Events

The Space Between: What cycling events might look like in a post Covid19 world

Written by Jazz Kuschke.

By Bike Hub Features · 66 comments

Will we ever race in the same way again? Not a chance. It is as simple and as complex as that.

Terms such as ‘new normal’ are being bandied around our digital world on every click, just about. Regardless of where you get your news or the latest conspiracy theory you’ve read about, or Youtube clip you’ve watched – regardless of what you buy into or not – the basic truth is that bike races as we know them are a thing of the past. Indeed, all mass participation sporting events will change. For cycling events, this might not be a bad thing at all.

The more complicated reality is just what that ‘new’ will look like. Perhaps the best place to start is at the ‘why.’

Why do we race?

The motivation behind riding events is multidimensional we. The ‘why’s’ many and varied. Some ride solely for fitness, wholly unconcerned with times and placings, others train very specifically for goal events and personal best times. Some put themselves through big challenge to raise money for charity. Still others rely on it for their meal tickets. Somewhere in each reasoning you’re more than-likely-to hear the words, ‘community,’ ‘social aspect,’ ‘camaraderie.’ Humans race because they like being around one another.

So when we can’t it is saddening.

Cancelled

“I can liken it to going through the stages of grief,” says Candice Lill of dealing with the cancellation of the 2020 Absa Cape Epic back in March. “When you lose something that has become such a big part of your life, it is like the weeks afterwards are spent mourning.” Lill – teamed up with fellow South African Mariske Strauss as Faces CST – was set for her biggest Cape Epic campaign yet. The pair were in the hunt to become the first all-African team to stand on the top step of the women’s podium at the world’s most prestigious mountain-bike stage race, in the process gaining enough UCI points for two Olympic slots.

ccs-62657-0-66837900-1595411444.jpegCandice Lill said that it took her a few days to come to terms with the Cape Epic cancellation. Photo credit: Sam Clark.

Covid-19, however, put paid to all of that and the Absa Cape Epic never saw a start gun. Shot down by the viral global pandemic in a whirlwind of global cancellations that started with the Tour of Hainan in January, and then swept through February and March with the Tirreno-Adriatico, Milan-San Remo and the Tour of Sicily, GP Larciano, Trofeo Alfredo Binda and Settimana Coppi e Bartal, following suite among many others.

As consummate, world-travelling professional with a fine hand on the bigger (global) picture, Lill was under no illusions ahead of hearing the news on the Friday evening ahead of the scheduled Sunday Cape Epic prologue at UCT.

“I raced the Cape Town Cycle Tour the week before,” she says. “There were so many questions around Cycle Tour – they were on the brink of having to cancel as well,” she says, adding that from then on she knew there was a very big chance of the Epic not happening.

“It didn’t all come all in one big blow,” Lill explains the waves of mourning she went through in the weeks after. “That first night and the next few days I was a little bit in denial, then I eventually got to, like, ‘okay fine’ we’ll just carry on and deal with it.”

For an amateur and Epic first-timer like Rene Winter, it was a different kind of knock. “It was one of the biggest disappointments of my sporting career and goals. CV19 wasn’t yet what we knew it to be that week so it was heartbreaking for sure,” he says.

Having been a part of the event for some years on the corporate side, as South African agent for Spot X, he grasped the bigger picture however.

“It must have been a really hard call for the event organisers to have made, while under siege from emotional audiences worldwide” he says. “There was so much at stake: Riders, international teams, brand integrity, sponsors, spectators, viewership, the time input on organization and planning, towns that rely on the tourism, the list goes on.”

“It was definitely the right decision based on what we now know about the reactions around the world – as hard as it is to take a knock financially and personally on what was put in, I feel it was ultimately the right call for sure.”

As with Lill and Winter, Team Bulls (featuring five-time winner Karl Platt, in his retirement year) were heavily disappointed, but had anticipated the possible postponement or cancellation.

“Europe was two to three weeks ahead of us,” explains Bulls soigneur, Vincent Durand. “Being a European team our mindset was already there… So, while we were monitoring what was happening on the ground here in South Africa with the Cycle Tour (which took place) we were also very aware of what was happening around the world.”

ccs-62657-0-69991000-1595411663.jpgKarl Platt had planned to retire after racing in 2020. With the calendar all but cancelled, will we see the Cape Epic legend consider holding on for one more year? Photo by Nick Muzik.

“In that week leading up to the Epic we were on standby for racing – everybody was ready to race. And, everybody was ready to race right from the gun, with a possible postponement or cancellation somewhere in the middle of the race a real possibility, traditional strategy and stage race tactics went out the window.”

