International Cycle Sport

International Cycle Sport was a British cycling magazine that covered British and European road racing. It had 199 issues between May 1968 and December 1984.

International Cycle Sport
The April 1971 issue of International Cycle Sport, featuring Roger De Vlaeminck
Former editorsJock Wadley (1968 (1968)-1971 (1971))
Staff writers
FrequencyMonthly
FounderRon Kitching
First issueMay 1968 (1968-05)
Final issue
Number
December 1984 (1984-12)
199
CompanyKennedy Brothers Publishing
CountryUnited Kingdom
Based inSilsden
LanguageEnglish
ISSN0020-6504
OCLC924483375

History

International Cycle Sport was the idea of Kennedy Brothers Publishing, a printing company in Keighley, Yorkshire, owned by three brothers.[1] With help from cycle parts importer and advertiser Ron Kitching, they brought in Jock Wadley as editor, who was head of the newly defunct Sporting Cyclist.[2][3]

By 1972, the magazine was selling around the world, with a special issue for the United States that had different centre pages for local stories.[4]

gollark: Doesn't matter, GPU beats it.
gollark: But not everything can easily be broken into parallelisable chunks, so CPUs are more widely used.
gollark: Basically, GPUs are faster, given that they have several thousand cores at 1-2GHz vs the 2-8 cores at 3-5GHz on CPUs.
gollark: ^
gollark: You should *only* use GPU miners.

See also

References

  1. Wadley, J. B. (2002). From the Pen of J.B.Wadley. Norwich, UK: Mousehold Press. ISBN 978-1-874739-22-7.
  2. Woodland, Les (2007). Yellow Jersey Companion to the Tour de France. London: Yellow Jersey Press. p. 401. ISBN 978-0-224-08016-3.
  3. Wadley, J. B. (May 1968). "Return to the Independent class". International Cycle Sport. No. 1. Keighley, UK: Kennedy Brothers Publishing. p. opening editorial. ISSN 0020-6504. Retrieved 8 April 2020 via InternationalCycleSport.com.
  4. Henderson, Noel G. (April 1972). "A magazine on the move". International Cycle Sport. No. 47. Keighley, UK: Kennedy Brothers Publishing. p. 32. ISSN 0020-6504. Retrieved 8 April 2020 via InternationalCycleSport.com.
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