The Guardian (USA)

Women’s Tour ‘impossible to deliver’ as organisers admit defeat over 2023 event

- PA Media

The Women’s Tour will not take place this summer after the organising company admitted defeat in its attempts to find the funding required to stage the five-day Women’s WorldTour race in June.

Last month Sweetspot announced a five-day route for the popular race, down from the usual six, but warned it needed to find £500,000 in new sponsorshi­p in order to go ahead – even launching a crowdfundi­ng campaign to try to spur interest. It set a soft deadline of Easter to make progress before it would need to start paying deposits on some of the primary expenses, mainly accommodat­ion at this point, but has now announced that the target is for the race to return for its 10th anniversar­y edition in 2024.

“Owing to a combinatio­n of increased running costs (approximat­ely 20% higher in comparison to the 2022 race) and a reduced level of commercial support, it has proved impossible to deliver the event that was proposed for

June,” a statement said.

The crowdfundi­ng campaign raised over £18,000 from more than 500 individual­s, with pledges ranging from £5 to £1,000, but it did not lead to the bigger deals Sweetspot needed and the funding gap remained at about £400,000 when the plug was pulled. The crowdfundi­ng pledges will now be refunded.

The loss of the race, which counts Lizzie Deignan, Marianne Vos and Elisa Longo Borghini among its former winners, is the biggest hit yet for a domestic scene that has absorbed a number of blows this year. The domestic Tour Series has not taken place while there has been a downscalin­g of British Cycling’s national road series. The UCI Continenta­l team AT85 Pro Cycling abruptly closed their doors this month.

Deignan, a two-time winner of the Women’s Tour, last month said the postponeme­nt of the race would represent “a huge loss” for both the domestic and internatio­nal calendar, saying she had been targeting the event in training as she plans her return after giving birth for a second time.

Sweetspot said the Tour of Britain, the eight-day men’s race due to take place in the first week of September, is still on track, with details of the route expected next month.

“While not immune to the economic environmen­t and same commercial pressures faced by the Women’s Tour and Tour Series, we remain confident that the Tour of Britain (Sunday 3 to Sunday 10 September) will run as

planned,” the statement added. “This is, in part, due to a number of commercial agreements already in place that are unique to this event. Plans to launch the race in the coming weeks are unaffected by this announceme­nt.”

This year’s edition of the Women’s Tour was due to start in Stratford-uponAvon

on 7 June and include a stage in the North Yorkshire Moors, the furthest north it would have ever ventured, before a final-day circuit race in Birmingham city centre.

Sweetspot have already announced that next year’s race is due to start in Wales as part of a long-term agreement with the Welsh government, with talks due to be held with those local authoritie­s which have missed out this year on whether they would like to host a stage in the future.

 ?? ?? The peloton passes through the village of Hook Norton during the Women's Tour in 2022. Photograph: Justin Setterfiel­d/Getty Images
The peloton passes through the village of Hook Norton during the Women's Tour in 2022. Photograph: Justin Setterfiel­d/Getty Images

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