Tour de France may have to limit spectators at start due to coronavirus: Ministry

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The Tour de France may have to limit spectators during the first days of the race in order to comply with a ban on major events gathering more than 5,000 people before September, the French sports ministry said.

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said on Tuesday that major sporting and cultural events bringing together more than 5,000 participants could not be held before September as he announced plans for a gradual end of a nationwide coronavirus lockdown from May 11.

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Philippe did not specifically mention the Tour de France, which has been postponed to Aug. 29-Sept. 20 from its original June 27 start date.

“It is too early to say (how this will impact the Tour) but for now this does not imply a postponement nor a cancellation, but it does not rule out arrangements notably in terms of number of spectators,” a sports ministry spokeswoman said.

Britain's Chris Froome, wearing the overall leader's yellow jersey, listens to his race director as he crosses the finish line of the twentieth stage of the Tour de France cycling race over 110.5 kilometers (68.7 miles) with start in Modane and finish in Alpe d'Huez, France, Saturday, July 25, 2015. (AP)
Britain's Chris Froome, wearing the overall leader's yellow jersey, listens to his race director as he crosses the finish line of the twentieth stage of the Tour de France cycling race over 110.5 kilometers (68.7 miles) with start in Modane and finish in Alpe d'Huez, France, Saturday, July 25, 2015. (AP)

The Tour is the biggest event on-road cycling’s calendar and the sport’s most lucrative race by far. It was originally scheduled to take place from June 27-July 19.

That was knocked off course by the COVID-19 pandemic, which as of Monday had killed 23,293 people in France.

The coronavirus outbreak prompted French President Emmanuel Macron to impose a strict lockdown that includes a ban on any mass gatherings.

Earlier this month, the International Cycling Union (UCI) pushed the Tour back by two months.

With the ban on mass spectator events now due to run until September, Tour organizers could have to hold the first three days of the race with restrictions in place on the number of fans attending.

That would be unfamiliar for an event which prides itself on its unrestricted access for spectators, and where thousands of flag-waving fans, some of them in fancy dress, routinely line the route of Tour stages.

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