Petition to ASO to allow women's teams to race the Tour

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Sep 8, 2010
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Bavarianrider said:
How good are women's cyclist actually?

Normally in most Pro Sporst the best women are roughly as good as the best 16/17 year old guys, at best.

Is cycling any different?

Don't think so.

Remember Karsten Braasch? Highest ranking in ATP 38, he beat Serena and Venus Williams 6:1 and 6:2 with no problems at all.

Men and women sport on a professional level are two complete different worlds.
 
Lupetto said:
Don't think so.

Remember Karsten Braasch? Highest ranking in ATP 38, he beat Serena and Venus Williams 6:1 and 6:2 with no problems at all.

Men and women sport on a professional level are two complete different worlds.

Yeah that's what i said. The very best women are normally on the level of the best 16 year old boys. That's why i consider this idea of women racing in the men's field pretty ridicilous.
 
Jul 19, 2010
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I gotta ask, how did women's tennis become so successful? Can Cycling follow a similar formula to promote women's cycling?
 
Aug 6, 2011
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Bavarianrider said:
That's why i consider this idea of women racing in the men's field pretty ridicilous.

If you would read cafully, then you would notice that the petition is not about mixed gender races, but about the introduction of women's editions of big races with similair parcours and duration. So a true, three weeks women's Tour de France. Marianne Vos even wants the maximun stage length for women's racing to be either lifted or extended to about 180-200km.
 
Jul 22, 2011
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Bavarianrider said:
Yeah that's what i said. The very best women are normally on the level of the best 16 year old boys. That's why i consider this idea of women racing in the men's field pretty ridicilous.

In Athletics (Track and Field) it's younger than that, boys are able to beat some of the women's world records as young as 13 and 14-15 is typical. Only in the marathon does the age rise to 19.

http://age-records.125mb.com/

Pete
 
Bavarianrider said:
How good are women's cyclist actually?

Normally in most Pro Sporst the best women are roughly as good as the best 16/17 year old guys, at best.

Is cycling any different?

Lupetto said:
Don't think so.

Remember Karsten Braasch? Highest ranking in ATP 38, he beat Serena and Venus Williams 6:1 and 6:2 with no problems at all.

Men and women sport on a professional level are two complete different worlds.
In cycling, there are few representative races. However, the Tour of California, and formerly Romandie, held ITTs over the same course, which allows us to judge a bit more accurately. Please note that while the Tour of California field for the men isn't super strong, the women's isn't either, with only a handful of top North American names participating. Nevertheless we get some good level pros at both.

2013 (31,6km):
Men's winner: Tejay van Garderen in 48'52
Women's winner: Evelyn Stevens in 55'49
= women's winner 14,22% slower than men's winner

2012 (29,7km):
Men's winner: Dave Zabriskie in 35'59
Women's winner: Kristin Armstrong in 39'59
= women's winner 11,12% slower than men's winner

2011 (24km)
Men's winner: Dave Zabriskie in 30'36
Women's winner: Kristin Armstrong in 34'29
= women's winner 12,69% slower than men's winner

I've only used the winner's times as the women's race is a standalone event and therefore there is no reason for them not to go all out, whereas many men racing as domestiques or domestic pros in the biggest race of their season may take it easy in the time trial to be fresh for working for teammates, or getting in breakaways, etc.

This places cycling around about the same area as you might expect. At the 2012 Olympics, women swimmers were, on average, 10,1% slower than their male counterparts, while female track and field athletes' performances were on average 13,3% behind those of the men, but with the biggest disparities coming in field events (especially the pole vault, but with an underperforming Isinbayeva, who is clearly head and shoulders above her competition most of the time there, the disparity may be unrepresentatively large). At the 2010 Olympics female biathletes were 10,1% slower on the trails than the men, but on the harder Khanty-Mansiysk trails in the 2012 World Championships this increased to 13,3%, same as the track and field.

The same is borne out in the cycling, with the women's winner getting closest to their male counterpart on the flattest, most straightforward course (Bakersfield 2012), while losing more time and with the greatest disparity over the hillier, tougher 2013 course.

To extrapolate that, 10% slower than Tony Martin at the 2012 World Championships ITT would place the theoretical female athlete 49th, but only 35th in 2011 on the flatter København course, whereas 15% slower would place them 59th. However, that would be assuming that the women would be able to retain the same level of endurance as the men over the longer distance than the other compared events, which would only really be realistic if the women were able to race the same distances as the men on a regular basis - even in the biathlon and cross-country skiing (and track cycling for that matter) mentioned, the women race different distances to the men, so the 10-15% difference may tend upwards as distances are increased.
TheEnoculator said:
I gotta ask, how did women's tennis become so successful? Can Cycling follow a similar formula to promote women's cycling?

Almost all of the sports where women's competition is held in high regard are sports where both sexes participate as part of the same event. While the women's and men's tennis competitions have their own events, all the biggest events have both men's and women's competitions. Athletics has had men's and women's events as part of the same meet for a long time. Same goes for swimming. Most wintersports have both men's and women's competitions as part of the same events, and successful female competitors get every bit as much attention as their male counterparts. Obviously ski jumping and Nordic combined are exceptions here, but it holds for Alpine, Cross Country and biathlon, in all of which you could argue that the most successful women are as well known if not more well known than the men. There is much less opposition to women's races in track cycling, where they participate in the same meets as the men, than there is in road cycling. Maybe that's because events are faster and exciting, maybe that's because the reduced fields mask the lack of depth, maybe that's because track cycling is a very niche sport, I don't know.

But what I do know is that in sports where the women's game is better developed, the need to compare them to the men is less. The median skier in men's biathlon (I use biathlon as the example because I know more about it than, say, tennis, and unlike, say, XC skiing, there is a fairly comparable level of depth to the competition, whereas women's XC skiing is perhaps more like women's cycling in that there are only a handful of truly elite talents who win everything which can understandably lead to disinterested fans, even if the prestige factor is far in excess of that for women's cycling) last year skied around 25km/h, the fastest women's skiers are just over 23km/h. But people don't see the need to use this to devalue the achievements of a Neuner or a Berger, because women's biathlon is competitive enough that there is enough depth to judge them relative to their competition without recourse to the men's capabilities.

That simply doesn't exist in (road) cycling. There is not a strong enough audience for women's cycling to justify enough having been broadcast to allow people to have enough knowledge of the péloton to judge it on its own merits, and therefore the only recourse we have by means of judging the performance levels is to compare it to the better known men's events. And with a smaller péloton, with only a few real specialists, few races that enable specialisation and - let's be clear, this matters - less impressive visual presentation (sponsors, helicams, on-screen graphics, and yes, fans), it's no wonder that women's cycling comes off badly in that comparison in a way that women's tennis, skiing, athletics, swimming etc - which often appear in front of the same fans as the men's events - don't.
 
Jun 1, 2012
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TheEnoculator said:
I gotta ask, how did women's tennis become so successful? Can Cycling follow a similar formula to promote women's cycling?

short skirts :eek:

Anyway the fanbase and $$ just isnt there to support womans cycling shown live on tv. Apart from a few diehard cycling fans noone really cares about the results of womans races
 
Unfortunately, the womens' teams would absolutely get destroyed by the mens field. It would be an embarrassment and that won't help anyone.

The problem is that the sport just hasn't broken into the female ranks enough to gain a following of the top female athletes. So other than 1% of female pros, the women just aren't even close to on the same level and frankly even that top 1% can't compete closely to the top 1% male. The sport needs promotion and I think this is a good topic to discuss. But it needs promotion inside their ranks not by mixing with the men.

The problem is it costs a tremendous amount of money and logistics to put on a race like the TDF. Unfortunately the female athletes need to earn that sponsorship before anyone is going to promote this. It is going to be a long grind of a process before this happens. The key is the sponsors putting the money on the table. If the money is there the athletes will flock to the sport. From there, anything could happen.
 
Aug 16, 2011
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offbyone said:
Unfortunately, the womens' teams would absolutely get destroyed by the mens field. It would be an embarrassment and that won't help anyone.

Competing in the same race with the men isn't what they want.
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Personally, I think a women's Tour de France sounds like a great idea. If they held one I would definitely watch. And I'm sure if more TV coverage was donated to just women's cycling in general there would be much more interest in it and it's fanbase would grow.
 
Jul 22, 2011
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offbyone said:
Unfortunately, the womens' teams would absolutely get destroyed by the mens field. It would be an embarrassment and that won't help anyone.

They don't wan't to compete against the men, but have a similar format to say the elite woman's race at The London Marathon where they set off before the men. From the petition...

We seek not to race against the men, but to have our own professional field running in conjunction with the men's event, at the same time, over the same distances, on the same days, with modifications in start/finish times so neither gender's race interferes with the other.

