Coronavirus resurgence in France
casts shadow on the Tour
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[August 26, 2020]
By Julien Pretot
NICE (Reuters) - Whether the Tour de
France will celebrate a winner this year is anyone's guess as the
world's greatest cycling race starts in Nice on Saturday amid fears
of a 'second wave' of COVID-19.
New coronavirus cases have been rising at an alarming rate in France
since the beginning of the month, casting a menacing shadow over the
re-scheduled 107th edition of the race.
Coronavirus tests will be conducted in a mobile unit throughout the
three-week race, which will go through southern, western and central
France, the Pyrenees and the Alps and include eight mountain stages.
Riders will be tested six and three days before the Grand Depart in
Nice. Any individuals who test positive along the race will be
isolated while contacts between the teams and Tour followers --
media, fans and organisers -- will be strictly restricted.
Teams have been warned by organisers that they would have to drop
out of the race should two of their members test positive or show
strong symptoms of COVID-19.
Testing riders regularly has been an expensive exercise for the
cycling outfits, with Groupama-FDJ doctor Jacky Maillot saying it
has cost them 130,000 euros ($154,000) for the season.
Fans on the road could also be a danger if they do not abide by the
protocols that have been put in place, although no rider scheduled
to take part in the Tour has tested positive since racing resumed
last month following a four-month suspension.
"So far cycling has not tripped on any obstacle," Tour director
Christian Prudhomme told Reuters.
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A person wearing a protective face mask walks past a sign ahead of
the Tour de France REUTERS/Stephane Mahe
"There will be police officers on the climbs, who will filter the
crowd and make sure fans are wearing masks since I'm confident all
the local authorities will make it mandatory."
Spectators along the road will have to adhere to the two-metre
social distancing rule and they will not be allowed anywhere near
the team buses at the start of the stages.
The Aug. 12-16 Criterium du Dauphine, which served as a dress
rehearsal for the Tour, was completed without a glitch but the scale
will be much bigger on the 21-stage Tour de France which concludes
in Paris on Sept. 20.
Prudhomme said the Tour would not be stopped if there were positive
cases in the peloton, leaving it instead to regional health agencies
to advise on the way to proceed.
"The Tour de France will not stop if there's a positive case, even
if nobody knows whether it will be completed or not," said
International Cycling Union (UCI) president David Lappartient.
(Reporting by Julien Pretot; Editing by Martyn Herman and Pritha
Sarkar)
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