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Opinionopinion

Peter Sharkey: Cycle stars on road to riches as big sponsors up the ante

New €1m prize pot idea just the beginning of cycling's resurgence

Chris Froome(Image: Doug Pensinger/Getty Images)

In a city better endowed than most with breathtaking architecture and beautiful, grand buildings of historic significance, Paris’s Palais de Congres ranks pretty low on the aesthetic index.

This grey, cumbersome building plays host to a rather important sporting announcement next Wednesday when the route for the 2015 Tour de France is revealed.

We already know that next year’s race will start in Utrecht on July 4 and, following two further days in Holland, the peleton will cross into France, probably heading west into Brittany, attracting huge crowds en route, continually building a colossal aggregate worldwide television audience to boot.

Watching professional cyclists ‘live’ in one of Europe’s Grand Tours has become enormously popular. Figures released by Tour de France organisers show that, on average, spectators spend six hours at the roadside and travel 130 kilometres to watch riders speed by.

Of course, before the peleton arrives, sponsors spend a couple of hours driving by in a collection of bespoke vehicles distributing souvenirs and T-shirts into a sea of willing, outstretched arms, after which roadside barbeques light up, bottles of wine are uncorked and the crowds settle down for a prolonged period of civilised imbibing. It’s easy to spend several hours in the sunshine engaged in such an agreeable activity.

It’s a similar story at the Giro d’Italia, the route for which was confirmed last Monday. The announcement enabled the dozens of well-established and recently-formed cycling tour companies to finalise bookings on their pre-Giro tours. According to one operator, the ‘Mamil’ (middle aged men in lycra) is not a phenomenon limited to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ. People wanting to ride part of a forthcoming Grand Tour route come from as far away as Australia and the US and pay handsomely for the privilege of cycling along the public highway. The average cost of a nine-day, pre-2015 Giro cycling tour, including accommodation, is around £2,500. It’s easy to see why bicycle manufacturers and other companies target the affluent Mamil demographic.

As details of the Italian race were confirmed, the prospect of the first double winner this century appeared more likely.

The late Marco Pantini was the last man to win in Italy and France (in 1998), but the possibility that one of the current batch of professional stars could emulate his feat will only enhance the appeal of both contests, provided Messrs Contador, Froome, Quintana and Nibali all finish the Giro in one piece.