Sounds reasonable but a logistical nightmare for the organisers.

Pete
 
May 19, 2010
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The Giro Rosa was great but, as mentioned above, holding the biggest women's cycling race of the year when all the cycling media is focused on the Tour de France seems like a waste of your best product. Maybe the week after the Tour might be a better time when there is more of a void on the men's calendar. Might be able to grab some viewers looking for a cycling fix during the post-TdF week.

Similarly, if ASO were to bring in a women's TdF (Tour Maillot?), they could make it a one-week event that followed the Giro. Somewhat like the Dauphine, it could feature stages (or more likely parts of stages) that would be raced in that year's men's TdF.

I also like the idea of women's one-day races on the Tour rest days. Again, take advantage of the time when a bunch of people who are watching cycling suddenly don't have a race to watch. Even if ASO wouldn't organize these, someone else should, whether in France or elsewhere. Obviously having it associated with the Tour/ASO would greatly increase media access.

I'd really like to see the Tour of California bump up the number of stages in their women's race. The TT they've done the past few years is great, and a while back (2009?) they held a one-day crit in Santa Rosa. If they could do both of those and add a one-day road race, I think they'd have a decent baseline for a Women's ToC. It would be great to have more than one day of road racing for the women, but the logistics/expense of tracking two pelotons simultaneously is probably a significant hurdle.

I think the stage from Livermore to Mt. Diablo in this year's ToC would have been well-suited for a dual women's and men's road race. Send the women out early, the men start maybe two hours later, the women's race could finish when they came back through Livermore, then the men come through a bit later and head on to Mt. Diablo. More spectacle to keep people milling about (and looking at vendor booths, and spending money!) in Livermore.

I think the other 1-week races in the US should at least step up to the level of what ToC is doing now and have one day of women's racing in their schedule. Maybe make it a series across the different events? Get a sponsor for the series... there's gotta be a cycling equipment or apparel manufacturer that would like to be the one presenting the major women's events in the US.

I hope women's cycling is able to get more exposure. It is exciting, aggressive racing that is often less formulaic than men's cycling.
 
Jul 19, 2010
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bangnz said:
short skirts :eek:

Anyway the fanbase and $$ just isnt there to support womans cycling shown live on tv. Apart from a few diehard cycling fans noone really cares about the results of womans races

Well then how did women's tennis get their fan base? What kind of promotion did Tennis do? Obviously if you have a fan base (i.e. demand), the money (i.e supply) will be spent in the sport. It's simple economics.
 
Aug 16, 2011
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Califootman said:
The Giro Rosa was great but, as mentioned above, holding the biggest women's cycling race of the year when all the cycling media is focused on the Tour de France seems like a waste of your best product. Maybe the week after the Tour might be a better time when there is more of a void on the men's calendar. Might be able to grab some viewers looking for a cycling fix during the post-TdF week.

Similarly, if ASO were to bring in a women's TdF (Tour Maillot?), they could make it a one-week event that followed the Giro. Somewhat like the Dauphine, it could feature stages (or more likely parts of stages) that would be raced in that year's men's TdF.

I also like the idea of women's one-day races on the Tour rest days. Again, take advantage of the time when a bunch of people who are watching cycling suddenly don't have a race to watch. Even if ASO wouldn't organize these, someone else should, whether in France or elsewhere. Obviously having it associated with the Tour/ASO would greatly increase media access.

I'd really like to see the Tour of California bump up the number of stages in their women's race. The TT they've done the past few years is great, and a while back (2009?) they held a one-day crit in Santa Rosa. If they could do both of those and add a one-day road race, I think they'd have a decent baseline for a Women's ToC. It would be great to have more than one day of road racing for the women, but the logistics/expense of tracking two pelotons simultaneously is probably a significant hurdle.

I think the stage from Livermore to Mt. Diablo in this year's ToC would have been well-suited for a dual women's and men's road race. Send the women out early, the men start maybe two hours later, the women's race could finish when they came back through Livermore, then the men come through a bit later and head on to Mt. Diablo. More spectacle to keep people milling about (and looking at vendor booths, and spending money!) in Livermore.

I think the other 1-week races in the US should at least step up to the level of what ToC is doing now and have one day of women's racing in their schedule. Maybe make it a series across the different events? Get a sponsor for the series... there's gotta be a cycling equipment or apparel manufacturer that would like to be the one presenting the major women's events in the US.

