About Cycling Weekly: who we are, what we do and how to contact us

Want to know about CW and get in touch with us? Here's how

Cycling Weekly
(Image credit: Future)

Cycling Weekly is the world’s leading cycling website for news, racing, reviews, buying advice, and fitness and training tips.

As a brand, Cycling Weekly was originally founded in magazine form in 1891, with the website launching in 2006.

Contact us

Email: cycling@futurenet.com

Twitter: www.twitter.com/cyclingweekly

Facebook: www.facebook.com/CyclingWeekly

Instagram: @cyclingweeklymagazine

Meet the editorial team

Michelle Arthurs-Brennan

Michelle Arthurs-Brennan the Editor of Cycling Weekly website. An NCTJ qualified traditional journalist by trade, Michelle began her career working for local newspapers. She's worked within the cycling industry since 2012, and joined the Cycling Weekly team in 2017, having previously been Editor at Total Women's Cycling. Prior to welcoming her first daughter in 2022, Michelle raced on the road, track, and in time trials, and still rides as much as she can - albeit a fair proportion indoors, for now.

Michelle is on maternity leave from April 2025 until spring 2026.

Anne-Marije Rook

Cycling Weekly's North American Editor, Anne-Marije Rook, started out as a traditional newspaper reporter and gained some 15 years of journalism experience before making her way to Cycling Weekly. Originally from The Netherlands, she grew up as a bike commuter but didn't find bike racing until her early twenties. As she competed at the elite and UCI level, her journalism career followed, and soon she became a full-time cycling journalist. These days she's less about competition and more about adventuring, yet there's hardly a day that goes by when she's not found pedalling. For Rook, a good week is when all the bikes in her stable get ridden, from her full-suspension trail bike down to her Brompton and some speedy road miles in between

Adam Becket

Adam's greatest love is road racing but as long as he is cycling on tarmac, he's happy. Before joining Cycling Weekly he spent two years writing for Procycling, where he interviewed riders and wrote about racing, speaking to people as varied as Demi Vollering to Philippe Gilbert. Before cycling took over his professional life, he covered ecclesiastical matters at the world’s largest Anglican newspaper and politics at Business Insider. Don't ask how that is related to cycling.

Tom Davidson

Tom joined Cycling Weekly as a news and features writer in the summer of 2022, having previously contributed as a freelancer. He is the host of The TT Podcast, which covers both the men's and women's pelotons and has featured a number of prominent British riders. An enthusiastic cyclist himself, Tom likes it most when the road goes uphill and actively seeks out double-figure gradients on his rides. He's also fluent in French and Spanish and holds a master's degree in International Journalism.

Tom Thewlis

Tom is a News and Features Writer at Cycling Weekly and previously worked in communications at Oxford Brookes University. He has reported from a wide range of races and events across Europe including the Tour de France and World Championships.

Profile image of Andy Carr
Andy Carr

Andy Carr is the tech editor at Cycling Weekly. He was founder of Spoon Customs, where for ten years, him and his team designed and built some of the world's most coveted custom bikes. The company also created Gun Control Custom Paint. Together the brands championed the highest standards in fit, fabrication and finishing.

Nowadays, Andy is based in Norfolk, where he loves riding almost anything with two-wheels. He was an alpine ride guide for a time, and gets back to the Southern Alps as often as possible.

Hannah Bussey

Hannah is Cycling Weekly’s longest-serving tech writer, having started with the magazine back in 2011. She specialises in the technical side of all things cycling, including pro peloton team kit, having covered multiple seasons of the Spring Classics, and Grand Tours for both print and websites. Prior to joining Cycling Weekly, Hannah was a successful road and track racer, competing in UCI races across the world, and has raced in most of Europe, China, Pakistan and New Zealand. For fun, she's ridden LEJOG unaided, a lap of Majorca in a day, won 24 hour mountain bike race and tackled famous mountain passes in the French Alps, Pyrenees, Dolomites and Himalayas. She lives just outside the Peak District National Park near Manchester UK with her partner, daughter and a small but beautifully formed bike collection.

