Venue: Glasgow, Scotland Date: 3-13 August Coverage: BBC TV and iPlayer, BBC Sport website, app and social media, including live streaming, live text commentary, reports and reaction. It is 10 years since Elinor Barker won the first of five track cycling world titles but she insists there is still plenty more to come. Barker, now
Cycling
American junior rider Magnus White has died after being hit by a car while training in his Colorado home town. The 17-year-old, a US junior men’s national team member, was out riding in Boulder when the accident happened. White had been preparing for the Junior Men’s Mountain Bike Cross-Country World Championships in Glasgow next month.
Demi Vollering has won a maiden Tour de France Femmes title after coming second in the individual time trial on stage eight. Marlen Reusser won the final stage with a time of 29 minutes 15 seconds. Dutch rider Vollering took possession of the yellow jersey on Saturday after a sensational stage seven win. Her time
Venues: Glasgow and across Scotland Dates: 3-13 August Coverage: Watch live on BBC Two, BBC Three, BBC iPlayer, BBC Red Button, BBC Sport website and app. The first combined UCI Cycling World Championships take place in Scotland from 3-13 August – and all the action will be shown live across the BBC. Over 11 days
Demi Vollering claimed victory on the seventh stage of the Tour de France Femmes to put herself in a strong position to win the yellow jersey. Vollering powered through the mountain-top fog to win the 89.9km stage in two hours 52 minutes 43 seconds. The Dutchwoman leads the overall standings by one minute 50 seconds
Denmark’s Emma Norsgaard held on to claim victory on stage six of the Tour de France Femmes by metres as Charlotte Kool chased her down. Norsgaard was part of a three-rider breakaway away with nearly 100km left of the stage from Albi to Blagnac. The chasing peloton, led by Dutchwoman Kool, caught the other two
Ricarda Bauernfeind became the youngest stage winner at the Tour de France Femmes with a breakaway victory on Thursday’s stage five. The 23-year-old German powered away in the closing stages of the 126.5km sprint from Onet le Chateau to Albi to finish 22 seconds ahead of her rivals. The win was Canyon-SRAM’s first on this
Tokyo gold medallist Beth Shriever is hoping for a “whole new Olympic experience” when she defends her BMX title in Paris next year. Shriever beat Colombia’s Mariana Pajon by 0.090 seconds in the women’s final in 2021, but crowd sizes were strictly limited in Japan because of Covid. She also won gold at a BMX
Yara Kastelijn claimed her first WorldTour win with victory on stage four of the Tour de France Femmes. Lotte Kopecky finished 14th to hang on to the leader’s yellow jersey she earned on the opening stage. Dutchwoman Kastelijn was part of a 14-rider breakaway and went solo inside the final 20km, finishing 71 seconds ahead
Lorena Wiebes won stage three of the Tour de France Femmes as breakaway rider Julie van de Velde was caught with about 200m to go. The Dutch rider beat Marianne Vos in a sprint to the line, while Wiebes’ team-mate Lotte Kopecky came in third to retain the leader’s yellow jersey. Victory on the 147km
Liane Lippert won the sprint for the line as the German claimed victory on the second stage of the Tour de France Femmes. Belgian Lotte Kopecky, who won stage one, launched her sprint at the end of a wet, 152km hilly route from Clermont-Ferrand to Mauriac first. But Lippert, 25, surged past her to take
Denmark’s Jonas Vingegaard sealed his second successive Tour de France triumph as Jordi Meeus sprinted to a surprise win on the final stage. Meeus, 25, edged Jasper Philipsen in a photo finish in Paris to deny his fellow Belgian a repeat of last year’s win on the iconic Champs Elysees. Vingegaard, 26, finished seven minutes
Belgium’s Lotte Kopecky won the opening stage of the Tour de France Femmes with a late breakaway. The SD Worx rider attacked on the Cote de Durtol climb towards the end of a largely flat 124km stage that started and ended in Clermont-Ferrand. Team-mate Lorena Wiebes took the sprint for second from Charlotte Kool of
The Tour de France Femmes returns for its second edition this weekend since it officially returned to the calendar as a stage race last year after a long absence. The eight-stage event gets under way in Clermont-Ferrand on 23 July – the same day the men’s edition finishes across the country in Paris – and
Dame Laura Kenny, Great Britain’s most successful female Olympian, has given birth to her second child with husband Sir Jason Kenny. The couple’s first son, Albie, was born in 2017 but Kenny suffered a miscarriage in November 2021 and an ectopic pregnancy in January 2022. Laura Kenny has not ruled out competing at the Paris
Teenage Italian cyclist Jacopo Venzo has died after a crash during a race in Austria on Friday. The 17-year-old crashed as he descended during the first stage of the Junioren Rundfahrt and was flown to hospital in Linz by helicopter. The Campana Imballaggi Geo&Tex Trentino rider succumbed to his injuries on Saturday and the tour
Tadej Pogacar salvaged some pride by taking stage 20 of this year’s Tour de France as Jonas Vingegaard all but sealed the defence of his title. Pogacar has been unable to challenge Vinegaard’s supremacy in the past week, but sprinted past the Dane to win on the final day of competitive racing. Vingegaard holds a
The Tour de France Femmes begins its second edition on Sunday, 23 July in Clermont Ferrand, central southern France. The eight-stage race features a mixture of flat stages, hilly days, a time trial and a showpiece mountain-top finish on the Tourmalet in the Pyrenees. Last year’s winner Annemiek van Vleuten is returning to the start
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