I hope women's cycling is able to get more exposure. It is exciting, aggressive racing that is often less formulaic than men's cycling.

I agree with this, especially the bolded. Holding one day's during rest days of GT's and holding women's races on days when there are no men's races especially sounds like a great idea to me.

Holding races on days and at times when there isn't any other racing and if we could get better coverage of them would be great and give us much more cycling to watch.
 
Jan 23, 2013
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TheEnoculator said:
Well then how did women's tennis get their fan base? What kind of promotion did Tennis do? Obviously if you have a fan base (i.e. demand), the money (i.e supply) will be spent in the sport. It's simple economics.

Discussing tennis gives a good opportunity to compare how other sports have progressed toward greater - or completely equal - opportunity for women and men in sport.

http://observer.com/2010/09/tennis-television-ratings-tumble/

The above link shows the TV ratings for the women's finals and men's finals at the US open and Wimbledon. There are interesting facts listed.

As for how women's tennis got its fan base, there are several factors: tennis is a sport played by many high school teams in the USA. If a school has a boy's team, it must also have - by law - a girl's team. Many schools general physical education programs include a unit in tennis. So, as teenagers in the USA, there is equal opportunity for boys and girls to play tennis and be exposed to the sport. None of that is true for cycling in the school system.

IN the USA, women's tennis wasn't very popular until Billy Jean King came along and started winning a LOT and being very outspoken about women's rights. After BHK, Chris Evertt tookthings a step further, largely due to the fact that she was very charismatic in addition to being a phenominal athlete. When the Williams sisters advanced the sport further yet, the foundation of women's tennis was very well established. With their mix of dominant performance, charisma, andcross-cultural appeal, the Williams sisters are a marketing executive's dream. Add to all of that the fact that tennis stars such as Sharipova and Anna Kournikova brought attention to women's tennis by posing for SI's swimsuit issue and have graced many covers of sporting mags (even though Kournikova never won a major tournament) and you have more marketing power for women's tennis.

That is exactly the type of promotion women's tennis did, and it has worked.

I am not saying I agree with it, but it's a fact that beautiful women in short skirts appeals to several demographics of TV viewers. Kournikova, in particular, is proof that appeal is not based on performance on the court alone. She made MUCH more money in sponsorship deals that many of the women who bet her regularly.

Each pro player has an agent, an image consultant, and the ability to use their playing career as a means of generating other revenue.

In cycling, that doesn't exist for women and exists to an extremely limited extent for men. Armstrong was a marketer's dream, as well. Hebecame a household name by gaining fame in an otherwise irrelevant sport by most Americans' standards. Since then, men's cycling is on the back page again in the USA and women's cycling is a footnote, at best.

Instead of petitioning the ASO, I think anyone who wants more opportunity for women in cycling need to roll up their sleeves and get to work courting sponsors, promoting more women's races, starting development youth programs for girls to build the next generation, and hope for a charismatic super-star with a great story to emerge. She's out there, somewhere.
 
murali said:
At least all the people waiting for the pelaton to come will have something to watch.

That worked for me at RvV. Was good to see them out there too.

Libertine Seguros said:
... the Giro d'Italia Femminile flourishes with its early July slot, at least in part because they hold stages fairly early in the day which means RAI's highlights package can be put together in time to append to the Tour de France coverage and take advantage of maximum crossover audience. And they must be doing something right, as highlights have increased from 10-15 minutes back in '08-'09 to 45-60 minutes for the last couple of years.

this would work here in Aust as the telecast of the Tour doesn't start til 10pm with racing shown from around 11pm. Would be great to have the women's race shown from, say, 9/9.30 onwards instead of bland interviews with Sherwen and other pundits.

TheEnoculator said:
I gotta ask, how did women's tennis become so successful? Can Cycling follow a similar formula to promote women's cycling?

TheEnoculator said:
Well then how did women's tennis get their fan base? What kind of promotion did Tennis do? Obviously if you have a fan base (i.e. demand), the money (i.e supply) will be spent in the sport. It's simple economics.

simple, you had men watching - think Steffi Graf, Gabrielle Sabatini and of course Kournikova. It grew from there, and now you have all the cute eastern european women playing - despite the grunting/screaming...
At that point men's tennis was a boring baseline slog, and that's IF you got past the cannonball serves that their game became - ie; just blasting your opponent off the court. The women's game was more 'tennis' with rallies and more mixed play, which was far more watchable for the lovers of the game.
 
