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Home»News»Biking Isn’t for the Faint-Hearted” – João Almeida Defends Race Restart After Risky Climate Neutralisation
News By Miles CooperMarch 13, 2025

Biking Isn’t for the Faint-Hearted” – João Almeida Defends Race Restart After Risky Climate Neutralisation

Biking Isn’t for the Faint-Hearted” – João Almeida Defends Race Restart After Risky Climate Neutralisation
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Biking Isn’t for the Faint-Hearted” – João Almeida Defends Race Restart After Risky Climate Neutralisation

Paris-Great level 4 winner João Almeida (UAE Group Emirates-XRG) has rejected a fashionable thought among his fellow riders that once dangerous climate had brought about the contest to be neutralised right through a brief length ahead of the end, the day’s racing will have to were cancelled completely . 

Among the ones opposing the continuation of level 4, as after all took place, used to be new race chief Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Hire a Motorbike). The Dane took 2d position on the Loge des Gardes summit in the back of Almeida. ‘Everybody used to be freezing, no person may just really feel their brakes,” he said later.

The stage was brought to a halt by race officials due to snow, hail and heavy rain then the breakaway and peloton were guided slowly under neutralised conditions until 28.8km to go, where racing resumed.

But despite admitting afterwards he was no fan of racing in cold weather, and saying jokingly that “you should not ask the winner that”, Almeida also insisted that he was pleased the stage had continued.

“The worst used to be over, there used to be no protection possibility, we even bogged down at the descent, so there used to be no reason why to prevent,” Almeida said, according to L’Équipe.

“Biking isn’t a game for softies, now and again it’s important to be difficult.”

Thierry Gouvenou, the member of the race organisation with special responsibility for safety and who played a key role in overseeing the neutralisation and subsequent restart, remained convinced that the right decision had been taken, too.

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“We briefly realised the level had to be neutralised, the brand new UCI protocol says that during circumstances of race protection, dangerous climate, it is a determination for the jury and the organiser,” Gouvenou told L’Équipe. “So we stopped the wreck, the counter-attack and the bunch.”

Riding through a relatively remote, rural part of France at some distance from the closest big cities of Lyon and Clermont Ferrand made logistics tougher and “We needed to carry the race to decrease altitudes as briefly as conceivable quite than simply go away the riders uncovered to excessive stipulations in the course of that.”

“Numerous them sought after to prevent, however preventing would have were given nowhere – there have been no buses or puts for them to take safe haven.” 

Het Laatste Nieuws also reported that Gouvenou had claimed there were a welter of different points of view overall for him to handle, and that “143 riders [equals] 143 other evaluations, after all. The truth is, we’ve had different editions of Paris-Great through which riders rode in 10 centimetres of snow, stipulations that have been some distance off what we had now. The elements stepped forward.”

Gouvenou added that when officials met with the riders’ representatives, Oliver Naesen (Decathlon AGR La Mondiale) and Matteo Trentin (Tudor Pro Cycling), there had been an agreement to continue the race.  

However, Naesen had a notably different recollection of events, telling L’Équipe that he had not had time either to discuss the proposal with Trentin before the decision to continue was taken, and that when he got to front of the race “the very first thing I heard used to be ‘the wreck’s again racing, we are beginning once more in two mins!’ 

“That was it. For me the race was ‘falsified’. Things can’t happen like that. We have to have a warning, be told what’s happening and then make the decision.”

Earlier race chief Matteo Jorgenson (Visma-Hire a Motorbike) had a identical criticism, pronouncing he did not know if the peloton used to be racing or neuralised after the restart.

Naesen agreed in the end that it were the suitable determination to neutralise the level.

“There was no alternative. If the police motorbike drivers, who are the best drivers who exist, couldn’t do that descent [where the weather was worst – Ed.] without falling off, what could a peloton of 150 riders do? It was just impossible to go down without an accident.”

In the meantime there are emerging issues that Saturday’s hardest mountain level of Paris-Great to Auron may well be badly suffering from snowstorm. Final 12 months the extraordinarily dangerous climate pressured organisers to switch an equivalent 149km level path to the cat.1 ascent Auron, preceded via the cat. 1 Col de l. a. Colmiane.

Final March the primary 89 kilometres of level 7 remained the similar, but it surely then completed at the Madone d’Utelle, a fifteen.3-kilometre ascent averaging 5.7%. As but, even though, ASO have now not commented on any conceivable direction transfer for 2025’s similar level.

Almeida bad biking climate neutralisation cycling defends João João Almeida neutralisation ParisNice race race restart restart softies stage weather winner
Miles Cooper
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