Everything done for Tour to be raced in safe conditions - Brailsford
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[August 28, 2020]
By Julien Pretot
NICE, France (Reuters) - Ineos
Grenadiers team principal Dave Brailsford believes everything has
been done so that the Tour de France can be raced in safe conditions
as the number of coronavirus cases in the country continues to
increase.
The number of daily cases in France reached a new post-lockdown high
of 6,111 on Thursday, fuelling speculation among fans and media that
the race, which starts on Saturday, would not reach Paris on Sept.
20.
"We can minimise risks quite significantly," Brailsford told a news
conference on Friday.
Riders and team staff members were tested for the coronavirus six
and three days before the start of the race.
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Four members of the Lotto Soudal team were sent home on Thursday
after a mechanic and a caretaker tested positive.
"We've been working with (organisers) Amaury Sport Organisation and
they really have done everything possible to make the event work,"
Brailsford said.
Yet he added: "We don't know, nobody knows if we're going to reach
Paris."
Organisers said last week that should two team members test positive
over a seven-day period, the whole outfit would be excluded from the
race, but sources told Reuters that the latest rule book they
received made no mention of that measure.
As a consequence, Lotto Soudal were not excluded from the event on
Thursday.
Teams, however, are used to operating in a sanitised environment and
in that respect, this year's race is not that different.
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Team INEOS team manager Dave Brailsford attends a news conference.
REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes
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"Before COVID came along we had our programme to minimise the risk
of injuries and illness," said Brailsford.
"It implied cleaning TV controllers (at the hotel), for instance. So
for us, the added element is that we need to wear a mask, it's not
such a big change."
Riders and staff will undergo regular tests and police officers will
be deployed on the climbs to make sure fans stay at a distance and
wear masks.
There is a question mark over the potential for 'false positive'
tests, which could result in a rider being sent home before a second
test can confirm the result.
Yet that is a risk teams need to accept, said Brailsford.
"We have to act quickly. It's not the best scenario but it's
realistic," he said.
Team Ineos Grenadiers' Egan Bernal of Colombia is the defending
champion of the Tour, which starts with a loop around Nice.
(Reporting by Julien Pretot; Editing by Toby Davis)
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