Jan 23, 2013
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Archibald said:
The women's game was more 'tennis' with rallies and more mixed play, which was far more watchable for the lovers of the game.

I agree that women's tennis is more exciting to watch for the sake of the game.

Women's cycling is - at best - equal to men's cycling in terms of spectator enjoyment for the lover of the sport.
 
Oct 20, 2012
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I vote for women teams' participation on TdF for the most obvious reason. That this race is called Tour de France and not "Men's Only Tour de France" and neither "Tour de Emirates".

Women must have the right to participate in all races if we want to talk about equal opportunities on sports, and so women teams must have the right to take part and compete in such a high profile cycling event.

I suppose that the TdF's rules were written in some past eras when women cyclists were not so many and haven't neither the equipment nor enough sponsors and well organized teams to support their participation. But this isn't the case anymore and I don't see why TdF is still an only men cycling event.

Cycling is for both sexes and there is no shortage of elite pro women cyclists any more while women's participation will bring more audiences and sponsors to the event too.
 
Oct 20, 2012
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offbyone said:
Unfortunately, the womens' teams would absolutely get destroyed by the mens field. It would be an embarrassment and that won't help anyone.

I don't get how did you end up in the conclusion that women's participation will have to be in mixed teams, or some kind of competition between men's and women's teams. :rolleyes:
Does this happens in Olympics or any other sport?

We are talking here and I think that this is very clear, about the participation of women's teams who will compete with other women's teams in the same event were the men's teams are competing between them.

This is not currently allowed in TdF, though is allowed in all other sport events.
 
Jan 23, 2013
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alitogata said:
I don't get how did you end up in the conclusion that women's participation will have to be in mixed teams, or some kind of competition between men's and women's teams. :rolleyes:
Does this happens in Olympics or any other sport?

We are talking here and I think that this is very clear, about the participation of women's teams who will compete with other women's teams in the same event were the men's teams are competing between them.

This is not currently allowed in TdF, though is allowed in all other sport events.

The confusion comes from a lack of specificity in the wording of the OP. In the past, there was a Tour de Feminine, which was a women's TdF.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tour_de_France_Féminin

Currently, there is the Giro Rosa, or women's Giro.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_Giro_d'Italia_Femminile

The names of the races have been /are very similar, but are still different, denoting the gnder of the participants in the women's races.

Saying "women should be allowed to enter teams in the Tour de France" is like saying "women should be allowed to enter a team in the Super Bowl of American football or the World Series in baseball", instead of saying "women should have their own leagues and own Super Bowl or World Series". It's just a bit confusing how things are worded.

As far as your comment about the Olympics, there is only one Olympic sport that I know of where men and women compete as equals is equestrian.

Even in Olympic sports where it could be argued that men would have little to no physical advantage over women (i.e. archery, pistol shooting, rifle shooting, shotgun shooting) there are men's divisions and women's divisions.
 
Jan 23, 2013
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tour_de_France_Féminin

There was a Women's Tour de France every year from 1984 through 2009 - except for 1990, 1991, and 2004 when there wasn't enough sponsorship money to fund the event.

I haven't read a reference to the prior women's tours in any of the posts from people saying women should have the right to race in the Tour.

That says something about the significance, popularity and fan appeal of those prior races, IMO.
 
Jan 23, 2013
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Vos could be every bit as charismatic as Billy Jean King. I doubt either would make SI's swimsuit cover. But, each have their charm and are amazing athletes.

An image consultant would be a smart investment for her. It payed off very well Lance to hire a consultant and manager for nothing but promotions. Vos didn't survive cancer, so her story isn't as compelling. But, she isn't a jerk-off, so damage control would be a lot easier.

Instead of saying "Look what tennis has done", I think it would be a lot more accurate to say "Look what women tennis players and their agents have accomplished through twenty years of persistent hard work, brilliant promotion, a lot of self-sacrifice, and more hard work".

True, tennis has shown it can be done. But it took a lot more than a petition to Wimbledon to achieve it.

http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Lawn+...er+pay;+EXCLUSIVE+Wimbledon'06...-a0147709291

In 2006, the women threatened to strike Wimbledon if their pay was made equal to the men's prizes.

There is the big difference, tennis women threaten to strike one of the biggest events of the year while cycling women petition for inclusion. Imagine the women cyclists threatening to not show up in protest to a race. If the fan appeal is as huge as some posters say, that would probably work.