A pair of Café Roubaix Arenbergs, with the original “Richter” branding.

Although he was already an active community member, I began my friendship with Dan Richter in early 2012 after he reached out to me regarding some wheels he wanted us to take along on Keepers Tour: Cobbled Classics 2012. At the time, he was an amateur wheel builder making some money on the side selling his wheels on eBay. Like many of us in this community, his heart tends toward the classics and the roughest roads around, and the wheels he was focussed on were largely classic wheels designed for rough riding.

Having read that I had built myself some wheels (three times, before I got it right) for the trip, and he wanted to see if his wheels would be able to withstand the torture of the cobbles of Northern Europe. We chatted about it, but the project never came to life as the wheels were damaged in an accident just before he was due to ship them off to me; with no time left to rebuild them, I left for France without a set of his wheels in my luggage.

But we kept up our communication and by the time I got back from the trip, he’s made up his mind to open a bicycle studio in Cochrane, Alberta, named Café Roubaix Bicycle Studio in homage to the greatest and toughest race in the world, Paris-Roubaix. I love seeing friends take a chance on starting a business, not to mention one built around Cycling; I was overjoyed at hearing the news and immediately offered any assistance we might be able to provide via our humble little community.

Fast forward a few months to November 2012 and delivery to my house of a set of Richter-branded carbon tubular wheels laced in a 3x pattern with bladed spokes; quite simply the most stunning wheels I’d ever laid eyes on, and shockingly light. With their lacing pattern, they were designed for Cyclocross but had an obvious use as wheels for the cobbles as well. I raced them the rest of the season before having an issue with one of the hubs. Dan quickly crossed that supplier of his list and sent me a replacement pair of wheels, this time co-branded with Velominati. These wheels were bullet-proof and carried me down the trench of Arenberg and every other cobbled road we hit during our 9-day trip.

In the meantime, I’d also commissioned a prototype climbing wheelset from him for my third attempt at not sucking on Haleakala. I still sucked, but I sucked a little less because the wheels were so insanely light and stiff; Dan immediately dubbed them the Haleakalas and offered them for sale as a standard wheelset through his studio.

But there was a nagging bit of feedback I kept getting from people who saw me out on the wheels, “Hey, how do you like those Ritchey wheels?” They’re not Ritcheys, they are Ricthers; read, you dumbass. (As I’ve said before, my natural charm has made me a good sprinter.) I brought the feedback that there might be some brand confusion to Dan over coffee one afternoon when he happened to pass through Seattle; after some brainstorming he decided to brand them after his shop’s fantastic name.

Every man needs a partner, a tailor, a wheelbuider and I’m proud Dan has been my official wheelbuilder for a few years now; his wheels are the best I’ve ever ridden and I’m grumpy any time I have to ride other wheels. It was only natural, then, that this past summer, we started working on an exciting project to co-brand a premium bespoke wheelset which would be available for sale to the public. KRX-10, Velominati’s trusty Graphic Designer, produced the most stunning design imaginable, before all our plans evaporated when Specialized sent the cease and desist letter. Velominati offered to publicize the matter, but Dan – the good guy that he is – decided to keep quiet and work it out between his lawyer and Specialized while laying plans to rebuild his brand from the ground up. It broke my heart to see his dream fall in shambles around him, but he always seemed to keep a good attitude and had confidence he would get back on his feet. He set about enlisting friends to brainstorm new names, and before long he was on his way to a fresh start.

Dan never asked for the outpouring from the Cycling community; he just gave an interview to a reporter who stopped by his shop and figured that was that. But within hours of its publication, the Cycling world went mad, launching into the biggest social media campaign I’ve ever seen around Cycling and one which Velominati were very proud to play some small part in. With the outpouring came the dropping of the lawsuit and, thanks to all of you in the community – not just here but in the Cycling world at large – Dan now has permission to continue using “Roubaix” in his shop name (although I’m not sure he can still use it on the wheels, we’ll have to ask him now how that works out legally.)

These past days, I have been more proud than ever to call myself a Cyclist, and I was just a bystander on the periphery of this amazing event – I can’t imagine how Dan feels. On behalf of all of us, we can not express our happiness and relief that this has worked out for a fellow Velominatus.

Vive La Vie Velominatus was ever thus.

