash MCN London Motorcycle Show.The Ducati 1199 Panigale will be one of the many new bikes on display at the 2012 Carole Nash MCN London Motorcycle Show.

All the major manufacturers will be coming together to help kick off the UK motorcycle season at the London ExCel this weekend.

The Carole Nash MCN London Motorcycle Show will feature the likes of Honda, Ducati, Suzuki and Yamaha, as well as numerous other producers of motorcycle clothing, accessories and motorbike helmets.

Honda always hosts a popular stand at these types of events, having built a strong brand reputation for quality, reliable motorcycles over many years.

This year will feature an extra special celebration, however, as the Japanese manufacturer revels in 20 years of the Fireblade.

An example of the original 1992 CBR900RR, released in 1992, will start the Fireblade display, which also takes in the fuel-injected 2000 edition and the first 1,000cc model from 2004. The sequence will be capped off with the high-tech 2012 edition.

Another iconic race machine, the RC174 which won the 1967 350cc world championship, will also feature at the event, with visitors even hearing the distinctive noise of the engine when it fired up once a day. Honda will also be displaying its other new bikes, including the all-new NC700X and the Vision 50 scooter.

Rival firm Yamaha celebrated 50 years of motorcycle racing at last year’s event, and is using the 2012 show to prove it still has plenty to offer. New to the line-up is the revamped YZF-R1 with cross-plane crank and six-stage traction control, as well as the interesting 530cc T-Max scooter, which is said to focus on combining the performance of a larger bike with the comfort and stability of a scooter.

Ducati’s stand will be busy, but it will be worth battling the crowds to catch a glimpse of one of the most eagerly-awaited bikes in recent memory – the 1199 Panigale, Ducati’s new 200bhp superbike.

With this and the Motorcycle News (MCN) 2011 Bike of the Year, the Diavel, standing aside the award-winning Multistrada, it’s no wonder Ducati is trumpeting this as its strongest and most exciting line-up yet.

Suzuki will also be out in force, as the show gives UK users the first chance to look at the brand new GSX-R1000, which arrives in UK dealers on February 11th.

Although the model has remained essentially the same for years, Suzuki is constantly evolving it, this time reducing the weight to enhance the agility of the powerful superbike.

“Naturally we’re delighted to attend the London show once again and pleased to be able to bring the 2012 GSX-R1000 to the capital for fans to see close-up for the first time,” Suzuki GB marketing manager George Cheeseman commented.

But superbikes are not the only thing on offer from Suzuki, with the manufacturer also showing off its 2012 V-Strom 650 with ABS and the Burgman 650. Former Suzuki racer Simon Crafar will also be in attendance throughout the event, talking to would-be racers about riding techniques and his new instructional DVD.

Speaking of special guests, there are plenty of those in action on the Revolution Stage.

This is a special live action part of the 2012 Carole Nash MCN Motorcycle Show, which sees professional riders having their skills tested to the limit.

Isle of Man TT legends John McGuinness and Ian Hutchinson will compete against trials king Dougie Lampkin and enduro champion David Knight, among others.

As the best riders in their relative fields, they will be handed a series of tricky, adrenaline-fuelled challenges that will take them out of their comfort zones, testing skill and nerve in front of a capacity crowd.

There is something on offer for everyone at the 2012 Carole Nash MCN Motorcycle Show, so why not kick off the 2012 season in style?

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Youngster Gears Up for Cycling Clinic


Government Supporting Daily


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JANVIER Hadi is one of three cyclists set to take part in a six-week high level training clinic at the prestigious African continental cycling center in South Africa.

The 19-year-old, who only started competitive racing during last year’s Tour of Rwanda, beat more experienced riders in Nathan Byukusenge and Gasore Hategeka in Friday’s 117km trial race.

Four-time Tour of Rwanda winner Abraham Ruhumuriza won the race while Nicodem Habiyambere and Gasore Hategeka followed closely in 2nd and 4th place.

Hategeka and Habiyambere complete the three-man team for the clinic and Emmanuel Murenzi, the Executive Secretary of the Cycling Federation (Ferwacy) expects the trio to reap big from the opportunity.

“They will be training alongside the very best on the continent so it’s great opportunity for them. They are focused riders and I have no doubt that they will make the most of the opportunity.”

