28 July 2013
25 July 2013
This Weekend: Warehouse Clearance Sale
If you're in the Portland area tomorrow through Sunday, swing by BicyclingHub.com HQ for your chance to save big in our Warehouse Clearance event!
With discounts of up to 75% off select jerseys, shorts, jackets and more by Castelli, Primal Wear, Sugoi, Canari, Pearl Izumi and other great brands, you won't want to miss out on this awesome chance to save big on your favorites.
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Any questions? Feel free to give us a call toll-free at (888) 817-8060
With discounts of up to 75% off select jerseys, shorts, jackets and more by Castelli, Primal Wear, Sugoi, Canari, Pearl Izumi and other great brands, you won't want to miss out on this awesome chance to save big on your favorites.
Warehouse Clearance Hours:
Friday, July 26: 10am–6pm
Saturday, July 27: 10am–5pm
Sunday, July 28: 10am–1pm
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Labels:
Canari,
Castelli,
discount,
Pearl Izumi,
Primal Wear,
sugoi,
summer sale,
warehouse clearance
22 July 2013
A Look Back at our Tour de France Predictions
Back in June, a full 20-some days before the Tour de France even started, we gave you our list of riders to watch in this year's 100th edition. Now, a day after the end of the race we take a look at our predictions to see how we did.
Vincenzo Nibali
We were way off. Nibali heard we were calling him a favorite and then he decided to skip the event altogether.
Peter Sagan
It's hard to call the green jersey a failure—but we admittedly expected Sagan to win more stages than he did. Last year he won three, this year just the one. Even so, he held onto the green jersey with a remarkable lead.
Chris Froome
It was pretty easy to be right about Froome. He was a big favorite after his performance last year and, as we all saw, he did not disappoint. Even so we pat ourselves on the back for our accuracy in this prediction.
Alberto Contador
In all honesty, we sort of figured the Tour would be between Contador and Froome, but Contador wasn't even on the podium. He was a strong contender in many of the stages, but he faded badly in the last week. After three times standing on the top step—though one was wiped from his record for the whole "Spanish Beef" thing—the Spaniard probably pretty disappointed with the outcome.
Tejay van Garderen
Aside from Nibali, van Garderen was probably our least successful pick. He crashed early in the race and ended up finishing 45th—and he narrowly missed winning the Alpe d'Huez stage (though he did get Team BMC's first top three finish). We expected much, much more from the American, what with his fifth overall placing in last year's Tour and his win at the Tour of California this year.
Ryder Hesjedal
Hesjedal went down in a crash in the race's first stage and was dogged won the rest of the Tour with a broken rib. An overall finish of 70th, it wasn't the performance we expected to see from the Garmin-Sharp rider.
Mark Cavendish
Looks like Cav finally found his rival. Two stage wins isn't what we'd call a failure, but with an overall finish of 148th and four stages lost to Marcel Kittel, we can admit the Brit wasn't as remarkable as we thought he'd be.
Cadel Evans
Evans seems to be going the wrong way. He won yellow in 2011, was 7th last year and came in a dismal 39th this year after a tough, exhausting race. He's credited his poor performance at the Tour to his last-minute enter in the Giro d'Italia, where he was 3rd, but perhaps it's time for the Australian to find a different focus?
Andy Schleck
We have to admit, 20th place is a disappointment for a man who, by default, took first in 2010. A broken pelvis takes time to heal, apparently.
Nairo Quintana
Not including Quintana in our list was a huge oversight. The Colombian rider for Movistar kicked ass at his Tour de France debut, coming in 2nd overall and scoring both the white and polka dot jerseys. Oh, and he won stage 20, so it's pretty easy to say Quintana is a powerhouse. We look forward to seeing his career develop.
Joaquim Rodríguez
Another big oversight, since Rodríguez, a Spanish climber for Katusha was 3rd overall. We should've known he'd do well, what with his 4th place finish at this year's Tour of Oman, his 2nd place finishes at both the Liège-Bastogne-Liège and the Volta a Catalunya, and last year's 2nd place standing in the Giro d'Italia and points classification win.
Marcel Kittel
We're also kicking ourselves for forgetting Kittel. After dropping out during his Tour de France debut last year due to illness, the 25-year-old German stole the show with four stage wins this year, including the finale.
Who We Had:
![]() |
| Peter Sagan, photo via Cannondale Pro Cycling |
Vincenzo Nibali
We were way off. Nibali heard we were calling him a favorite and then he decided to skip the event altogether.
