Angry riders argue 'stupid and extreme' handlebar positions are threatening race safety
Cycling has a new thing. It’s turned-in hoods and outward-pointing brake levers. Well, actually, it’s not so new, but Tadej Pogačar has recently adopted it, and many of his colleagues in the peloton have too. But mutiny is around the corner.
Not because half the peloton staunchly believe that handlebars should point completely forward without being turned inwards by even a smidgen of a degree (Ok, Christopher Juul-Jensen of Jayco-AlUla aside: “I have no opinion other than you’ll never see me ride with those.”) but because a growing percentage are taking the issue to the extreme. Some are pointing the brake hoods so far towards the centre that they start to mimic a gravel bike’s handlebar set-up.
The concept isn’t entirely new: riders have been turning their hoods inwards by a couple of degrees for the last few years for ergonomic reasons, but this year things have ramped up with a growing number of riders flicking the levers outwards and turning the hoods inwards to create a narrower hand position, all in the name of improved aerodynamics.
So beneficial is the position that an insider at one of the top-ranked men’s WorldTour teams refused to speak about the topic because of its “potential performance advantage”.
Many pointed out that it has attracted increased fandom in the wake of UCI’s decision two years ago to ban the so-called ‘puppy paws’ position that saw riders rest their forearm on the handlebars without touching their brakes.