Adrien Niyonshuti, who also went through the high-level training clinic, is now an integral member of South Africa’s UCI Continental team MTN Energade.

He started his first UCI European road race in August, 2009 with his participation in the 2009 Tour of Ireland, becoming the first Rwandan cyclist to ride in the European professional peloton.

Last year, he qualified to represent Rwanda in the 2012 London Olympic Games cross-country mountain bike race.

With the Tour of Morocco (March 23- April 6) waiting in the wings, Ferwacy is set to organise another trial race on February 17. Other high profile races on Team Rwanda’s calendar include Gabon’s La Tropicale Amissa Bongo (April 24-29), Tour of Eritrea (May 30-June 3), Kwita Izina (June 10-11) and the Tour of Rio (August 30-September 3) in Brazil.

Copyright © 2012 The New Times. All rights reserved. Distributed by AllAfrica Global Media (allAfrica.com).
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London 2012: Beijing heroine Nicole Cooke facing life on the fringes

All the talk is of whether the cyclist Mark Cavendish, the BBC’s sports personality of the year, can get Britain’s medal count going on the first day of the London Games with a victory in the Olympic road race. If he were to bring it off, it would be a wonderful moment for the Manxman and, in motivational terms, for the team as a whole. But it would only reproduce the achievement of Nicole Cooke in 2008, when the Welsh woman emerged out of the drizzle under the Great Wall of China to overpower her rivals in the final stretch and take a gritty win that kicked open the gate for a rush of medals.

Three and a half years after Beijing, and six months ahead of London, there is a nice little dilemma brewing up for Dave Brailsford, the head of British Cycling, and his performance manager, Shane Sutton. Will Cooke, the reigning Olympic champion, be given the chance to defend her title on home ground, or will she be asked to stand aside?

At 28, she should be in her prime. But although she followed the Olympic victory by winning the world championship a few weeks later, the last four years have not been consistently kind to her. She has found herself on the outside of British Cycling’s charmed circle, a position underlined by her performance in the World Championships in Copenhagen last autumn, when she was heavily criticised for a lack of team spirit that, it was said, lay behind a failure to match Cavendish’s historic success in the men’s race the following day.

Cooke was one of seven British women riders in Denmark that day. The plan was for the team to work in support of Lizzie Armitstead, then 22 years old, a gifted Yorkshirewoman who had shown outstanding form throughout the season and was judged by the coaches to have the best chance of profiting from a bunch sprint. Among the other riders were Emma Pooley, Sharon Laws and Lucy Martin, then fellow members of Armitstead’s trade team, Garmin‑Cervélo.

The riders did their jobs according to the schedule until towards the end of the last lap, when Armitstead found herself momentarily delayed behind a crash. Cooke, who had been delegated to lead her out for the final sprint, could not see her. Instead of waiting to locate the team leader, she launched her own sprint, finishing just out of the medals in fourth place. Without assistance, Armitstead recovered to cross the line in seventh position, which suggested that with the benefit of the planned assistance she might have achieved her ambition. Tears were shed in the team bus afterwards, and strong language was used back in the team’s hotel later on.

That the dispute was not resolved by those exchanges became clear before Christmas, when Armitstead gave an interview to the monthly magazine Cycle Sport, in which she pulled no punches when asked a couple of blunt questions. How did Nicole ride? “For herself.” How often does Nicole work for other Great Britain team-mates? “I’ve never seen her work for a team-mate.”

It needs to be remembered that unlike Armitstead, who is a product of British Cycling’s Olympic Podium Programme and honed her skills – as did Cavendish – with the superb track team, Cooke became a professional bike racer at a time when Britain had very little going for it, certainly nothing like the beautifully oiled development machine available to today’s talented teenagers. She was offered a chance to join up, but balked when told that she would have to conform to a regime which insisted on participation in the track programme. She wanted to be a road cyclist, and didn’t see the point of spending most of her time in the velodrome. That decision revealed a rift which not even an Olympic gold medal and a world title have managed to close.

Cooke is an independent soul. She turned pro at 19, joining a team in Italy and learning to speak the language in order to be able to function effectively. But she sometimes makes terrible career decisions, and perhaps her rejection of British Cycling’s proposal was the first of them.

