UCI Sports Director Peter van den Abeele admitted to Sporza.be on Wednesday that there were mistakes made in communicating the time gaps and breakaway information to the peloton in the road races at last week’s UCI Road World Championships.
After Remco Evenepoel soloed to victory in the elite men’s road race, riders complained that they had no idea what place they were sprinting for.
Michael Matthews (Australia) said he only found out minutes after the finish that he had earned the bronze medal.
“We were talking in the peloton, [asking] if we were racing for anything because we didn’t know where exactly anyone was,” Matthews said on Sunday. “We just kept catching bunches. Even in the last 500 metres of the race. I was thinking we weren’t even sprinting for top 10 and then I saw the French team lining up for Laporte and I jumped on the back of that and did my thing in the sprint.”
A similar problem cropped up in last year’s Olympic Games in Tokyo, where Annemiek van Vleuten (Netherlands) attacked thinking she was going for the gold medal only to find out after the finish she had finished second behind Austrian Anna Kiesenhofer.
Van den Abeele called the latest time board snafu in Wollongong a “learning experience”, saying they would look for more experienced time board operators or other communication options for future events.
“You have to make an evaluation after every race and possibly adjust things in the next race,” Van den Abeele told Sporza. “The functioning of the so-called ardoisier or sign man [a person on the back of a motorcycle who holds up a board with the time gap for riders – ed.] was not good at all in Australia. That is why we have already decided within the UCI to recruit people with experience for the upcoming World Championships.
“We could ask people from, say, the Tour [de France], Giro [d’Italia] or Tour of Flanders and no longer outsource it to the local organizations or federations. We want to take everything in our hands to avoid such things.”
There are other options for helping riders understand the race situation in the absence of race radios, which are banned at Worlds and the Olympics.
“We could also increase communication by using electronic signs in the feed zones, where the riders can see who is where in the race. By the way, this is already done under the finish arch, where the difference is displayed between the leader and the riders.”
The UCI is not considering to allow riders to have radio communication with their team cars…
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at CyclingNews RSS Feed…