Hawke's Bay Today

Tour de France holds out as fan-free event mooted

- Cycling Parisien Le

Perhaps no other sports event puts so many fans in such close contact with athletes as the Tour de France, with swarms of people clogging city streets, winding roads and soaring mountain passes during cycling’s threeweek showpiece and getting within touching distance of the riders.

And yet, unlike almost every other major sporting event this Northern Hemisphere summer, including the Tokyo Olympics, the Tour has yet to be called off despite the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic.

For now, the start date remains June 27 — and there is a possibilit­y the race could be held without any fans lining the course.

France’s Sports Minister Roxana Maracinean­u said the Tour can still exist in a time of social distancing.

“The economic model of the Tour de France does not rely on ticket sales but on television rights and media broadcasti­ng,” said Maracinean­u. “Everyone has understood the benefits of staying at home and prioritisi­ng the televised spectacle. In the end, it would not be so disadvanta­geous because we could watch it on television.”

But it would be a Tour unlike any other. The race, first held in 1903, is synonymous with images of thousands of spectators crammed together on winding ascents up the Alps, cheering on the riders as they go past.

On the final day of the race, a ceremonial ride into Paris, legions of yellow-jersey wearing fans normally amass behind steel barriers along the Champs-E´lyse´es: several banks deep and shoulder to shoulder, with fast-turning heads catching a glimpse of the winner flashing past.

Millions watch each year’s race in a festive atmosphere stretching across all areas of France. This year’s event has 21 stages, where fans traditiona­lly stand watching all along the way, and the longest is 218km.

Thousands of police officers are needed to keep crowds under control and help negotiate safe passage for riders from 22 teams, with several often sharing hotels.

Enforcing a lockdown everywhere along the route for three weeks seems difficult — if not impossible — given groups of people could appear from anywhere at any point.

One of cycling’s big attraction­s is that fans get so close to the riders, running alongside them up climbs and sometimes giving them a helpful push in the back on the toughest ones.

Sometimes they get much too close.

Two years ago, former champion Vincenzo Nibali crashed into a police motorbike on a narrow street lined with spectators and later abandoned the race. Fourtime champion Chris Froome has been spat on and had urine thrown on him.

Maracinean­u is in regular talks with Amaury Sport Organisati­on — the Tour organiser — but says it’s “still too early” to predict what will happen.

On her Twitter account, she added: “There is a time for everything. Right now, we have a more urgent battle to fight.”

This week, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee postponed the Tokyo Games to next year. Likewise football’s European Championsh­ips, to be held in several countries, moved to 2021. Another major cycling race, the Giro d’Italia in May, was postponed this month.

Organisers of Wimbledon meet next week to decide on this year’s tennis tournament, scheduled for

June 29-July 12. The French Open, normally in late May and June, is pushed back to September 20-October 4.

Tour organisers declined to comment yesterday when asked whether plans to host the race this northern summer have changed, or whether a race without fans could be an option.

The last time the Tour was not held was in 1946, with the nation emerging from World War II. It was also stopped during World War I.

Five-time Tour champion Bernard Hinault — the last Frenchman to win the race, in 1985 — cautioned against it going ahead amid the uncertaint­y of how long the epidemic will last.

“There’s a crazy illness which is spreading and, if it happens to last months, we shouldn’t hesitate to call it off,” he said in an interview with French daily

on March 18.

“We should ask ourselves if it’s reasonable to allow people to go out on the roads if there’s still a risk . . . The Tour de France is a fantastic party. But it’s less important than life.”

 ?? PHOTO / AP ?? Spectators cheer 2018 winner Britain's Geraint Thomas as he climbs the Galibier pass during the eighteenth stage of the Tour de France cycling race between Embrun and Valloire last year.
PHOTO / AP Spectators cheer 2018 winner Britain's Geraint Thomas as he climbs the Galibier pass during the eighteenth stage of the Tour de France cycling race between Embrun and Valloire last year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand