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TOUR DE FRANCE

Anti-Covid protocol to be reintroduced for Tour de France – sources

This year's Tour de France will see the reintroduction of an anti-Covid protocol, including the wearing of masks and social distancing, sources said Sunday.

Anti-Covid protocol to be reintroduced for Tour de France - sources
Jumbo-Visma team's Danish rider Jonas Vingegaard arrives for a mandatory Covid-19 test after competing in the 15th stage of the 109th edition of the Tour de France 9n 2022. Photo: Marco BERTORELLO/AFP.

This year’s Tour de France will see the reintroduction of an anti-Covid protocol, including the wearing of masks and social distancing, sources said Sunday.

Organisers of the July 1-23 Tour, Amaury Sport Organisation (ASO), have not officially confirmed that a protocol will be put in place.

But a meeting Saturday with sporting directors from participating teams on the eve of the week-long Criterium du Dauphine allowed ASO to lay out its plans, according to various team members.

The protocol foresees a limited access to the finish area for teams while the wearing of masks will be mandatory for guests and journalists in the race bubble.

As for the riders, the idea is to limit to the maximum interactions outside the bubble, ruling out, for example, visits to restaurants or mixing with fans for selfies or autographs.

The protocol will be introduced in a bid to avoid a repeat of a Covid-19 outbreak at the Giro d’Italia in May, when then-leader and race favourite Remco Evenepoel was forced to withdraw after a positive test for coronavirus.

The opening stage of the Criterium du Dauphine on Sunday saw almost all riders wearing masks.

“It doesn’t bother me as long as we preserve our health. I prefer to put masks on and for everyone to be more relaxed rather than to have an outbreak and a lot of riders ruled out because of Covid,” Groupama-FDJ team leader David Gaudu told AFP.

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SPORT

‘Dazzling’ finish to new-look men’s Tour de France route

High altitude, an Italian debut in Florence and a finale on the French Riviera are on the itinerary of the 3,492km route for the 2024 Tour de France unveiled on Wednesday.

'Dazzling' finish to new-look men's Tour de France route

The route embarks from Florence on June 29 and features four high altitude finishes as the race crosses the Alps twice and squeezes in two time-trials, including a potential high drama final day run from Monaco to Nice on July 21.

It is the first time the race will not finish in Paris which is off limits as it prepares to host the Olympic Games.

 As spectacular as it is atypical, the route was revealed at a Gala overseen by Christian Prudhomme, president of the organisers ASO in front of almost 4,000 guests and many of the expected competitors, mayors from along the route and a large press pack at a conference centre in Paris.

The Florence start and Nice finish were already known, prompting much excitement about not only the first ever Grand Depart in Italy, but the race’s first ever finale outside Paris.

“It’s difficult to replace Paris, so what better scenery could we give than than a dazzling Monaco to Nice time-trial,” said Prudhomme.

Instead of the traditional last day parade along the Champs Elysees, fans can instead anticipate a potentially decisive individual time trial down the Riviera coastline and in the hills between Monaco and Nice.

The scenario brings to mind the 1989 edition when American rider Greg LeMond beat Laurent Fignon by eight seconds on a last day dash.

After the Florence start, the race takes in Rimini on the Adriatic coast before cutting across Italy via Bologna and Turin and into France via the Alps on stage four.

“The Tour has never climbed so high, so early,” said Prudhomme. “The panoramas in the high Alps are just splendid.”

Stage six will catch the eye of wine lovers as it takes in the “Route des Grands Crus” between Macon and Dijon while stage seven goes through the vineyards of Nuits-Saint-Georges in Bourgogne.

There are a series of stages for the one-day specialists and for the sprinters, but the southern Alps will likely mark the start of the final battle for the yellow jersey.

“Could this herald a duel playing out between two, three, or – let’s dream a little here – even four contenders,” Prudhomme said after the 2023 Tour was marked by the two way duel between Jonas Vingegaard and Tadej Pogacar.

A more generous than usual 60km total over the two time-trials will please the fast men such as Remco Evenepoel or Primoz Roglic.

The seven mountain stages, meanwhile, and four high altitude finales with the highest at 2802m on stage 19, will be very much to the liking of defending champion Vingegaard.

After Troyes in the Champagne region the race swoops south-east toward Pau and the Pyrenees, then heads west through Nimes back to the Alps and and the mouthwatering finale on the Riviera.

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