Cycling was licking its wounds on Monday and wondering “where next?” after a chaotic final day of the Vuelta a Espana which saw the concluding stage called off 50km shy of the Spanish capital and the winner crowned in a hotel car park.
The three-week stage race, one of the three Grand Tours at the pinnacle of the sport, was repeatedly disrupted by pro-Palestinian demonstrators fired up by the presence in the race of the Israel-Premier Tech (Israel PT) team.
A Spanish government spokesman said that 100,000 people had taken part in the final-stage protests, which followed other pro-Palestinian protests during the race.
Photo: EPA
The stage was stopped early. The winner Jonas Vingegaard had to make do with an improvised podium. For the International Cycling Union (UCI), the sport’s governing body, and race organizers, the activists highlighted the vulnerability of races, which stretch across long distance and take place on public roads with free access for spectators. Some fear for future races, notably next year’s Tour de France which begins with three stages on Spanish soil, starting in Barcelona.
“Let’s hope that the conflict in Gaza is resolved by the time the Tour de France comes around,” Vuelta director Javier Guillen said.
It was not the first race targeted this year. In May, pro-Palestinian protesters stretched a rope across the road shortly before the finish of the 15th stage of the Giro d’Italia in Naples, Italy. In July, a man wearing a T-shirt reading: “Israel out of the Tour” disrupted the finish of the 11th stage of the Tour de France in Toulouse.
However, these were isolated incidents, nowhere near the mass demonstrations in Spain, a country where the Palestinian cause is popular.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, who has talked of “the genocide in Gaza,” even expressed “deep admiration” for the protesters and called for a sporting ban on Israel, a position which incurred the wrath of the UCI on Monday who said it “calls into question Spain’s ability to host major international sporting events.”
However, there are fears within the peloton that the Vuelta has set a precedent.
“It’s clear for everyone that a cycling race can be used as an effective stage for protests and next time it will only get worse, because someone allowed it to happen and looked the other way,” experienced Polish rider Michal Kwiatkowski on Sunday evening wrote on social media.
“It’s very bad for cycling that the protesters managed to get what they wanted,” Kwiatkowski said. “We cannot pretend that nothing happened.”
The Tour de France, the highest profile race in the world, would make an obvious target in July next year, but the Israel-Premier Tech team, 13th in the UCI rankings, is automatically invited to all the most prestigious races on the calendar.
It dropped the word “Israel” from its shirts during the Vuelta for several stages, but categorically refused to throw in the towel. Several riders on other squads called for the withdrawal of the team, which was created by Israeli-Canadian billionaire Sylvan Adams, who likes to describe himself as an ambassador for Israel. The race director also suggested that such a withdrawal would help calm the situation, while adding that was a decision for the UCI.
“We alerted the UCI to the situation. They took a position through a statement to keep Israel-PT in the race,” Guillen said on Monday.
In its statement, the UCI expressed its “total disapproval of and deep concern” about the events that marked this year’s Vuelta, calling them a “serious violation of the Olympic Charter and the fundamental principles of sport.”
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