Rider safety, particularly on downhill finishes, was one of the topics du jour in the build-up to this year’s Tour de France. Three stages feature major descents in the run in to the finish, with stage 14’s run-in to Morzine, and stage 17 to Courchevel likely to be raced at speed.
All of this is happening after 26-year-old Gino Mäder died last month after crashing at high-speed on a descent at the Tour de Suisse, an event which brought safety issues to the forefront of everyone’s mind
Speaking at a press conference in Bilbao ahead of the race, the Tour’s director, Christian Prudhomme, said that Mäder’s death was a “drama that we absolutely don’t want to be repeated”.
To that end, “new” safety initiatives will therefore be used at this year’s race, where over 5,000 “dangerous spots” will be marked for the riders. The initiatives include noise-producing road signs, re-tarmacked roads and 30-metre-long safety mattresses, which will be installed on the descent of the Col de la Loze on stage 17.
However, not all the riders are impressed by the measures, with some wanting finishing descents taken out all together.
“I didn’t see any new measures they added, from what I can tell,” Movistar’s Matteo Jorgenson said ahead of stage one. “They’re talking a lot about safety, and I think that’s good, that we talk about it, but I haven’t seen any new measures particularly. Honestly, ASO races are much safer for me than other races, I always like racing them. The safety here is the same it has always been.
“I think they should take them [downhill finishes] away. We saw what happened a few weeks ago on one. It’s a part of cycling, but one life lost is too much. We’re all willing to take risks to win the race. If the route is planned that way, it puts us all in a bit of danger. I hope they would take those out, make them safer. I would prefer to finish on top of the climb.
Jorgenson crashed on the run-in to the line on stage 16 of last year’s race to Foix, which also saw a finish down in a valley after a climb, similar circumstances to stages 5, 14 and 17 this year.
“There’s always a guy who is slightly off the back over the top, or someone off the front,” he continued. “I experienced it last year myself when you’re in the position to win a stage, you’ll take all the risks possible. I crashed on the downhill, it wasn’t that bad for me, but it could have been if it was a slightly faster downhill. We’re bike racers, and when you put a finish line at the bottom, we’re…