Ladies First: 13 Female Cyclists Completing Tour de France
LOURDES, France (AP) β They ride every stage of the Tour de France before the men do.
Over the same mountains on the same 3,351-kilometer (2,082-mile) route.
Except there wonβt be a podium or prize money waiting for them on the Champ-Elysees when they finish on Saturday, one day before the yellow jersey arrives in Paris.
What these 13 amateur female cyclists hope for, instead, is recognition, respect, and the return of the womenβs Tour.
βWe want a womenβs stage race with the same media coverage and the same attention as men have,β Tetiana Kalachova tells The Associated Press. βNot necessarily the same roads and not necessarily the same quantity of dates, but with the same appreciation.β
Kalachova and her teammates rise early every day to complete the three-week challenge. They do the same stage as the men, a day before the men.
They have conquered the jarring cobblestones of Roubaix, daunting ascents in the Alps, the foothills of the Massif Central, and have been pedaling this week through the Pyrenees.
βWe are trying to prove that women, even amateurs, totally clean – no doping, no special assistance – are able for this kind of effort,β Kalachova says.
None of the team, called βDonnons des elles au veloβ in a play of words meaning give women or wings to cycling, are being paid for their efforts.
Unlike the men, they have to contend with normal traffic as they navigate the route. Dirty air from heavy trucks washed over the women as they departed Carcassonne for a 218-kilometer stage.
βWe respect the traffic signs. We stop at red lights. We respect the rules,β Kalachova says.
Ideally, the team would like the return of the Tour de France Feminin, which ran alongside the menβs event from 1984-89, or at least a womenβs stage race that is given the same importance as the menβs.
βCycling is one of the unequal sports,β Kalachova adds.
Dutch star Marianne Vos, a two-time Olympic champion and three-time winner of the womenβs Giro dβItalia, has no doubt women are physically capable of completing a 21-day Tour de France.
But Vos, who praised the recent development of womenβs cycling, also wonders about the feasibility of a womenβs Tour, saying it would impact on the existing calendar and a shorter stage race might be preferable.
βOf course it would be great to have a (womenβs) Tour de France for 21 days, but I donβt think itβs the best thing for womenβs cycling at the moment,β Vos tells the AP.
Tour organizers have had a womenβs race called La Course by Le Tour since 2014. This yearβs was an exciting one-day race won in Annecy by defending champion Annemiek van Vleuten, but itβs a long way from what βDonnons des elles au veloβ wants.
βIt appeared at some point because there was a demand for it, but a stage race would be much more interesting,β Kalachova says.
The βDonnons des elles au veloβ project started with just three female cyclists in 2015 and has grown each year. This yearβs team is a mix, with about half the riders having done the Tour before.
βWhen it happened the first year, no one knew. Then people started to recognize. Last year we had some mentions on French TV,β Kalachova says.
βNow when we come, people scream and encourage. They prepare food for the breaks or on arrival. They write our names on the climbs and this is pretty awesome.β
Every day, the team posts its position publicly so others can join at any stage.
βEvery single stage this year, weβve had a double or triple peloton. In Brittany, we had 120 people on the start.
βItβs not only because weβre so cool. Itβs because people are asking the same question – where is the womenβs Tour de France? They want to see it and theyβre here to support it.β
Kalachova points out that fans waiting on climbs for the men to arrive are looking for entertainment, so βwhen we arrive itβs crazy.β
The famed 21 bends of Alpe dβHuez were a particular highlight, with raucous Dutch fans cheering and running alongside the riders.
βThey are screaming, so you just have to push, you stand up, you start pedaling hard and even harder. After the corner you say, βGosh, why did I do this sprint? It was nothing and now Iβve still five kilometers to the (summit)!ββ Kalachova says.
βWe did it. It was amazing. But we finished late. As we are not professionals, we take twice as long as the professionals do.β
Their efforts are inspiring younger riders, too. One 10-year-old girl from the U.K. joined for the first stage in Noirmoutier-en-Lβile.
Kalachova says, βShe is doing so much cycling and she is so into it, that we hope there will be a womenβs Tour some day and she will ride it.β