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • @wiscot

    @Gianni

    I hope this works. Here is the video we have been waiting for. It's the Big S apology.

    Oh that is brilliant! Dan is the epitome of cool and understated schadenfreude. He just stands there and let's him talk and doesn't interrupt. Sinyard could not have looked more awkward and uncomfortable - just look at his face in the beginning. Given the choice between unsedated colonoscopy and this, I think he's have taken the former. Mind you, a wee bit of credit to him for doing this in person and not just doing it via twitter or facebook as so often happens these days.

    Interesting that Sinyard was wearing plain black T shirt and Dan a plain black collared shirt. Nary a logo or name in sight! Coincidence? I think not.

    I hope Sinyard sprung for breakfast too!

    Except in the wheelset behind Dan!:

  • If Sinyard was was a politician or oil exec I'd be less inclined to buy it. But the optimist in me has to believe that as a cyclist and former dirtbag, Sinyard is being genuine.

  • It's healthy to be an optimist. Personally, I'm agnostic about Sinyard or what his apology might mean for him or the company. For me, the upside is two-fold: a) Dan carries on in style, and 2) the next time they pull shit like this on a small business, there's that pesky fucking video with the founder and chairman saying that what they were doing to Dan was a mistake. That's enough for me, right there.

    When I saw the vid, I'd just kitted up to go ride the mtb--the Epic mtb. And suddenly I wasn't really pissed off about riding a Spesh.

  • @sthilzy

    That would have been a classy move to wear a Café Roubaix T for the video.

    I wonder what happened over the weekend at Big S.

    A phone call is not good enough?  I have to go to f'ing Calgary to undo the mess you lawyers got us into? I have to have breakfast with this guy and shoot a mea culpa video too? Oh I can't believe this. Damn it, when I get back I'm going to start firing some of you dicks.

  • @RoubaixInTwoYears

    It's healthy to be an optimist. Personally, I'm agnostic about Sinyard or what his apology might mean for him or the company. For me, the upside is two-fold: a) Dan carries on in style, and 2) the next time they pull shit like this on a small business, there's that pesky fucking video with the founder and chairman saying that what they were doing to Dan was a mistake. That's enough for me, right there.

    My thoughts exactly, what a great ending and it really proves that the world is such a small place !

    I got a hint of genuine remorse out of what was said in the video !  I also understand the trademark protection thing ala Chinarello etc etc but his comments seemed from the heart.

    Excellent result !

    Now Dan, more importantly, wheres my T Shirt, I want to proudly wear that sucker !

  • @sthilzy

    I think Mike had his T-shirt on backwards for the interview!

    Nice. I suppose it would be piling on to circulate this image all over the internet.

  • Kudos to Sinyard.  His obvious discomfort shows that he is not, in fact, the monstrous villain the social media lynching tried to portray,  He is just a human being.  He had the balls to stand up for his company's mistake, take full responsibility and apologize.

    Kudos to Dan.  There was no trace of gloating or sanctimony.  A testament to his character and obeyance of Rule #2.

    To all those still spouting vitriol and hate toward Specialized.  Follow Dan's example and see Rule #43.

  • @w3r1

    Kudos to Sinyard. His obvious discomfort shows that he is not, in fact, the monstrous villain the social media lynching tried to portray, He is just a human being. He had the balls to stand up for his company's mistake, take full responsibility and apologize.

    Kudos to Dan. There was no trace of gloating or sanctimony. A testament to his character and obeyance of Rule #2.

    To all those still spouting vitriol and hate toward Specialized. Follow Dan's example and see Rule #43.

    Sorry, I can't. I refuse to forgive and forget corporate greed and malice. Someone signed a cease and desist letter against something that was not a threat in any way shape or form to a brand. "We didn't mean it" is crap. They meant it, right up until it was going to bite them in the ass hard. The only, I emphasize ONLY reason corporate apologies are made is when they realize not doing so costs shareholders money. Sinyard apologized because of the shitstorm. Speciaized is sorry they got caught. So it is with BP, and any other corporate entity that acts solely and completely in their sole, monetary interest.

    This is the essence of patent-troll-dom. When the shakedown implodes or doesn't work, apologies cost nothing. Well...I refuse to let them off the hook.

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