Peter Sagan
It's hard to call the green jersey a failure—but we admittedly expected Sagan to win more stages than he did. Last year he won three, this year just the one. Even so, he held onto the green jersey with a remarkable lead.
![]() |
| Chris Froome, photo via Team Sky |
It was pretty easy to be right about Froome. He was a big favorite after his performance last year and, as we all saw, he did not disappoint. Even so we pat ourselves on the back for our accuracy in this prediction.
Alberto Contador
In all honesty, we sort of figured the Tour would be between Contador and Froome, but Contador wasn't even on the podium. He was a strong contender in many of the stages, but he faded badly in the last week. After three times standing on the top step—though one was wiped from his record for the whole "Spanish Beef" thing—the Spaniard probably pretty disappointed with the outcome.
Tejay van Garderen
Aside from Nibali, van Garderen was probably our least successful pick. He crashed early in the race and ended up finishing 45th—and he narrowly missed winning the Alpe d'Huez stage (though he did get Team BMC's first top three finish). We expected much, much more from the American, what with his fifth overall placing in last year's Tour and his win at the Tour of California this year.
Ryder Hesjedal
Hesjedal went down in a crash in the race's first stage and was dogged won the rest of the Tour with a broken rib. An overall finish of 70th, it wasn't the performance we expected to see from the Garmin-Sharp rider.
![]() |
| Mark Cavendish at the Giro d'Italia |
Looks like Cav finally found his rival. Two stage wins isn't what we'd call a failure, but with an overall finish of 148th and four stages lost to Marcel Kittel, we can admit the Brit wasn't as remarkable as we thought he'd be.
Cadel Evans
Evans seems to be going the wrong way. He won yellow in 2011, was 7th last year and came in a dismal 39th this year after a tough, exhausting race. He's credited his poor performance at the Tour to his last-minute enter in the Giro d'Italia, where he was 3rd, but perhaps it's time for the Australian to find a different focus?
Andy Schleck
We have to admit, 20th place is a disappointment for a man who, by default, took first in 2010. A broken pelvis takes time to heal, apparently.
Who We Missed:
![]() |
| Nairo Quintana, photo via Movistar |
Not including Quintana in our list was a huge oversight. The Colombian rider for Movistar kicked ass at his Tour de France debut, coming in 2nd overall and scoring both the white and polka dot jerseys. Oh, and he won stage 20, so it's pretty easy to say Quintana is a powerhouse. We look forward to seeing his career develop.
Joaquim Rodríguez
Another big oversight, since Rodríguez, a Spanish climber for Katusha was 3rd overall. We should've known he'd do well, what with his 4th place finish at this year's Tour of Oman, his 2nd place finishes at both the Liège-Bastogne-Liège and the Volta a Catalunya, and last year's 2nd place standing in the Giro d'Italia and points classification win.
Marcel Kittel
We're also kicking ourselves for forgetting Kittel. After dropping out during his Tour de France debut last year due to illness, the 25-year-old German stole the show with four stage wins this year, including the finale.
17 July 2013
Sneak Peek: BicyclingHub.com 5.0
As you may've already seen on Facebook and Twitter, we will soon be transitioning to a beautiful new website—or, as we're calling it: BicyclingHub.com 5.0. The design isn't quite done yet, but it's getting close. We're so excited we thought we'd share the latest mockup with you:
We don't have an exact launch date yet, so all we can say is: coming soon.
What do you think? Are you as excited as we are?
Labels:
BicyclingHub.com,
new website,
staff news
15 July 2013
Video: Tour de France Impersonations
It's a rest day, which means we're seeing a variety of interviews with Tour de France cyclists and tweets from teams about how their riders spent the day. But this is what we're watching: an awesome mashup of Tour de France cyclist impersonations.
Looking forward to more TdF action tomorrow with Stage 16.
Labels:
2013 Tour de France,
Cavendish,
Contador,
Evans,
TDF
12 July 2013
Watch a Bicycle-Powered Helicopter Take Flight
Labels:
bicycle power,
bikes,
helicopter,
innovation,
videos
11 July 2013
Watch the Flying Scotsman Test His Beastie
We all know who Graeme Obree is, right? One of our favorite cycling movies—The Flying Scotsman—is based off of his life. Well his latest speedy creation, his 'Beastie,' is headed to the World Human Powered Speed Challenge in September. He tested it out for the first time in the video above. Looks a little shaky, but hey, we have faith in Obree.
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