He Lost His Leg, Then Rediscovered The Bicycle. Now He's Unstoppable
Leo Rodgers is the irrepressible gravel-racing hero we all need right now.
Leo Rodgers is the irrepressible gravel-racing hero we all need right now.
Leon had been riding west for 309 days. Noel had headed east for 176. Their meeting in the desert was a small miracle.
"I wanted them to know James's heart was safe, that I was going to do everything I could to protect it."
Despite an ambitious vision zero plan, a recent spike of deaths illuminates the city's glaring disregard for cyclists' lives.
Perfect trail conditions helped John Lackey crush the 350-mile race.
Every time we take to the open road, we entrust our lives to a safety net of legal protection and basic human decency. That system has failed.
Everyone agrees that when Kim Flint crashed, he was chasing a record on Strava, the social fitness site that has rewritten the etiquette of cycling and shattered its traditions, transformed countless lives for the better, and fostered as many friendships (and rivalries). What almost no one seems to fully comprehend is exactly who—or what—caused Flint's death.