I think race commissaires have a bigger role to play, particularly in professional racing with television coverage and replays. If teams and riders are aware there are greater consequences for dangerous riding it will help encourage self policing. I lean towards this more than drastically reducing peloton sizes even if logically that should have a positive effect.
~90 riders just doesn't look as impressive on television for global viewers. And there will be more complaints from fans where their favorite teams or riders are excluded.
The 2025 TdF had 23 teams represented - each with 8 riders. Below are typical numbers. I added two options for a smaller peloton. One halving the teams and the other reducing riders per team. The latter would not work from a racing perspective.
| Event | Number of teams | Riders per team | Total starters |
| 2021 TdF | 23 | 8 | 184 |
| 2022-24 TdF | 22 | 8 | 176 |
| 2025 TdF | 23 | 8 | 184 |
| Option 1 | 11 | 8 | 88 |
| Option 2 | 22 | 4 | 88 |
I agree that commissaires and enforcement matter, but your post seriously overstates what “stricter consequences” can achieve and understates how much the crash problem is built into the incentive structure.
The core problem is not a lack of awareness. Riders already know which situations are dangerous. That does not lead to “self policing” today. the reason for this is that when risk rises, the incentive to fight for position usually rises too. If you know a narrow bridge, a corner, or crosswinds are coming, you do not calmly drift back and hope for the best. You move up because being behind is exactly how you get caught in the crash or the split. That is why the peloton fights hardest precisely when the road gets worse. The behavior you want is the opposite of what the incentives reward.
So unless you are proposing commissaires can consistently identify and punish “dangerous positioning battles” in real time, you are basically asking for a cultural change that has failed to materialize for decades. The sport already has rules. The problem is that riders cannot rationally rely on everyone else to behave cooperatively when the cost of being passive is immediate and personal.
What evidence is there for that claim that 90 rider peloton is not impressive. You just assert this? Because the visible pattern in the sport points the other way. The most talked about and most highly rated racing is often the most selective racing, where the effective peloton is smaller. Mountain stages after the selection, punchy finales, the last 100 km of Roubaix and Flanders, and the decisive phase after Cipressa and Poggio in Sanremo. No one watches those and thinks “this is underwhelming because there are only 60 to 90 riders left in the front group.” On the contrary.
If anything, the least engaging days for many viewers are exactly the ones with the largest intact bunch: long flat transition stages that end in a nervous mass sprint. Those are also the days with the most chaotic high speed positioning and the biggest multi rider pileups. So the “TV impressiveness” argument reads like a gut feeling, not an empirically grounded point.
Your two options are strawmen. Presenting only two ways to get to 88 riders is not an argument against reducing field size. It is an argument against two extreme designs you selected yourself.
Nobody serious is saying “halve the number of teams to 11” or “keep 22 teams but slash them to 4 riders.” Of course those are awkward.
The obvious middle ground is what many people are actually advocating: a modest reduction that keeps the sport recognizable while lowering the crash pressure. Something like 14 to 16 teams with 6 riders for the biggest events. That preserves team tactics, leadership protection, and race identity, while materially reducing the number of bodies involved in the same fight for space.
The key mistake in the “commissaires instead of peloton size” framing is that you treat the problem as primarily moral or disciplinary. It is primarily structural. 200 starved dogs going 60 kph into a tight corner in france and belgium...
Crashes are not just individual bad decisions, but 180 riders make more mistakes than 90 riders.. These are events in a dense, high speed system with limited space. Field size affects four things at once:
- exposure: fewer riders at risk
- interactions: fewer overlapping lines, fewer simultaneous move ups
- cascade potential: when something happens, fewer riders are available to be swept into the domino crash
- Race dynamics: the chance of big bunches being together in a race at all. The cost of being at the back of them. The reward for taking risks to get to the front. And so on.
You do not need perfect enforcement to get these benefits.
Yes, some fans will complain if their team is excluded and riders will worry about fewer jobs. Those are real costs and they should be addressed transparently. But they do not make the safety argument wrong. The correct debate is whether the safety gains justify the changes, and how to implement them without damaging the sport’s ecosystem.
Also, it is not obvious that sponsor visibility suffers, rather the exact opposite. A smaller field can mean each team gets more airtime and clearer exposure, not less, and they will pay a lot less since 60 % of their riders on the roster don't even do the big races with attention!!!. And a safer product is easier to sell long term.
Sigh.