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Celebrity chef attracts Wiggins' and McEwen's fury

  • Tuesday, 15 September 2009
  • Nigel Wynn
  • 7 Comments

Cycling stars Bradley Wiggins and Robbie McEwen have joined in the angry response to an article written by celebrity chef and motoring writer James Martin in the Mail on Sunday.

In the article reviewing an electric Tesla sports car, Martin openly admits running cyclists off the road whilst driving the vehicle.

"God, I hate those cyclists. Every last herbal tea-drinking, Harriet Harman-voting one of them," wrote Martin.

"Twenty minutes into my test drive I pulled round a leafy bend, enjoying the birdsong - and spotted those damned Spider-Man cyclists. Knowing they wouldn't hear me coming, I stepped on the gas, waited until the split second before I overtook them, then gave them an almighty blast on the horn at the exact same time I passed them at speed."

"The look of sheer terror as they tottered into the hedge was the best thing I've ever seen in my rear-view mirror. I think this could be the car for me."

And the response from Wiggins? "James Martin TV chef. The word cock springs to mind, stick to Ready Steady T*** mate," Wiggins wrote on his Twitter feed shortly after completing stage three of the Tour of Britain.

Australian sprinter Robbie McEwen was equally disgusted, and wrote: "Website of cyclist hater James Martin. Anyone with computer skills feel free to **** it up!"

Online backlash
Links to the online version of the article spread quickly through internet forums and via Twitter, where a backlash against Martin quickly developed. Someone altered Martin's Wikipedia page and an 'I hate James Martin' Facebook group attracted well over 1,000 users by the end of the day.

But behind the online jibes at Martin is a serious point, taken up by national cyclists' organisation CTC, who are actively seeking the cyclists run off the road by Martin - if, indeed, they exist. There could be grounds for a legal case.

Martin's article offers similar sentiments to one written by Matthew Parris published in the Times in December 2007, in which the columnist wrote that cyclists were 'smug' and 'deserved to be decapitated'.

The Press Complaints Commission received more complaints about Parris's article than any other in the whole of 2007.

Parris subsequently issued an apology due to the volume of complaints made directly to the paper.

Update
On Tuesday, the Daily Mail removed the last paragraph - referring to the horn honking incident - from the online version of Martin's article.

In an interview with online cycling podcast FredCast, Rachel Konrad, a spokeswoman for Tesla cars and herself a cyclist, distanced the car company from the sentiments expressed in the article.

Related links
Times 'decapitate cyclists' article most complained about of year

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September 15 11:52

Tony Mills

Surely if he has genuinely caused an accident and by his own admission left the scene of it then he has committed a crime and the police should be alerted. If he has fabricated the incident then apart from being an idiot he should be subject to a press complaint and possibly criminal action for wasting police time?

September 15 12:22

Mark Jones

Watched Keith Allen's interview with Keith Floyd last night and he described modern celebrity chefs as c***s and these sort of comments justify this. What a complete idiot. What he wrote is deplorable and shame on the Daily Mail for publishing it.

September 15 12:51

D Adams

I have just gone onto the Press Complaints Commission web site and logged a complaint about this artical and encourage every red blood cyclist to do the same!!

September 15 14:50

Martin Smith

does James Martin realise that, according to r.o.s.p.a., some 16,000 cyclists are killed or injured every year on British roads, i.e. at the hands of British motorists? he should be ashamed of himself

September 15 16:27

Sian Mayer

Perhaps Mr Martin might like to pop round to the family of Jason MacIntyre and share the story with them in person. I'm sure they'll be highly amused at his way of dealing with those pesky cyclists, and they'll get dinner cooked for them as well.

Interestingly, the Daily Mail felt his tragic death was a big enough story to write about at the time. Shame they didn't look in their own archives before paying Mr Martin his (presumably large) cheque.

September 15 17:14

Paul Martin

James Martin should be charged with assault.

September 16 12:09

ken waller


This type of article by so called celebrities is offensive in the extreme. Having lost friends and fellow cyclists in so called accidents,I am appalled that the Mail could print it . The editor should be called in for question on his moral ethics and attitude to death.

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