Rob Spedding

Rob has been Content Director of Cycling Weekly - as well as Cyclingnews.com, Fit&Well, Golf Monthly and MBR - since May 2021. Before that he spent two years in similar role at Bikeradar, which followed 12-years as Editor-in-chief of Cycling Plus magazine and eight years at Runner's World. In his time as a cycling journalist he's ridden from London to Paris at least twice, London to Bristol once, completed the Fred Whitton Challenge, L'Etape du Tour and Maratona dles Dolomites. He's also jumped into the broom-wagon at La Marmotte and Oetzaler Radmarathon.

Cycling Weekly magazine editorial team

Cycling Weekly magazine is more than 130 years old - you can find our more about our story here.

Cycling Weekly maazine

(Image credit: Future)
Simon Richardson

Editor of Cycling Weekly magazine, Simon has been working at the title since 2001. In that time he has written product reviews, features and news. He has covered the Tour de France more times than he can remember along with two Olympic Games and many other international and UK domestic races. Once an aspiring bike racer himself, he can still be seen at his club's evening races through the summer.

James Shrubsall

After cutting his teeth on local and national newspapers, James began at Cycling Weekly as a sub-editor in 2000 when the current office was literally all fields. Eventually becoming chief sub-editor, in 2016 he switched to the job of full-time writer, and covers news, racing and features. A lifelong cyclist and cycling fan, James's racing days (and most of his fitness) are now in the past, although that doesn't stop him banging on tirelessly about "that one time" he nearly rode a 20-minute '10', and planning the big comeback that everyone knows will never actually happen.

David Bradford

David Bradford is fitness editor of Cycling Weekly (print edition). He has been writing and editing professionally for more than 15 years, and has published work in national newspapers and magazines including the Independent, the Guardian, the Times, the Irish Times, Vice.com and Runner’s World. Alongside his love of cycling, David is a long-distance runner with a marathon PB of two hours 28 minutes. Having been diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) in 2006, he also writes about sight loss, equality and social affairs.

Advertising

Want to find out about ad rates and deadlines…

Jess Hamer
Advertising Director
jess.hamer@futurenet.com
+44 (0)7933 502456

Sam Marsh
Account Director
samuel.marsh@futurenet.com
+44 (0)7517 560177

Chelsea Speakman
Account Director
chelsea.speakman@futurenet.com
+44 (0)7432609945

Lewis Mokler
Account Manager
lewis.mokler@futurenet.com
+44 7538 068084

Editorial ethos and how we test products

We take pride in ensuring all of our editorial content is free from commercial influences or considerations.

Our teams also sometimes accept invitations or hospitality to events or product launches, however this never influences our opinion and review of the product, but will affect whether the product is given coverage or not. I.e, we may not give coverage to the event/product had we not been taken to it by the company.

The CW tech team tests a huge range of products each year with the aim to give our readers everything they need to know before investing their money in a new bike, component, or piece of kit.

You can read more about how we test products here, but in short our commitment to you is:

1) Our products are only tested by committed cyclists with years of experience – we believe that gives a deeper insight than that of outdoor-generalists or fitness-enthusiasts

2) When we say we’ve reviewed a product, that means we’ve ploughed the hours in on familiar roads or trails

3) Manufacturers can’t pay for a good review – we keep complete editorial integrity

Affiliate & Advertising disclosure

We are committed to helping you find the best products and services for your needs and connecting you with trustworthy retailers where you can purchase them at competitive prices. Within our editorial content, we often provide links to products and services on retailer sites for which we can receive compensation – called an affiliate fee – if you click on those links or make purchases through them. That affiliate fee is paid to us by the retailer and does not directly affect the price you pay for the product or service.

Our expert editorial teams are independent. This means the products and services they select to appear in our articles are chosen based on their unbiased, expert judgement and relevance to the readers' needs and article content. While our editors may be informed by commercial insights to understand the market, our goal is always to provide independent, objective, valuable and useful advice to our readers. – the selection criteria are based solely on usefulness and value to our readers.

Our curated product widgets that you see in some of our articles are intended to help you find the best products and services, at competitive prices, at trusted retailers. Those widgets are powered by our own software, called Hawk, which displays the latest product and price information from thousands of retailers. We will always do our best to ensure that we display the most up-to-date information possible.

On occasion, a retailer may have updated their prices, up or down, before the adverts displayed by Hawk are updated. Retailers may also add delivery or other costs to the purchase – please see the retailer's site for more information. The affiliate fees we receive help us to continue developing Hawk as well as helping to pay our teams and other website costs.

