A letter from the editor

A letter from the editor

Rouleur's editor, Andy McGrath, looks back and looks forward

Photos: SWpix.com Rouleur Magazine Words: Andy McGrath

Dear Rouleur readers,

Well, first we weren’t sure whether it would even happen, then if it would go all the way to Paris. Happily, we’ve had the answer last weekend saw the regular Tour de France finale in the shadow of the Arc de Triomphe, albeit a bit later in the summer than usual. 

It’s felt a bit like Christmas. You look forward to it for so long and then it absolutely flies by. What a race it’s been. Fresh, exciting stage winners. Action man Marc Hirschi. Attacking racing, Slovenian supremacy and suspense all the way till Paris. The sport, the fans (us Rouleur staff included) and France needed a decent Tour, and we got one.

But unlike festive times, we’ve not been overdoing it and falling asleep on the sofa. It’s a busy period over on the Rouleur website. We have been doing our best to predict the winner of each Tour stage daily and there’s a new feature the week in Desire, showcasing the latest gorgeous gear. This week, the spotlight is on Met’s new Rivale helmet, their video featuring a certain Steve Cummings. 

We’ll also have coverage from the Giro Rosa in the next edition of Rouleur issue 20.7, out to Rouleur members in late October with photos from Sean Hardy and an interview with a pro cycling TikTok star who grew up on a bison ranch. Strange but true.

Our next issue also features exclusive interviews with two of the outstanding riders of this Tour de France, Caleb Ewan and Wout van Aert. Twelve months ago, the Belgian was on crutches after a career-ending crash; now, he is the superstar of the summer. He reflects on his journey to becoming the bike racer who can do it all: mud, mountains, Monuments and the madness of a bunch sprint.

Off the back of our commitment to anti-racism earlier this summer, dedicated reader Chris Jones got in touch and the seeds of a special article were sown. Jones writes powerfully on his experience as a Black man and cyclist in America: “These roads weren’t built with me in my mind.”

Lastly, I’d like to thank our Rouleur members and readers too, many of whom will be new and may well have responded to our call-to-action at the beginning of the pandemic when our future was jeopardised. Your support enables us to continue to craft our independent, peerless cycling journalism and build for 2021. 

With your help, we can plan for a great year ahead, so please recommend Rouleur to your cycling-mad friends. We love doing what we do. It isn’t easy, but if it was, everybody would do it. There’s only one Rouleur. 

Happy reading and happy bike riding,

Andy McGrath

 

Photos: SWpix.com Rouleur Magazine Words: Andy McGrath

READ MORE

Filippo Ganna, Milan-Sanremo 2025

'I tried to follow the two gods of cycling': Filippo Ganna finishes second again at Milan-Sanremo

The Ineos Grenadiers star has now finished on the podium of the season's first Monument twice, and is wondering if he'll ever upgrade to top...

Leggi di più
Juan Ayuso and Primož Roglič at the Tour de France 2024

Volta a Catalunya 2025 preview: The contenders to win the seven-stage race

With a number of potential winners, the week-long stage race promises to be an open affair

Leggi di più
Lorena Wiebes, Milan-Sanremo

Closing in on a century of victories: Lorena Wiebes is unstoppable

SD Worx had multiple cards to play at Sanremo Women, but it was Lorena Wiebes who came out on top

Leggi di più
Mathieu van der Poel, Milan-Sanremo 2025

'It's not something that is normal': Mathieu van der Poel basks in the absurdity of another Monument victory

Worryingly for his rivals, the Dutchman claims he's in career-best shape as he targets more Tour of Flanders and Paris-Roubaix titles

Leggi di più
'You cannot do magic': Tadej Pogačar and an unconquerable Milan-Sanremo dream

'You cannot do magic': Tadej Pogačar and an unconquerable Milan-Sanremo dream

Tadej Pogačar "tried everything" to win Milan-Sanremo, but still the Italian Classic resists his advances

Leggi di più
Milan-Sanremo Donne 2025

Heartache and frustration as Sanremo Women returns: 'Next time they're not gonna catch me'

Lorena Wiebes won the first women's Milan-Sanremo in 20 years, but it so could have been Elisa Longo Borghini celebrating

Leggi di più

READ RIDE REPEAT

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Get closer to the sport than ever before.

Enjoy a digital subscription to Rouleur for just £4 per month and get access to our award-winning magazines.

SUBSCRIBE