Bradley Wiggins Tour de France 2007 stage four

Bradley Wiggins will make his return to racing at the Tour of Pendle this weekend. The Cofidis rider last turned a pedal in anger as he crested the top of the Col d?Aubisque on stage 16 of this year?s Tour de France.

Wiggins? team then quit the race after Italian Christian Moreni tested positive for Testosterone, and the Brit has been recuperating ever since.

The Olympic champion will now take on the best of British as he competes in the last round of the season long Premier Calendar competition. New national champion David Millar was also due to ride the 96-mile event but has had to pull out.

Millar will however be riding the British time trial championships in Cheshire on September 2. The Saunier Duval rider was desperate to win the road title, and now wants to add the TT title to make a set of three ? he won the pursuit title last year.

Although Millar?s race program with Saunier Duval has tailed off since he announced he would be joining Jonathan Vaughter?s Slipstream team, he is still due to ride the Vattenfalls Classic, GP Ouest France Plouay, and the Tour of Poland, before the world championships.

The Tour of Pendle is part of the Pendle Bike Fest and takes place this Sunday (August 12). It starts at 9.30am outside Nelson Town Hall and is due to finish around 1pm in Nelson Town Centre.

Race ETA?s

Main circuit

Barrowford: 9.42 ? 10.47 ? 11.52

Blacko (summit): 9.52 ? 10.59 ? 12.07

Chatburn: 10.11 ? 11.16 ? 12.21

Read: 10.30 ? 11.35 ? 12.40

Finishing circuit

Carr Road: 13.00

Brierfield: 13.03

Fence (by-pass): 13.10

Carr Road: 13.15 (finish)

Related links

Tour of Pendle official site

British Cycling

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Simon Richardson
Magazine editor

Editor of Cycling Weekly magazine, Simon has been working at the title since 2001. He fell in love with cycling 1989 when watching the Tour de France on Channel 4, started racing in 1995 and in 2000 he spent one season racing in Belgium. During his time at CW (and Cycle Sport magazine) he has written product reviews, fitness features, pro interviews, race coverage 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. He became the 130-year-old magazine's 13th editor in 2015.