Fake Booze
Saturday, June 27, 2026
Fake Booze
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
Cycling or Motorsport?
Is this CYCLING or a Motorsport?
Our friends at PEZ Cycling published this the other day.
UCI’s Tunnel Vision: Policing Aerodynamics While Riders Keep Crashing
I like the guys there, having worked with Richard and his crew to promote CycleItalia back in the day. But I have issues with this piece.
First is the defense of the guy who keeps cheating and getting caught. He's become such a pest to the UCI people in-charge of enforcing the rules it looks like they single him out at each race for special scrutiny. He's been DQ'd three times but he doesn't seem to learn a thing from it.
The "aero" stuff is already out-of-control - one look at the "head fairing" below should explain it. Why is this obvious fairing allowed? Because they call it a safety helmet? What's next, a larger one, maybe supported by struts attached to the rider's back? UCI needs a rule limiting how far from the rider's head (you know, that thing they're trying to protect?) these gizmos can extend. 4-5 centimeters in ANY direction would be a good start.
Monday, June 8, 2026
$50 vs $10
Battle of the chainrings $50 vs $10
Can you tell the difference between the $50 chainring and the $10 chainring in this photo? After our Tuscan adventure we though our gravel bikes needed gearing a bit lower, but Shimano GRX was maxed-out with 40 up front and 42 out back. Sadly, nothing smaller up front or larger out back was available from Shimano.
So Zio Lorenzo went searching on the internet where he found a French Specialties T-A (remember them?) chainring claimed to be a perfect replacement though with 38 instead of 40 teeth. Zio figured this would be an easy swap, probably not requiring anything other than removing and replacing, so he ordered two of 'em. $50 seemed a bit steep but they were supposed to fit and if not, the reputable online merchant would surely take them back, right?
Meanwhile, some $10 Chinese chainrings popped up after he ordered. They looked the same but the description was a little vague as to the bolt-pattern fitting GRX, but for $10 Zio figured he'd give 'em a try. Looks like they'll fit but will they last as long as the 7075 T6 alloy French rings? Probably not, but Zio doubts the French ones will last 5 X longer to justify the higher price. Time will tell.
Monday, June 1, 2026
Giro d'Italia 2026
Thoughts on Giro d'Italia 2026
La Corsa Rosa 2026 was entertaining despite the domination of one rider. While you can only beat the guys who show up to race, the competition was rather thin, made worse by some riders plans being ruined through crashes or illness. Zio Lorenzo notes the winner's big rival won this race a couple of years ago (against stiffer opposition) by almost ten minutes, winning 6 stages and wearing the Maglia Rosa almost from start to finish.
But at least this guy seemed far less robotic than in the past, right? Lots of commenters thought so. Could he be maturing or just the thought of joining the 7 others who have won all three Grand Tours made him reveal some genuine emotions? I guess we'll see at the big race in July when he faces some REAL opposition.
We had a great time at the one stage we saw live along with the others we watched on TV from various locations during the three weeks. A few things stood out: Where did Afonso Eulalio come from? His teammate Damiano Caruso warned that he might be a factor but who could have predicted he'd get the leaders jersey at all, let alone hang onto it for as long as he did OR win the best young rider category? It was great to see old-guy Caruso sheparding him through the Sicilian's final Giro before he takes over DS duties for the team next season. There should be a best old rider category too. Why not?
While some of the racing was formulaic, some real tactics and passion were seen in the victories of Alberto Bettiol, Alec Segaert, Davide Ballerini, Igor Arrieta and Paul Magnier and in the pursuit of the best climber's jersey by Giulio Ciccone. Sadly the other Giulio, as in Pellizzari got sick, but he made no excuses and helped his teammate and former winner Jai HIndley to 3rd place.
The UAE team was almost destroyed before they ever got to Italy but the guys left didn't give up, Jhonatan Narvaez won three stages and briefly wore the Maglia Ciclamino and LIDL/Trek's Jonathan, as in Milan finally won a stage, not in Milan but the last one, in Rome. Never give up, right?
Some things are better left unmentioned like the money-grab start in Bulgaria, the farce of that Milan stage and that RCS owner parading around like Napoleon, but one thing sticks in Zio's mind and has him scratching his bald head - when did guys like Victor Campenaerts and Bart Lemmon become mountain goats in the Visma train?
Sepp Kuss and Davide Piganzoli? Yes, Zio can understand that- those guys are climbers employed to shepherd their leader uphill at speeds competitors struggle to match, then peel off to just beat the time limit at the stage finish. And even though both of those guys did much more, Kuss winning a stage and Piganzoli almost grabbing the Maglia Bianca, WTF were these other guys doing up there?
The last time Zio remembers something this odd was back when Frankie Andreu was doing something similar for BigTex and his own wife asked "What the hell are YOU doing up there? You're no climber!" We now know how that happened and watching Visma riders don baseball hats with RABOBANK on them conjures up some bad thoughts...thoughts Zio hopes are just that and not a return to the bad old daze.
Is Zio Lorenzo the only won wondering about this?
W Il Giro!
Monday, May 25, 2026
Best plans Part 3
Finally, our plan WORKS!
We were 0-5 for the GIOS Raduno and kind-of only 3-5 for our Eroica adventure. Could things finally go the right way with the weather? We drove back to Monferrato on a Friday to find out. It was wet all the way north but sunny when we arrived.
Sunday, May 24, 2026
Best plans Part 2
The best plans continue not working-out as planned..
Saturday, May 23, 2026
The best plans don't always go...
The best plans...
,,,don't always go the way you want. Ours was to enjoy another GIOS Raduno so we flew up to Milan, rented a car and headed to our old HQ, Hotel Ariotto.
We pulled our our blue bikes out of storage, took 'em for a brief test ride and then enjoyed some cycling on our e-gravel bikes.
Monday morning it was again gorgeous while we packed the e-bikes in the car to head south to Tuscany. More on that in the next post.
Sorry Marco, Aldo and the rest of the GIOS blue family! We'll be back in 2027!

























