Cyclocross Glasgow

Cyclocross (or cyclo-cross) is a form of bicycle racing. Races take place typically in the autumn and winter (the international season is September-January), and consists of many laps of a short (2-3km) course featuring pavement, wooded trails, grass, steep hills, and obstacles requiring the rider to dismount, jump the barrier and remount.

Bike Life
+44 (0) 141 229 0994
1052 Argyle Street
Glasgow
Dales Cycles
+44 (0) 141 332 2705
150 Dobbies Loan
Glasgow
Philip Lang Cycles
+44 (0) 141 552 5103
163 Gallowgate
Glasgow
Gear of Glasgow
0141 339 1179
19 Gibson Street
Glasgow
Bicycle Chain
0141 958 1055
1417 Dumbarton Road
Glasgow
Billy Bilsland Cycles
+44 (0) 141 552 0841
176 Saltmarket
Glasgow
Evans Cycles
+44 (0) 1418 864236
Kings Inch Road
Renfrew
Dooleys Cycles
+44 (0) 141 889 6090
40 Moss Street
Paisley
Alpine Bikes
0141 353 2226
116 Great Western Road
Glasgow
Kinetics Cycle Shops
0141 942 2552
54 Switchback Road
Glasgow
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Cyclocross

Cyclocross

Cyclocross

Cyclocross (or cyclo-cross) is a form of bicycle racing. Races take place typically in the autumn and winter (the international season is September-January), and consists of many laps of a short (2-3km) course featuring pavement, wooded trails, grass, steep hills, and obstacles requiring the rider to dismount, jump the barrier and remount. Races for senior categories are generally between 50 minutes and an hour long, with the distance varying depending on the ground conditions. The sport is administered by the Union Cycliste Internationale; it began in the 1940s and the first world championship was held in Paris in 1950. The sport is strongest in the traditional road cycling countries (and particularly so in Flanders).

Cyclo-cross has some obvious parallels with cross-country mountain bicycle racing and many of the best cyclo-cross riders are also stars of mountain biking. But cyclo-cross bicycles are similar to racing bicycles: lightweight, with narrow tyres. They have to be lightweight because competitors need to carry their bicycle to overcome barriers or slopes too steep to climb in the saddle. The sight of competitors struggling up a muddy slope with bicycles on their shoulders is the classic image of the sport, although unridable sections are generally a very small fraction of the race distance.

Compared with other forms of cycle racing, tactics are fairly straightforward, and the emphasis is on the rider's aerobic endurance and bike-handling skills.

A cyclo-cross rider is allowed to change bicycles and receive mechanical assistance during a race. While the rider is on the course gumming up one bicycle with mud, their pit crew can work quickly to clean, repair and oil the spares.

Origins
Equipment
Courses
Cyclocross Championships

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