Arab News

AlUla’s partnershi­p with GreenEDGE looking to transform Saudi cycling culture

Saudi royal commission’s sponsorshi­p of Team BikeExchan­ge will run until 2023

- Ali Khaled Riyadh

When the Tour de France 2021 started on Saturday, there would have been extra interest from one corner of Saud Arabia in particular.

Only days earlier, the Kingdom’s Royal Commission for AlUla (RCU) had announced it was partnering with GreenEDGE Cycling, also known as Team BikeExchan­ge, ahead of the sport’s most famous tour, which runs until July 18.

For the RCU, it was the latest sporting tie-up aiming to attract visitors to the heritage and cultural destinatio­n.

Philip Jones, the RCU’s chief management and marketing officer, said: “It was our desire to position AlUla as a sports hub for northweste­rn Saudi Arabia and we obviously believed cycling is a good fit for the destinatio­n.

“We have amazing landscapes, beautiful backdrops where you can do mountain biking and desert biking, but you can also do some very significan­t road biking, because we have a vast network of roads and very little traffic, so it lends itself to a cycling culture.”

By raising the profile of cycling in the Kingdom, Jones is hoping the RCU can attract young Saudi men and women to the sport, and to AlUla’s desert trails.

“It’s a great sport for the destinatio­n in terms of the profile of people who watch profession­al cycling. They tend to be frequent travelers, and they are also folks who are looking for adventure and outdoor experience­s.

“So, it’s something that aligns nicely with our brand, and it’s also a way of introducin­g the sport of cycling to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia at a profession­al level because I think there is tremendous potential for it,” he added.

With more Saudis taking up the sport, the aim will be to produce profession­al riders down the line.

Jones said: “What I like about the partnershi­p with GreenEDGE is that they have a profession­al men’s team and profession­al women’s team, and they were telling me about their young new star rider who is from Trinidad and Tobago,

not exactly a cycling hotspot.

“If we can provide the same opportunit­y for young Saudi cyclists, both male and female, to ultimately become part of a profession­al team one day, I think that is something that we’d be very excited about, and very proud to do.

“The more people who are exposed to cycling and fitness through cycling, the more popular the sport will be in Saudi Arabia,” he added. Jones pointed out that cycling facilities in AlUla were set to proliferat­e in the coming years, with a 26-kilometer track due to open in October.

“We’re putting the infrastruc­ture in to allow people who come to AlUla to do some significan­t riding in a beautiful setting,” he said.

“One of the exciting things for us is that we’ll host a training camp with profession­als such as Simon Yates who won Vuelta a Espana and came in third in Giro d’Italia, with the other profession­al team members, men and women, and

they’ll do cycling camps, training tips, nutrition, and coaching so we can open it up to a limited number of Saudi cyclists.”

That the RCU’s announceme­nt of the partnershi­p took place on the eve of the Tour de France 2021 was no coincidenc­e either.

“There are 2,000 journalist­s

covering the Tour de France. It’s an opportunit­y to get maximum visibility, it’s exciting for us, and it has been so well received,” Jones added.

“The team members are so excited, and they’ve been posting on social media. Simon said he wants to come and visit AlUla as

soon as the season is over because it’s exactly what he’s looking for, adventure and the unknown. It really helps us from a destinatio­n marketing perspectiv­e to have multiple facets to this partnershi­p.

“GreenEDGE is a great team, and the brand associatio­n with us is very positive. And we share the values, sustainabi­lity, commitment to female empowermen­t and bringing young people into the sport.”

The rise in cycling popularity elsewhere in the Gulf has already meant several regional tours and Jones is confident there will be more in the future.

“The Bahrain team is here, and the UAE team is just across town,” said Jones from the French city of Brest.

“There is a recognitio­n that the Middle East is a new cycling hotspot. And I think that AlUla is the first in the Kingdom to announce a partnershi­p that will hopefully lead to other opportunit­ies to bring profession­al tours, stage racing, as well as Grand Tour type racing throughout the Middle East where we can partner with Bahrain, the UAE, and Saudi Arabia and put together a major race.”

Thanks to its stunning desert terrain, AlUla has in recent years hosted several high-profile sporting events such as Extreme E rally racing and desert polo.

“As you bring different events, you target different segments of the traveling public. Someone who is interested in desert polo is very different to someone who is interested in profession­al cycling, or a horse race, or camel race, or mountain bike race, or an eco-trail ride.

“One of the advantages we have in AlUla is that we have this amazing natural beauty and it’s the perfect setting for multiple sports and I think our goal is to position AlUla as one of the sport hubs for Saudi Arabia because we have this opportunit­y to capitalize on that,” Jones added.

 ?? RCU ?? The number of cycling rails and tracks are set to grow in AlUla over the coming years, as a result of the RCU-Green Edge partnershi­p.
RCU The number of cycling rails and tracks are set to grow in AlUla over the coming years, as a result of the RCU-Green Edge partnershi­p.

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