1. 車衣

    2. 連身車褲, 平口車褲 & 長袖連身車褲

    3. 夾克 & 背心

    4. Pro Team Suits

    5. T 恤 & 上衣

    6. 連帽衫 & 運動衫

    7. 休閒短褲 & 長褲

    8. 底衫

    9. 優惠套組 & 優惠 - 最高可享 8 折優惠

    10. 暢貨優惠

    1. 競賽 & 訓練

    2. 公路騎乘

    3. 登山車騎乘

    4. 礫石路騎乘

    5. 通勤 & 城市騎乘

    6. 生活風格用品

    1. 春夏新品

    2. Core

    3. Brevet Element

    4. PRO TEAM

    5. RCC 系列

    6. Classic

    7. Gore-Tex

    8. 美麗諾羊毛自行車服飾

    1. PRO TEAM 指南

    2. Rapha 的男版多層次穿搭指南

    3. 底衫指南

    4. 陰雨天騎乘

    5. Gore-Tex 洗滌保養指南

    1. 車衣

    2. 連身車褲, 平口車褲 & 長袖連身車褲

    3. 夾克 & 背心

    4. Pro Team Suits

    5. 連帽衫, T 恤 & 上衣

    6. 休閒短褲, 長褲 & 緊身內搭褲

    7. 底衫 & 運動內衣

    8. 優惠套組 & 優惠 - 最高可享 8 折優惠

    9. 暢貨優惠

    1. 競賽 & 訓練

    2. 公路騎乘

    3. 登山車騎乘

    4. 礫石路騎乘

    5. 通勤 & 城市騎乘

    6. 生活風格用品

    1. 春夏新品

    2. Core

    3. Brevet Element

    4. Pro Team

    5. RCC 系列

    6. Classic

    7. Gore-Tex

    8. 美麗諾羊毛自行車服飾

    1. PRO TEAM 指南

    2. Rapha 的男版多層次穿搭指南

    3. 底衫指南

    4. 陰雨天騎乘

    5. Gore-Tex 洗滌保養指南

    1. 車鞋

    2. 車襪,襪套 & 鞋套

    3. 腿套 & 袖套

    4. 鏡款

    5. 安全帽

    6. 自行車毛帽 & 小帽

    7. 手套 & 露指手套

    8. 水壺

    9. 自行車適用包款 & 背包

    1. 清潔護膚商品 & 保養洗滌商品

    2. 備品零件

    3. Rapha 書軒

    1. RCC 是什麼?

    2. 立即加入

    3. 俱樂部車服

    4. Rapha FAR

    5. 租借公路車

    6. 俱樂部活動

    1. 上海

    2. 香港

    3. 台北

    4. 首爾

    5. 東京

    6. 馬略卡北部快閃店

    7. 查看所有 Clubhouse

    1. Rapha + Hiut

    2. USA Cycling

    3. Pro Team Training

    4. Team AMANI

    5. 即將上市

    1. 男性禮品

    2. 女性禮品

    3. 禮品優惠套組

    4. 暢銷款

    5. 特別限定版

    6. 選禮指南

    1. 骑行必备

    2. 專業性能首選

    3. 精品之选

    4. 選購各類禮品

The Rapha Roadmap: Part Ten

In the final instalment of the Rapha Roadmap, its author Oliver Duggan recaps the conclusions from each chapter and plots his prescribed course for cycling’s future.

WordsOliver Duggan, Steve Maxwell, Joe Harris & Daam Van Reeth

Research for this project took us all over the world. We have conducted interviews with more than 50 of the sport’s most experienced stakeholders, snatching conversations at races, at training camps, at sportives, at music festivals, on university campuses, on planes and beyond. We have researched the state of the sport for almost two years for this work and we have barely scratched the surface. There are hundreds of opinions we would have been lucky to hear and thousands of points of view that could not be included. Each section outlined above could form its own study. Each interviewee deserves their own platform. Each recommendation belies the true scale of the potential.

But beyond the substance of these discussions, beyond the specifics of reality and reform which have formed the spine of this work, it is the meetings themselves that form most compelling sign of the incredible symbol for change. Professional cycling is overflowing with talent on and off the bike and there is no shortage of passion for the sport at every level of involvement. That passion, whether it was presented as anger and frustration or optimism and reflection, was evident in every interview for this work. Riders past and present agitated for a voice without exception. Team managers and owners all spoke candidly of their struggles for survival. The organisers of the biggest events revealed in unison the pressures driving their business. Governors, lobbyists and politicians have detailed as though scripted their shortcomings as well as their successes. We have spoken at length about the demand on riders, the structure of races and calendars, the value of media and sponsorship, the pressures of oversight, the realities of doping and the systemic, relentless failures to change perceptions. Nothing has been off limits and we have been presented consistently with the same image of the sport; it is too beautiful, too exciting, too completely bewitching to be so small, to leave so much on the table.

At the very least, it is a sport filled with people eager to talk and to talk candidly. With the fewest of exceptions, senior officials and figures throughout the world of cycling were willing to talk openly and at length about the challenges they face and the opportunities they see. In all, the eagerness to help with this research from each of those we met is amongst the most encouraging findings of this work. The viability or appeal of any one suggested reform in the text above could be contested and will likely form the basis of our debates going forward, but the appetite to work for those solutions across the sport is beyond discussion. Entire organisations of people appear energised to bring professional cycling to more people and connect more meaningfully with fans and participants. That is a remarkable asset and the only question, the central question for the Rapha Roadmap, is how.

Each chapter has attempted to frame the answer. There are fundamental challenges to reaching new fans posed by the very structure of the sport; the format of racing, the calendar of events, the organisation of teams and the process of reward. In Talking Shop, specific recommendations for reform to the sport itself detail the potential for a better organised race programme, a new approach to teams and more compelling formats. There are equally difficult questions surrounding the presentation of the sport; its broadcast on television and digital platforms, its presentation as a live spectacle and all its associated media. Dressing the Window attempts to locate some of the opportunities for connecting with new fans in new places and building meaningful engagement between the public and the sport, including the potential to enhance coverage across genders and disciplines in a bid to change the image of professional cycling. The undeniable financial weakness of the sport at almost every level is considered in Making Money and potential advances in sponsorship targeting, cost reduction and revenue diversification are outlined. Finally, the gulf between participation and those involved in racing at the highest level is addressed. Breaking Away suggests how riders, teams, events and sponsors could get closer to the cycling community and add value to their experience, shaping how cycling could learn from the successful initiatives of other sports to connect with more people.

In each of these areas Rapha has sought to identify chances to help. This research was commissioned at the end of our relationship with Team Sky to orientate Rapha’s involvement in the professional sport and has led directly to a series of major business decisions. The Rapha Roadmap project was among the first steps towards a major 2019 teams project that will see Rapha working with a host of partners to create a truly revolutionary force in the sport, the concept and ethos of which are linked inextricably to the Rapha Roadmap. With these activities and more, Rapha is committed to helping grow the sport as a whole, connecting with more fans and building more meaningful connection with those already engaged.

The implications of this work for Rapha are already being felt. As we seek to take a new position on professional cycling we are changing the way we work and will continue to champion reform at every level of the sport. Its impact, we hope, will be seen in a growing number of fans, an increasingly engaged audience and a willingness to pursue radical innovation. Professional cycling must be made more accessible and more engaging. In reaching that destination, we will have to take the road less travelled.

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The full compiled version of the Roadmap is now available to download.

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