In recent years she has flitted from team to team, seldom spending more than a season with any of them, wasting a year on an abortive attempt to start her own outfit and never building profitable relationships with fellow riders.

There is an obvious contrast with Armitstead, Pooley, Laws and Martin, who learned at the end of the year that the Garmin-Cervélo women’s team was being disbanded. At the beginning of January it was announced that all four of them will race this year for a Dutch team, AA Drink-Leontien, an arrangement that will delight British Cycling’s coaches since it keeps them working together all season, strengthening the sort of bonds that could pay off on the Mall in July.

Cyclists like to spend the European winter putting the miles into their legs in warmer climates, and at the moment Cooke is in Australia, where she sprinted to a win in the recent Noosa Grand Prix in Queensland. In Britain in six months’ time, however, she may find herself out in the cold, unable to defend on home territory the title she won so proudly and dramatically – and, she may care to remember, with the help of Pooley and Laws – in a distant land.

richard.williams@ guardian.co.uk twitter.com/@ rwilliams1947

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Bicycle Superhighways — Pathways to Less Congestion and Healthier Urban …

Recently I’ve learned about efforts in England, Sweden, Denmark, and even in North America, to establish “bicycle superhighways” — not just bike lanes tacked on to city streets, but dedicated bicycle roadways, with features like two-directional traffic, passing lanes, service areas for repair and filling tires, and signage for safety and wayfinding.

Sweden’s transportation authority has reportedly approved a 10.5-mile, four-lane bike highway between the city of Malmö and the nearby university town of Lund. The city of London is developing a system of 12 bicycle highways that radiate from the center of the city to outer London. Bike highways are under development in Copenhagen, Denmark. A Toronto architect has even proposed the construction of a high-speed network of bike tracks enclosed in elevated tubes.

Bike route in Malmo, SwedenEncouraging more bicycle transit seems like a logical move for cities, given the levels of congestion, air pollution, and safety problems resulting from automobile traffic. “Hard-core bikers,” whoever they might be, are supposedly satisfied to mix right in with automobile traffic on city streets. But obviously, limiting bike traffic to a regime that is only safe for that mythical population is a self-fulfilling prophecy: Only the hard core will dare to venture onto streets dominated by tired, angry, frustrated car commuters, one hand occupied with a cell phone, operating speeding projectiles made from a ton of metal. The average person who dares to try it runs the risk of providing proof of the theory of natural selection. (Photo: Bicycle roadway in Malmö, Sweden. Credit: David Hall, CC BY 2.0.)

Bike lanes hardly seem like a better solution. Bike traffic is still effectively mixed in with automobile traffic. You still have the same problems with intersections, lane-crossings, and left turns. Bike lanes are usually narrow, often obstructed, and sometimes run alongside parked cars, so the cyclist runs the risk of getting creamed when someone opens their car door.

I’ve long felt that different kinds of traffic should have their own separate thoroughfares designed according to the unique needs of the category of traffic. I would be happy to never have to drive again on the same highway with big trucks, and I’m sure the feelings are mutual on the part of truck drivers. To me it makes great sense to develop dedicated bicycle highways designed with the characteristics of bicycle travel in mind — slower speeds, faster maneuverability, and greater vulnerability in case of collisions.

Where I live, in Raleigh, North Carolina, U.S.A, the city is developing what it calls the Capital Area Greenway Trail System — a network of trails now at 69 miles and still expanding. The Greenway is primary intended for recreation and is not restricted to bicycle traffic, but it does provide alternative bike travel for some routes. So far, though, the Greenway system does not provide a direct route from the populous North Raleigh area where I live down into the central city and NC State University, which are key commuting destinations for people living up here.

Malmö: Sweden’s “Cycle City”

The city of Malmö bills itself as “Sweden’s cycle city,” boasting 410 kilometers of bicycle paths, more than any other Swedish city. Bicycling is increasing rapidly in the city, with 30 percent of total transport occurring by bicycle, and 40 percent of all work-related activity undertaken by bike. The city web site says,

At 28 intersections in Malmö a sensor system has been installed to grant cyclists priority. As cyclists approach an intersection which is not already crowded by car traffic, the lights quickly turn green to favor the cyclist.