We also run advertising in various forms. Ads on our websites are designed in a way that makes them clearly identifiable as ads and distinguishable from our editorial articles.

From time to time, we also publish paid-for editorial content on the site. This content is labelled so you can see who has funded it and how it was created. We have a full guide to content funding here. You can also read the full terms and conditions that apply to your use of our sites.

Address

Mail

You can write to the editorial team via: Cycling Weekly C/O Future Publishing, Unit 415, Eskdale Rd, Winnersh Triangle, Reading, RG41 5RA

Subscriptions

Magazine subscriptions

You can subscribe to Cycling Weekly magazine via our partner Magazines Direct and have it delivered every Thursday. You can also save on the cover price via a subscription and there are also regular offers for new subscribers .

The Cycling Weekly subscriptions hotline is 0330 333 1113. Call this number if you experience any problems with your subscription or have any questions.

Complaints

Editorial Complaints

Cycling Weekly is a member of the Independent Press Standards Organisation (which regulates the UK's magazine and newspaper industry). We abide by the Editors' Code of Practice and are committed to upholding the highest standards of journalism. If you think that we have not met those standards and want to make a complaint please contact cycling@futurenet.com. If we are unable to resolve your complaint, or if you would like more information about IPSO or the Editors' Code, contact IPSO on 0300 123 2220 or visit www.ipso.co.uk.

IPSO

(Image credit: IPSO)

Frequently asked questions

Who owns Cycling Weekly?

Cycling Weekly is part of Future PLC, a media company based in Bath but with offices all over the world. The magazine and website was formerly part of IPC Media which was then part of AOL Time Warner, which then became Time Inc. and then TI Media before Future PLC bought TI Media in April 2020.

Is Cycling Weekly the oldest cycling magazine in the world?

Cycling Weekly magazine is the world's oldest cycling publication still in circulation. It was first published as Cycling in January 1891 by Edmund Dangerfield. Cycling Weekly's first editor was Charles Sisley.

Who is the editor of Cycling Weekly?

Cycling Weekly Community Guidelines

Our comment section is for thoughtful discussion of article topics. Together we’re developing a space where people share your passion and where you can enjoy conversations built on a foundation of respect and common interests.

Our team is dedicated to providing quality content—please keep that in mind and keep disagreements respectful. Not every comment needs to be a debate – it’s fine to just talk! – but please approach all disagreements in a spirit of openness and tolerance.

If you feel like you’re getting too invested, take a deep breath and step away. You are never obligated to reply to a fellow commentator. If someone is breaching our rules or making the comments a less welcoming place then please use the report button so that our Community team can investigate further.

Whenever someone joins the comment section here at Cycling Weekly they should find them welcoming and insightful. We want to build a community that you’re proud to recommend to others and we can only do that together.

Please read our guidelines below to understand what is allowed and how our moderation system works.

Community Guidelines

Note: If your post is removed, it's never a personal attack but a step to maintain a respectful and engaging community in line with our guidelines.

  • Stay on Topic
    • Comments should be relevant to the article or discussion at hand.
    • Posts that stray into unrelated topics like politics or religion will be removed.
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    • If a threat is deemed to be credible we will contact local law enforcement.
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    • Users doing so will be banned.
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  • Spam Policy
    • Spam comments will lead to an immediate and permanent ban.
  • Language
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  • Respect Moderation Decisions
  • Names
    • All of the above rules apply equally to names and using abusive language, fraudulently claiming to be staff or any other misuse of your display name will lead to a ban.

Our guidelines cannot cover every situation and our moderation team reserve the right to remove any comment at any time. The Cycling Weekly Team and Future PLC do not endorse the opinions and views shared by readers in our comment sections.

Pre-moderation: When dealing with a large volume of comments it’s impossible to handle them in real time. Comments may be pre-moderated due to their content, article settings or reports by other users. If you are finding yourself to be consistently pre-moderated then it is not targeted. How you are choosing to post is getting picked up by the system or reported by other users and can usually be fixed by following our guidelines or considering how others might read what you have posted.

Ban Appeals: If you wish to appeal a ban please contact Commentmoderation@futurenet.com. Please include the name of the site you are posting on, your username and respectfully explain why you believe the ban should be overturned.

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