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Cycling Weekly is the world's oldest cycling publication. It is both a weekly cycling magazine and a news, features and buying advice website. It is published by Future. It used to be affectionately referred to by British club cyclists as "The Comic". [1]
In 1995 Australian Bill Mitchell, a keen cyclist and professor of economics at the University of Newcastle, created the website titled "Bill’s Cycling Racing Results and News" after finding there was a need for fast-breaking news and race results in English-speaking countries.
Tony Bell (born 20 June 1958) [1] is a freelance writer and journalist, known for his What's he on column in Cycling Weekly, [2] where he was a columnist between 1994 and 2006. [3] His popularity gained as a CW columnist [ 4 ] [ 5 ] led to engagements as an after-dinner speaker at cycling events.
One X user wrote: “Terrible news for UK Cycling as it means people have to pay to watch coverage of the Tour which lets face it, is the way into cycling for a majority of Brits. Money talks but ...
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The Illustrated London News; Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News; Imagine; Impact (action entertainment magazine) InStyle UK; International Cycle Sport; International Record Review; Internet Magazine; Khamsin; Knave; Krazy; New Worlds; NGC Magazine; Night Magazine; Nimbus; Nintendo Gamer; Nova; Now (1996–2019 magazine) Now! (1979–1981 ...
Global Cycling Network (GCN) is a cycling-related YouTube channel which was launched in the United Kingdom in 2013. The channel's parent company, Play Sports Network, became a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Discovery through its TNT Sports unit in 2019 and returned to private ownership in 2024.
The BBAR was announced by the magazine Cycling on 4 April 1930. It offered an annual trophy valued at £26 and a shield to be held for a year by the winning team. Time-trialling had been the staple of British cycling since the National Cyclists' Union (NCU) had banned massed racing on the road in 1888 as a reaction to police objections it feared would threaten all cyclists. [1]