 

Malmo superhighway map

Malmö-to-Lund bicycle superhighway route. Credit: Transportation Administration of Sweden.

 

The new bicycle superhighway between Malmö and Lund would be constructed along the route of existing bike paths and would pass through several smaller communities along with way. Leo Kaye, writing for TriplePundit, says,

The 10.5 mile link would be for the most part adjacent to rail tracks, feature exits but no intersections, and offer wind protection from hedges. Bicycle service stations would also be included on this link. The proposed highway would also have links to bicycle and pedestrian paths to other towns in this southern tip of Sweden.

The project is expected to cost about US$7 million and will take several years to complete.

London’s Barclays Cycle Superhighways

Sign along London bike routeLondon calls its bike transit project Barclays Cycle Superhighways, named after the banking firm Barclays, which sponsors the roadways and a bicycle-sharing program in the city. Designed for commuting, the Barclays routes radiate like spokes from central London out to surrounding areas of the city and running through 25 boroughs. Routes measure up to 15 km. Four of the routes have been completed, and eight more are planned by 2015. The system is part of a plan by the city to increase cycling by 400 percent from the year 2000 through 2025. This would mean that by 2015, 5 percent of all trips in London would be by bicycle. (Photo: Bicycle route signage, London. Credit: EverydayLifeModern, CC BY-ND 2.0.)

Although the routes run through urban land and often close to automobile traffic, the city has made them much more than just bike lanes. According to the city,

Cycle lanes are at least 1.5m wide and continue through junctions. Advanced Stop Lines (ASLs) are provided at signals to help cyclists get ahead of the traffic, and a number of junction layouts have changed to provide more space. There are also safety features, such as blind spot visibility mirrors to help HGV [Heavy Good Vehicle] drivers see cyclists. Barclays Cycle Superhighways will provide thousands of new cycle parking spaces, free or subsidized Commuter Cycle Training, as well as better facilities for cyclists at work.

The highways also provide “improved signage, road markings and other info to assist with wayfinding and journey planning, … [and] new surfacing to provide a more comfortable journey for cyclists and other road users.” The roadways use blue surfacing, “to provide high levels of safety and visibility, to help wayfinding, to provide a consistent look and feel, and to distinguish them from other cycle lanes in London.”

 

Map of London bicycle highways

Barclays Cycle Superhighway routes. Credit: Office of the Mayor of London.

 

The aforementioned “hard-core bikers” are said to complain at times about the whole bike-lane concept, asserting that a bicyclist will do better by “owning the lane” and riding in the center right along with car traffic. While acknowledging that this might sometimes be the case, the city argues that

The blue cycle lanes help make motorists aware that they can expect high volumes of cyclists along the Barclays Cycle Superhighways routes, adding to the “safety in numbers‟ effect. Individual cyclists should use their own judgment and apply what they have learned in their training, taking up a road position that is appropriate to the traffic conditions. On some occasions, for example, when preparing to turn right at a junction or when passing stationery vehicles, cyclists may choose to cycle outside the blue lanes.

As a practical matter, London has not created the completely separate roadway system that I think would be ideal. In such a heavily-developed metropolitan area, the land simply isn’t available to provide wholly segregated bike roads. City informational materials say that,

Barclays Cycle Superhighways are primarily intended to provide commuter cyclists with a safer, faster, and more direct route between work and home. They are aimed at those who already own and use a bicycle, as opposed to inexperienced or novice cyclists and are intended to help cyclists assert their right to be on the road, whilst making drivers aware that they are likely to encounter high volumes of cyclists. The project promotes shared road space, which has been shown to have a civilising effect on all road users.

Each of the superhighways is expected to cost between £8 and £11 million. Transport for London, an agency attached to the mayor’s office, reported that, along the first two Barclays routes, bicycle traffic increased by 70 percent from 2008 to 2010. Research by the office found that, because of the new routes, more people had taken up cycling and those already cycling had increased their activity. About 80 percent of trips were made by people commuting to and from work.