According to Durand, as soon as the news of the cancellation reached the team, their focus shifted to getting everyone home safely. “Those few days before lockdown ensued for international travel were very hectic. My team manager was busy for three days just sorting travel arrangements and baggage logistics,” he says. “It was a mini post Epic, epic.”

Ever the pragmatic (with the team’s season now on ice as UCI events continue to haemorrhage down the calendar) Durand takes a measured view of the future of events. “The way that event organisers will have to restructure events will no doubt be based on new international sets of standards of hygiene,” he says, by way of a starting point.

“For the near future it will be about how quickly can race organisers adapt good standard practice – races like the Epic already have the best standard practice, so for them it will be easier.”

The shape of things to come

This is also something David Bellairs, Marketing, Media and Sponsorship Director of the Cape Town Cycle Tour Trust and the rest of the Cape Town Cycle Tour Trust team are currently grappling with. The team organises not only the iconic Cape Town Cycle Tour – the largest timed cycle race in the world with some of the finest global best-practice standards when it comes to mass-participation events – as well as the Double Century.

ccs-62657-0-89177000-1595418220.jpgThe Cape Town Cycle Tour is the largest time race in the world. The organisers have already began planning changes for the execution for future editions.

“We were extremely fortunate to have been able to run the event,” Bellairs says of the 2020 Cycle Tour, which took place on 8 March. “We just squeezed in.” For many cyclists that might be the last event they rode. The one they look forward to most for next year.

“Going forward, there is no doubt that the entire eventing space will look different,” he adds. “How we’re interacting with people who participate is going to be very different,” he says.

“Given the current situation, how do we roll out future events that are acceptable to both the public and the authorities? Unpicking that is everything we are focused on at the moment.”

“Do I have answers yet? No I don’t. What I do know is that it is going to be different, very different,” he says.

ccs-62657-0-58614900-1595412063.jpg
ccs-62657-0-84593100-1595412076.jpg

In broad terms, what Bellairs and his team envision for the Cape Town Cycle Tour is something of a festival of cycling, a ‘happening’ that appeals to all types of riders and celebrates the reasons why cyclists ride events.

“This we’ve already had in the back of our minds for the past eighteen months (pre-Covid) in terms of the Cycle Tour for sure. The DC is a very different beast because that is a 200km ride and team event,” he says.

“There will always be the racing element, the challenge is how we cover for the racing element and the ‘go-faster’ mob, while giving the best experience for all the other riders.”

“I’d like to see the back of the event more as not groups of people charging around the Cape Peninsula but rather people taking the opportunity to ride on a route that is a 109kms of absolutely beautiful scenery. And, doing it for the pure pleasure of riding and being out there in the company of others, but not in a close-knit bunch, while raising money for charity at the same time.” he says.

Food for thought

“We are trying to assess the food industry at the moment has changed forever and it’s based on the same principles,” says chef and restauranteur David Higgs, echoing Bellairs’ sentiments. “It’s about people coming together and enjoying themselves, whether that is watching sport, eating and drinking, or whatever,” Higgs, a passionate cyclist, was ready to tackle his third Absa Cape Epic and is very particular about the ‘why’ when he picks his races.

ccs-62657-0-19802100-1595418827.pngDavid Higgs.

“I look for a challenge and then a good lifestyle offering on the side. A good vibe you know, I’m a social rider not a racer,” Higgs says. “I love what the Tankwa Trek is all about (a really tough and challenging three days). As well as events such as Berg and Bush, where last year I rode with Erik Kleinhans… So I had to work really hard to keep up, but then afterward we sat on the banks of the Tugela and drank beer. That event’s got a bit of both for me, I like that.”

For Higgs, unlike the pros and the event administrators, it is the balance of the various positive benefits – physical, mental, emotional and social – that makes events, and cycling in general, so appealing. Higgs also represents a big percentage of cyclists who have embraced the digital element during the early lockdown times and taken to his indoor trainer (and particularly Watopia) with gusto. So much so that he believes he’ll do much of his future training stationary.

“I’m really going to appreciate eventing again, without a doubt. However I can really see the benefits of training on an indoors – I’m a completely different cyclist now… It’s a little bit more precise and you can control more what you do (in training terms).”

Higgs went so far as to do a 360km ultra-endurance virtual ride in late April, in an effort to raise funds for his team at Marble and Saint restaurants. The cycle was to create awareness for his staff fund which sees all proceeds from the sale of his book, Mile 8: A book about cooking, go towards supporting those staff teams.

