Vancouver Sun

WorldTour hit by splits over reform

- SAMUEL PETREQUIN

PARIS — The Tour de France and other major races are being pulled from the Internatio­nal Cycling Union’s elite calendar in 2017 in a renewed fight for control of the sport.

Amaury Sport Organisati­on, the organizer of the Tour, last month rejected the UCI’s proposed reforms for the 2017 WorldTour, and has the support of a majority of race organizers in its bid to be free of cycling’s governing body.

ASO said in a statement on Friday it told the UCI “it has opted for the registrati­on of its events on the Hors Classe calendar for season 2017,” meaning it will have more freedom to invite the teams of its choice to its events.

ASO described the UCI reform of the 2017 WorldTour as “a closed sport system.”

It fears the new plan will only reinforce the power of the most powerful teams, and ultimately lead to a franchise system.

“More than ever, ASO remains committed to the European model, and cannot compromise the values it represents: An open system giving first priority to the sporting criterion,” it said.

“It is therefore in this new context and within its historical events that ASO will continue to keep these values alive.”

The UCI said later Friday it remains determined to implement the reforms, which it “believes properly balances the interests of all those involved in profession­al cycling.”

ASO owns the Tour de France and classics such as Paris-Roubaix and Liege-Bastogne-Liege, as well as the one-week races Paris-Nice and the Criterium du Dauphine.

The UCI, which has been regularly at odds with Tour organizers for 15 years, announced in September reforms aimed at streamlini­ng the calendar and providing the top level of men’s cycling with a more stable operating environmen­t.

Among the measures planned are the implementa­tion of threeyear licences granted to a maximum of 18 WorldTour teams from 2017-19, and stricter antidoping protocols.

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