Copenhagen, the City of Cyclists

Cyclists in CopenhagenThe city of Copenhagen, Denmark, likes to refer to itself as “The City of Cyclists.” And their support for two-wheeled transit is impressive. Informational materials from the city say that the city has 350 kilometers of cycle tracks and 40 kilometers of Green Cycle Routes, that cyclists in the city travel 1.2 million kilometers by bike daily, and that one person out of three commutes by bike to work or school daily. (Photo: Cyclists in Copenhagen. Credit: Troels Heien.)

The Green Cycle Routes the city describes as “cyclist motorways” that “criss-cross the city, separated from the rest of the infrastructure,” providing cyclists with “a quick route because of the broad width of the paths and a minimal contact with traffic.” Besides the Green Cycle Routes, the city provides conventional bike lanes, as well as “cycle tracks,” tarmack roadways that follow city streets but are separated from auto and pedestrian traffic by curbs.

A brochure discusses safety measures the city has built into its bicycle infrastructure:

In order to reduce the risk of accidents, many intersections have been restructured in order to give priority to cyclists. Stop lines for cars are being pushed back five meters behind the stop line for cyclists. At intersections with separate traffic lights for bikes, the cyclists get a green light four seconds before the cars do. In some cases the head start is up to 12 seconds. These initiatives make the cyclists far more visible in the traffic.

Copenhagen is now working with 18 municipalities in the region and the Capital Region of Denmark to develop a large-scale Cycle Superhighway.

 

Map of bicycle superhighways around Copenhagen

Routes for the Cycle Superhighway around Copenhagen. Credit: Projektsekretariatet for Cykelsuperstier.

 

The United States is not completely ignoring the bicycle-superhighway model. Tom Vanderbilt at Slate writes that Portland, Ore., Austin, Tex., Minneapolis, Minn., Wilmington, N.C., and Rochester, N.Y., are considering the idea.

Does it really make sense to put so many resources into specially-designed roadways for bikes, rather than just create bike lanes or let bikers mix in with car traffic? Jacob Larson, a McGill University researcher who conducted a study about Montreal’s bicycle infrastructure, told Vanderbilt:

I do believe the separate facility is the best. Not only in terms of actual safety performance but in terms of encouraging people who are less likely to ride their bikes. These people shouldn’t have to be some kind of breakneck radicals that are really diehards—it should be a clear and safe option, and I think separate facilities give the perception that it is, and often do provide a truly safer alternative.

 

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Cycling family hits its straps

WORLD champion Kaarle McCulloch might have won a gold and three silver medals, but she was more nervous for her young brother Jack on the final day of the national track cycling championships at the Adelaide Superdome.

For some time Kaarle, of Gymea Bay, has set Jack’s training programs, and she helps train him when she is back in Sydney.

On Sunday, it all came together

for him.

In the under-19 Madison, Jack McCulloch and NSW teammate

Tirian McManus won gold over NSW Institute of Sport pair Caleb Ewan and Nathan Bradshaw, after Jack had taken bronze in the under-19 teams pursuit.

‘‘I was so proud of him,’’ said Kaarle yesterday, resting at the Australian Institute of Sport headquarters in Adelaide after another ding-dong battle with fellow world team sprint champion, Anna Meares.

‘‘Jack is still only 17, this was his biggest test and he came through. I was as thrilled for him as he was.’’

Kaarle finished her own program with a thrilling end to the women’s keirin event, where she just failed to catch the breakaway Meares in the shadow of the winning post.

Meares grabbed the wheel of the derny pace bike from the start and used it to full advantage, powering away from her rivals as the bike left the track.

She surged to a massive lead, and McCulloch, who was caught in traffic, had to firstly pass four others before trying to close the gap. She made up enormous ground quickly but Meares held on to win by mere centimetres.

‘‘I realised the gap was significant, but not enough to withstand a good run from Kaarle, so I had to really commit otherwise or be run down,’’ Meares said.

‘‘This is the most level event for the two of us to come head-to-head; you saw that, I won it by half-a-tyre. [But] I’d rather almost lose than almost win.’’

McCulloch, who won the 500 metre individual sprint but was beaten by Meares in the Olympic sprint, was pleased with her finish. ‘‘It showed that, despite our hard training, I have the speed in my legs,’’ she said.

‘‘Another metre and I would have mowed her down. Her lead was just too great.’’

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