Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The British Cycling Premier Calendar Road Race Series is a season-long competition run by British Cycling. It comprises a series of road bicycle races for the country's top domestic road riders. Organisation and events
[1] [2] The organisers of the event, including WBD Sports, British Cycling, the UCI, and the venue (Lee Valley VeloPark) took the decision to cancel the remainder of the evening's races. [3] Both riders and four spectators were treated by medics at the venue.
Cycling clubs or teams affiliate to British Cycling to race in British Cycling events. Adult road racing licences are graded by excellence, from fourth and lowest to first and élite. There are licences for under-18s and for women. British Cycling is a member of the European Cycling Union, the UCI and the British Olympic Association.
Blythe is a pundit for Eurosport's coverage of cycling, having worked part-time in this role on the channel's coverage of the Grand Tours during his final professional season in 2019. [19] He was also "on-site" reporter for NBC Sports' coverage of the 2020 Tour de France, [20] and fulfilled that role again in 2021. [21]
The British National Individual Pursuit Championships are held annually as part of the British National Track Championships organised by British Cycling. A women's championship was held for the first time in 1960. [1] [2] [3]
RideLondon Classique is a women's cycle stage race held in Essex and London as part of the UCI Women's World Tour.Part of the RideLondon cycling festival, the race was originally held as a one-day race in central London, and became a stage race in 2022 following the demise of the London–Surrey Classic.
Elizabeth Jordan (born 7 November 1997) [2] is a British para-cyclist, who won gold in the time trial B at the 2024 Summer Paralympics in Paris. [3] Left without her sight following a severe e-coli infection as a teenager which saw her spend two months in a coma, Jordan had to re-learn how to walk as part of her long recovery from the disease.
Paul Sherwen (7 June 1956 – 2 December 2018) was an English professional racing cyclist and later a cycling broadcaster, notably covering the Tour de France.He raced in seven editions of the Tour, finishing five, and gained a reputation for his ability to suffer over long mountain stages. [2]