Women's Cycling
Jul. 22nd, 2018 07:52 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
(In which I have similar problems to
ioplokon but about women's cycling.)
There is no women's Tour de France. I wish there was. I am 100% behind most of the many and varied attempts to get one.
But the whole "x amateur women are riding it to try and get one" that's getting all the media attention this year strikes me as the worst possible way.
Partly this is the media's fault. The first week of the Tour is the one with all the boring flat stages, so the media look for anything they can to write about. And this is an interesting thing to write about.
Unfortunately, it means that they aren't covering the Giro Rosa*. Given the Giro is the only one of the grand tours that actually has a women's race, this is frustrating. Especially as it was such a good race. Annemiek van Vleuten is just amazing.
Compare the coverage of the amateur race with the coverage of La Course, where the the UCI Pro women's teams race the most interesting stage of the Tour in the morning before the men. La Course is down to one stage which is annoying but hopefully the joy of crowd might convince them to give it a second stage again.
Also, see, I told you van Vleuten was amazing.
Another annoying thing is the amount of face time Skoda are getting for backing the amateur race. If you've got that much money, Skoda, you can fund a goddamn women's pro tour race! (Sorry!)
The other thing that annoyed me was the people who were up in arms about the lack of women's Tour but were willing to ignore the Giro Rosa. It could be because the media don't cover the Giro Rosa so people don't know about it. Or it could be people just enjoy getting enraged without doing some background research.
I think we're more likely to get a women's Tour if we makes the most of the excellent riders we have now. That wil make it clear to sponsors that they can get recognition and sales money (or possibly tax write-offs) by sponsoring them or a race. This involves building on the successes of the Giro Rosa, and races like it. To an extent, we are getting there, just look at the number of UCI pro women's teams. Also look at how many of them attached to men's teams, suggesting a more stable funding stream.
Build from what we've got works better than build from nothing.
*The pink thing isn't pinkification, it's the colour of the original race sponsors so the men's jersey is also the pink jersey.
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
There is no women's Tour de France. I wish there was. I am 100% behind most of the many and varied attempts to get one.
But the whole "x amateur women are riding it to try and get one" that's getting all the media attention this year strikes me as the worst possible way.
Partly this is the media's fault. The first week of the Tour is the one with all the boring flat stages, so the media look for anything they can to write about. And this is an interesting thing to write about.
Unfortunately, it means that they aren't covering the Giro Rosa*. Given the Giro is the only one of the grand tours that actually has a women's race, this is frustrating. Especially as it was such a good race. Annemiek van Vleuten is just amazing.
Compare the coverage of the amateur race with the coverage of La Course, where the the UCI Pro women's teams race the most interesting stage of the Tour in the morning before the men. La Course is down to one stage which is annoying but hopefully the joy of crowd might convince them to give it a second stage again.
Also, see, I told you van Vleuten was amazing.
Another annoying thing is the amount of face time Skoda are getting for backing the amateur race. If you've got that much money, Skoda, you can fund a goddamn women's pro tour race! (Sorry!)
The other thing that annoyed me was the people who were up in arms about the lack of women's Tour but were willing to ignore the Giro Rosa. It could be because the media don't cover the Giro Rosa so people don't know about it. Or it could be people just enjoy getting enraged without doing some background research.
I think we're more likely to get a women's Tour if we makes the most of the excellent riders we have now. That wil make it clear to sponsors that they can get recognition and sales money (or possibly tax write-offs) by sponsoring them or a race. This involves building on the successes of the Giro Rosa, and races like it. To an extent, we are getting there, just look at the number of UCI pro women's teams. Also look at how many of them attached to men's teams, suggesting a more stable funding stream.
Build from what we've got works better than build from nothing.
*The pink thing isn't pinkification, it's the colour of the original race sponsors so the men's jersey is also the pink jersey.
no subject
Date: 2018-07-22 08:45 pm (UTC)I definitely think there is a large barrier in terms of just knowing where to look for stuff, but I know Sarah Connelley & the Women's Pro Cycling Podcast make posts about where to find every race so like... it's not like the info isn't out there...
The big proble w/ women's races in France is the ASO from what I've heard. They just like, don't give a shit about women's bike racing in France (which is shameful since PFP is more promising than most of the French male juniors...)
no subject
Date: 2018-07-28 09:53 am (UTC)Theoretically the ASO is get roundable, it just involves someone putting up the money, either to convince them to run the races or to run the races and convince the ASO to be chill. It might almost be worth finding cities that didn't get to be on the TDF route in a given year and racing round them so that it really is separate but following a similar path.
no subject
Date: 2018-09-21 05:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2018-09-22 09:28 pm (UTC)It shows that like, British Cycling is willing to improve (tho their track record w/ para-cycling is still shameful); the UCI is willing to improve (tho did anything come of that report that found a significant number of male and female cyclists were victims of economic and often sexual abuse?); it's really the ASO that is holding shit back in terms of women's cycling in France.