“It really still doesn’t compare to riding on the road or trail, but if you are training for something specific it is a great tool to have and it’s a lekker way to hook up with guys and chat. I think this is what zoom and zwift has done.” Higgs is not alone in believing that, due to the current financial implications many will have less goal races to train for than in the past.

Ride on

“It is safe to say that the cycling landscape will be very different to the one we were used to. It will be fascinating to witness the creativity and ingenuity of the cycling community when they tackle the post COVID-19 world,” says Michele Starke of the boutique mountain-bike stage race, The U.

ccs-62657-0-81912100-1595419004.jpgEvents like the The U which is hosted on the private Piket-Bo-Berg trails and with limited entries might be more appealing than ever in a post-Covid world. Supplied by The U.

“Perhaps there will also be a greater opportunity for small events – as numbers may be limited by Covid-19 regulations in the short- to medium-term.” The U takes place on a 100km network of privately owned, hand-crafted trails in Piket-Bo-Berg, usually in October. The event has a very limited number of entries and due to the combination of its premium, all-inclusive weekend offering as well as spectacular riding, is always a sell-out.

“Actual event operations will also be very interesting. It is difficult to control something as mundane as a stomach bug during an event, but after Covid-19 the demand for better sanitation and hygiene will be much greater. Event tents can be crammed and bathroom facilities at some events can look very dodgy after day two or day three of a stage race – events will have to seriously up their game to stand a chance of survival,” she says.

Zandile Meneses, organiser of the Dr Evil Classic in the Garden Route which has also just recently been cancelled for 2020, agrees. “Smaller ‘boutique’ events such as the Dr Evil Classic may benefit as it only takes limited numbers – so targets are not too high and it is a very well priced experience,” she says.

ccs-62657-0-30481500-1595419717.jpgZandile Meneses is confident that the riders will be itching for the Karoo to Coast race experience once the lockdown restrictions are lifted. Supplied by Karoo to Coast.

Meneses also believes iconic one-day events such as the Lions Karoo to Coast (also off for 2020) will continue to be well supported in the future. “South Africans love an adventure – and will be itching for one when lockdown restrictions have finally been fully lifted – this event is relatively cheap in terms of entry and yet offers a huge day out in terms of experience,” she says.

It is that ‘experience’ – social, mental and physical – that will keep riders going back. “Riders will possibly appreciate the events more that are fairly priced, have a sense of community (charity) and are less ‘commercial’ and have a more down-to-earth feel. I think the whole ‘isolation journey’ may adjust perception for many in terms of what really matters in the long run,’ Meneses says.

“I think the mindset and psyche of people interacting in large groups has changed forever,” Rene Winter echoes her sentiments. “Realistically this isn’t going away for a while and from work meetings, to social gatherings and sports events, the world and face-to-face time has changed for a long time to come, if not forever.”

“Personally I will continue to do sports events, such as the Cape Epic, it’s my sanity and release from everything else stress related in the world. The social aspects of race villages will have social distancing and hygiene influences, and open opportunity for some form of sports-specific masks and the like.”

Sure, but others want to tick those goal-boxes. “Even if it’s the only way I’d be happy if they cut out much of the luxuries and just let riders sleep at home, then ride the routes and then go back home,” says Craig Kolesky, a seven-time Absa Cape Epic veteran. “For me the goal is still 10 epics, and I’ll do whatever it takes.”

Events bring people together, ‘to conquer 10’ like Kolesky, to share experiences, to win. Only time will tell how we navigate the new cycling normal. Regardless of how things change, the common thread of humans racing because they enjoy the trails and the open air the like being around one another, will remain. Perhaps even more cherished.

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Comments

DieselnDust

Jul 27, 2020, 12:39 PM

The future surrounding sport is very clear. It will continue. Since ancient Greece first engaged in "the Games" man has has been fascinated by sporting competition....except in those days people really lost their lives as part of the spectacle.

In the last 110yrs the Olympic movement has survived Two World Wars, the Cold War, terrorist attacks, boycotts, doping scandals and some downright cheating.

 

The analogy of comparing this SARS- COV2 pandemic to the Spanish flu is likely a good one. We don't enough to make judegements about the future other than what we know we can do to limit the spread  till we either build whatever herd immunity is or a vaccine is found.

 

What we do know is the hardest hit countries have an obesity problem. Of those there is a large elderly population with low immunity due to the more advanced living conditions.

