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  Sports   In Other sports  27 Mar 2020  No decision yet on Tour de France amid virus

No decision yet on Tour de France amid virus

AP
Published : Mar 27, 2020, 9:54 am IST
Updated : Mar 27, 2020, 9:54 am IST

In no other sport or event do fans come so close to athletes as in the Tour de France

2018 Tour de France winner Great Britain's Christopher Froome. AFP Photo
 2018 Tour de France winner Great Britain's Christopher Froome. AFP Photo

Paris: 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 three-week showpiece and getting within touching distance of the riders.

And yet, unlike almost every other major sporting event this 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 that 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 TV rights and media broadcasting," Maracineanu told France Bleu radio on Wednesday evening. "Everyone has understood the benefits of staying at home and prioritizing 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, which was first held in 1903, is synonymous with images of thousands of crammed-in spectators stuck together like glue 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 spectators normally amass behind steel barriers along the Champs-Elysees: several banks deep and shoulder to shoulder, with fast-turning heads catching a glimpse of the winner flashing past.

Tour organizers declined to comment Thursday when asked whether plans to host the race as planned this 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 the second world war. It was also stopped during WWI.

Five-time Tour champion Bernard Hinault -- the last Frenchman to win the race -- 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 Le Parisien 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.''

Tags: tour de france, covid 19
Location: France, Île-de-France, Paris