The Welland Tribune

Tour loves its ‘Podium girls’

While most major cycling race counterpar­ts have changed, French defend the practice

- IAN AUSTEN

SAINT-LARY-SOULAN, FRANCE — The daily ceremony during which the winners of the Tour de France’s various competitio­ns slip into their leaders’ jerseys is tightly choreograp­hed. And a key part of the ritual is a cycling tradition that many argue is, at best, long beyond its prime.

Each day, pairs of young women wearing high heels and dressed in evening gowns or above-the-knee skirts help the award winners into special podium versions of their jerseys, give them a trinket and, eventually, deliver chaste kisses.

The race organizer, the Amaury Sport Organizati­on, officially calls the women “Tour hostesses.” They are universall­y referred to as “podium girls.”

Like many jobs at the Tour de France, their hours are long, their days often hectic and the glamour overstated. For many women, particular­ly those involved in cycling, the routine seems out of touch, if not offensive, in the 21st century.

“ASO, frankly, have a problem with women,” Emma Pooley, a retired profession­al cyclist from Britain, said. “There is a role for people on the podium to make the presentati­on glamorous. It really helps to have people there who know what they’re doing when they hand out the goodies.

What I don’t understand is why sex or sexuality has anything to do with it.”

At a time when the treatment of women in their work roles is being widely examined and challenged, the Tour de France and the Giro d’Italia, its Italian counterpar­t, are increasing­ly isolated. The Vuelta a España, the third of the grand cycling tours and another ASO property, now has men and women presenting at the same time on its podiums. The Tour of California followed along this year. Australia’s Tour Down Under exchanged its female podium presenters with young cyclists after the South Australian Government pulled its funding for the ceremony two years ago.

And the Internatio­nal Cycling Union, the sport’s governing body, decided last month to use the Vuelta’s method at the sport’s various world championsh­ips.

The Tour de France is hardly alone in a sports world that often clings to its traditiona­l philosophi­es on gender issues. The NFL will open its season in September with scantily clad cheerleade­rs, despite renewed scrutiny of their role and accusation­s of mistreatme­nt of them. At Wimbledon, chair umpires referred to the recently married Serena Williams as “Mrs. Williams,” while married men are simply called by their surname.

Fabrice Tiano, a spokespers­on for the Tour de France, said that the race director, Christian Prudhomme, is no longer discussing the issue of the hostesses.

Tiano said that news media reports earlier this year that the Tour was reassessin­g its podium policy had no basis in fact. He explained that the current system had its own logic of equality, and would remain. “On women’s races we have men on the podium, on men’s races we have women on the podium,” he said.

The presenters’ work days generally begin at a VIP area where Tour sponsors receive corporate guests well before the stage starts. As those guests are then ferried along the race route in cars and vans driven by retired cycling stars and, for those with the greatest pull, helicopter­s, some of the hostesses act as valets, driving the guests’ cars to the finish line. Once the podium is over, they quickly change out of their evening dresses to reunite the guests with their cars.

For many years, the podium presenters were recruited from the towns and cities where each stage finished. Currently, the corporate sponsors of each award select and hire the women using modelling agencies. Brief biographie­s of the presenters that Crédit Lyonnais, the yellow jersey sponsor, put out as recently

‘‘ What I don’t understand is why sex or sexuality has anything to do with it. EMMA POOLEY Retired profession­al cyclist

as two years ago indicated that most of the women were students, some of them in graduate programs. Most spoke more than one language.

In theory, the women are not allowed to have any contact with the riders beyond the podium, but romances have blossomed. In 2003, Melanie Simonneau was fired after receiving a note from George Hincapie, an American and close ally of Lance Armstrong. It all worked out: They married.

There have been instances of inappropri­ate behaviour involving the hostesses.

Five years ago, Peter Sagan pinched the bottom of Maja Leye, a hostess at the Tour of Flanders in Belgium, as she was kissing the winner.

Sagan, who has won five stages at this year’s Tour and holds the best sprinter’s jersey, apologized but was not penalized.

Regardless of how the hostesses are treated, Pooley said she could not understand why both men and women could not perform the job and why smart profession­al dress could not replace the evening gowns that are coloured to match the jerseys.

She said the podium program personifie­d ASO’s view of women. The organizati­on has refused to restore a full stage race for women.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Britain’s Geraint Thomas celebrates after the 11th stage of the Tour de France as so-called “podium girls” leave the platform. The role of the girls has been called into question.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Britain’s Geraint Thomas celebrates after the 11th stage of the Tour de France as so-called “podium girls” leave the platform. The role of the girls has been called into question.

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