We probably need a new definition of television. We already accept that “phone” now means a pocket-sized mobile computer. A modern TV is really a computer too. And if your TVs are like mine, then they have apps just like a modern phone. YouTube, for example, is literally built into all of my TVs. That’s convenient when I want to watch a bike race. These days, almost all of the races I watch are on YouTube. I miss the days of RedBull.tv and Versus, and I certainly don’t watch as much bike racing as I used to, but YouTube provides more options than you might expect.
The Absa Cape Epic concluded early on Sunday in South Africa. Thanks to YouTube, I watched all eight days of the mountain bike stage race. The broadcast went on for hours each day and it didn’t always have my undivided attention, but it was strangely comforting in its ubiquity. I could leave it for a while, then come back later, treating it much like I used to treat multi-hour Tour de France stages during the good ol’ days of OLN and Versus.
While the Absa Cape Epic was the premier mountain bike race during the last week, it wasn’t the only mountain bike race. The US Pro Cup was in Fayetteville AR for a very full schedule of cross-country Olympic and short track events, all of which aired live on YouTube. That series doesn’t have the star power of the UCI World Cup, but it’s worth watching if you’re a fan of that style of racing. And just because you won’t see the top European pros, that doesn’t mean there aren’t any recognizable faces. Christopher Blevins, Kate Courtney, Gwendalyn Gibson, and Riley Amos are at or near the top of the series standings. The next US Pro Cup event is at Englewood Grass Farm in Fall River, May 2-3. That coincides with a WORS weekend, so lots of Wisconsin mountain bikers will be on hand. But if you can’t be there to cheer on the pros in person, then you can watch them on YouTube!
The UCI has its own YouTube channel, of course, and it streams many of its events across a variety of cycling disciplines. Several national federations do too. Australia’s national federation, for example, provided an astonishing 20 hours of live coverage of its juniors national track championships over the last three days. The next five days belong to the grown-ups. I’m going to continue to skip it, but maybe track cycling is your thing.
Subscribing to a bunch of YouTube channels to get your fix of live bike racing isn’t an ideal solution. But we’ve never really had a single, comprehensive source for all disciplines, either online or on linear TV. My point is that there is still live coverage to be had, for free.