If you want more clarity of the difference between a top-level cyclocross race bike and a race-ready gravel bike, you won’t find it from Cervélo. Over the weekend of UCI World Cup racing, we spotted Team Sunweb rider Joris Nieuwenhuis racing the carbon Cervelo Aspero gravel bike head-to-head with the world’s best cyclocross racers. So how does a gravel bike fare at the CX World Cup?
Cervélo Áspero gravel bike’s double life as a cyclocross bike
So what was it that separates a gravel bike from a cyclocross bike again? Generally we look at gravel bikes fitting larger diameter tires, having more relaxed & stable geometry, and more comfort & adventure focused versatility.
But it all is in a manner of degrees. As we’ve seen gravel bikes start to differentiate themselves into fast gravel racing, all-around gravel, adventure gravel, and even bikepacking sub-genres, some modern gravel bikes aren’t so far away from some cross bikes.
So what does it take to race a gravel bike at the Cyclocross World Cup?
In fact, those gravel changes vs. cyclocross were already the advantages that cyclocross bikes had over traditional road bikes. Cervelo is clearly planted in the more racy “aero is everything” side of bikes they build, and they explicitly said the new Aspero is meant to “haul ass, not cargo“.
Cyclocross conversion – tech details
Cervelo Aspero’s adjustable geometry?
Team Sunweb’s custom cyclocross solutions
