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Too early to make decision on Tour de France: French minister

The world’s best-known cycling championship remains one of the few big international sports events this summer not having been postponed or cancelled till now.

Too early to make decision on Tour de France: French minister

(FILES) In this file photograph taken on July 25, 2018, France's Julian Alaphilippe, wearing the best climber's polka dot jersey (R) seizes the fork of Tour de France fan Didi Senft (L) during the 17th stage of the 105th edition of the Tour de France cycling race, between Bagneres-de-Luchon and Saint-Lary-Soulan Col du Portet, south-western France. - French sports minister Roxana Maracineanu says this year's Tour de France could be staged without spectators in a bid to combat the coronavirus pandemic. The French government is in talks with Tour organisers about the future of the June 27-July 19 edition of world cycling's top event which draws more than 10 millions fans annually to the roads of France. (Photo by Jeff PACHOUD / AFP)

French Sports Minister Roxana Maracineanu said on Thursday it is too early to decide whether this year’s Tour de France can take place as scheduled in June and July amid the coronavirus outbreak, but also admitted that a race without roadside spectators is an option.

Following the postponements of the football European Championships and the Tokyo Olympic Games, the world’s best-known cycling championship remained one of the few big international sports events this summer not having been postponed or cancelled, Xinhua news agency reports.

“The Tour is a sports monument. It is too soon to decide. There is a time for everything. For now, we have a more urgent battle to fight. Let us focus on this mountain in front of us and then consider what’s next,” Maracineanu wrote on Twitter.

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French media Bleu Radio Station reported on Wednesday that Maracineanu said that one of the options would be to organise a Tour without roadside spectators.

“The Tour’s economic model is not based on ticket sales but on TV rights,” the minister said. “People understand the benefits of staying home and watching the event on TV rather than live. It would not be too detrimental to follow the Tour on TV.”

The Tour has never been cancelled in peacetime since its inaugural edition in 1903. This year’s race is scheduled to start outside Nice on June 27 and finish on the Champs Elysees in Paris on July 19.

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