On 21 July 2013 Chris Froome became only the second British cyclist to win the Tour de France. This paper examines how the events surrounding Froome’s victory in the 2013 Tour de France were reported in the British (London-based) print media the day after his victory. Data were collected from nine different daily newspapers on 22 July with a total of 52 pages of coverage devoted to the story. Thematic coding revealed that, despite a comprehensive victory, Froome appeared to be framed as being in the shadow of two other prominent cyclists. Firstly, Froome’s victory appeared to be framed within a moral panic surrounding the use of performance-enhancing drugs in cycling, with his achievements partially overshadowed by the ‘folk devil’ that is ...
This article aims to address the question of credibility as a key issue for sports stakeholders. Due...
The massive doping schemes that surfaced in professional cycling suggest that riders’ performances, ...
Lance Armstrong once called the Tour de France a contest in purposeless suffering. In a different ...
This article provides attention to the lives of seven British/black champion cyclists who between th...
The backdrop to this exhibition is Great Britain’s emergence over the last ten years as the leading ...
Great Britain’s emergence as a world force in the sport of cycling over the last twenty years has gi...
This short article presents a small sample of oral testimonies from the research 'Made in Britain: U...
BACKGROUND: Successfully increasing cycling across a broad range of the population would confer impo...
When watching on television an earlier stage of the 2021 Tour de France, a family member commented: ...
Racism and cycling became a talking point for a brief period in the cycling world following the huge...
In the summer of 2014, there was no way of getting away from it: Le Tour de France was coming to Yor...
This exhibition is the third iteration of original and groundbreaking research work uncovering the l...
AbstractBackgroundSuccessfully increasing cycling across a broad range of the population would confe...
Athlete-turned academic Dr. Marlon Moncrieffe takes us through his project 'Made in Britain: Uncover...
The US Anti-Doping Agency published its evidence against Lance Armstrong in October 2012 after a len...
This article aims to address the question of credibility as a key issue for sports stakeholders. Due...
The massive doping schemes that surfaced in professional cycling suggest that riders’ performances, ...
Lance Armstrong once called the Tour de France a contest in purposeless suffering. In a different ...
This article provides attention to the lives of seven British/black champion cyclists who between th...
The backdrop to this exhibition is Great Britain’s emergence over the last ten years as the leading ...
Great Britain’s emergence as a world force in the sport of cycling over the last twenty years has gi...
This short article presents a small sample of oral testimonies from the research 'Made in Britain: U...
BACKGROUND: Successfully increasing cycling across a broad range of the population would confer impo...
When watching on television an earlier stage of the 2021 Tour de France, a family member commented: ...
Racism and cycling became a talking point for a brief period in the cycling world following the huge...
In the summer of 2014, there was no way of getting away from it: Le Tour de France was coming to Yor...
This exhibition is the third iteration of original and groundbreaking research work uncovering the l...
AbstractBackgroundSuccessfully increasing cycling across a broad range of the population would confe...
Athlete-turned academic Dr. Marlon Moncrieffe takes us through his project 'Made in Britain: Uncover...
The US Anti-Doping Agency published its evidence against Lance Armstrong in October 2012 after a len...
This article aims to address the question of credibility as a key issue for sports stakeholders. Due...
The massive doping schemes that surfaced in professional cycling suggest that riders’ performances, ...
Lance Armstrong once called the Tour de France a contest in purposeless suffering. In a different ...