 

SA has a gap of some 12,000 deaths where there is uncertainty as to whether these should be attributed to SARS_COV2 virus or not. Heck we don;t even know if assymptomatic people can transmit it or not. WHO experts seem to think not but the policy makers prefer to say they can and take the cautious approach.

 

Much of where we are ow is down to political decisions by politicians, and  not science lead decisions.

In SA there seems to be more policital agenda in the decision making process than concern for community health so any crystal balling should be informed from a perspective of whatever furthers that agenda. I'll bet we middle class won't like it one bit . This gov seems to think that it will solve the problem by taxing its way to wealth and that by buckling under union pressure i serves the interrest of the people....

and then theres the fact that the crystal ball is "Made in China"....

The Ouzo

Jul 27, 2020, 1:14 PM

Me, [edit] - price fight over ice-cream? never! In fact the only argument I will gladly engage in is with anyone wanting to share some of my gelato...I might share my last Rolo, but ice-cream? Go get your own.

 

I am not a miser when it comes to spending, but crowds always bring out the worst in me. I do crowds like a claustrophobe does confined spaces. I'm more of a one on one kind of bloke. I even get annoyed when leaving a building when people gather in a doorway. Immediate moer-meter-innirooi. But for the record, I recognise that as a personal weakness, and thus I rather minimise my engagement and if you didn't already know that about me, you wouldn't either cause I am good at suppressing my agitation.

 

I would love the expo if there was say, oh I dunno, maybe 98% fewer people...

 

As for cycling friends, I have a few yes.

echos my thoughts (even the part about the gelato)

 

My wife long ago saw the wrong side of this a few times whilst we were out shopping, resulting in us hardly shopping together anymore. 

Alien Racer

Jul 27, 2020, 1:23 PM

Why not instead off doing the old regular races, try a new race, that is smaller and with  more personal  touch and go to a place where you've never been!

Cyclist is so much creatures off habit, I try to at least every year do 3 to 4 new races that I have not done for few years or never before.

You meet new people and get to do more races by doing more smaller ones rather than the over priced larger ones.

 

Rocket-Boy

Jul 27, 2020, 1:38 PM

Why does anything have to change?

Did the world change after the previous pandemics that killed way more people?

 

Sure it might take a while to get back to normal but assuming it cant go back to the way it was before seems nonsensical to me.

 

Maybe Im naive and there is more to it, but we arent going to spend the rest of our lives on lockdown and hiding away from each other.

DieselnDust

Jul 27, 2020, 2:54 PM

Why does anything have to change?

Did the world change after the previous pandemics that killed way more people?

 

Sure it might take a while to get back to normal but assuming it cant go back to the way it was before seems nonsensical to me.

 

Maybe Im naive and there is more to it, but we arent going to spend the rest of our lives on lockdown and hiding away from each other.

Unless The Zuma faction get their communist way. But then I suspect we will have a proper and overdue civil war with real bullets and ****

b-rad

Jul 27, 2020, 3:48 PM

Why does anything have to change?

Did the world change after the previous pandemics that killed way more people?

 

Sure it might take a while to get back to normal but assuming it cant go back to the way it was before seems nonsensical to me.

 

Maybe Im naive and there is more to it, but we arent going to spend the rest of our lives on lockdown and hiding away from each other.

Agreed. People might be more cautious in the way they live but eventually normality will return. As soon as media stops harping on about Covid we'll see a big change for the better and if everyone tried to stop watching the news for a while the levels of positivity will return in a big way.

Robbie Stewart

Jul 27, 2020, 8:49 PM

echos my thoughts (even the part about the gelato)

 

My wife long ago saw the wrong side of this a few times whilst we were out shopping, resulting in us hardly shopping together anymore. 

 

I think we're twins, and we married sisters...

 

my wife gets PO'd with me while we're getting in the car at home, as she just knows...

MORNE

Jul 28, 2020, 4:32 AM

Unless The Zuma faction get their communist way. But then I suspect we will have a proper and overdue civil war with real bullets and ****

This post is not aimed at you personally...just a general observation about the subject matter.

 

Lol i always snicker at hints of civil war by the middle class in this country. There will be none. There will only be Zim. They will take rape and pillage and you will be able to do nothing other than run. Who is going to fight for the other (supposedly our) side In this war. This country’s taxpayers is filled with a bunch of all talk and no action people. On the other side you have people who basically will kill for food without hesitating...and in the most brutal ways imaginable. When we stll lived in GP, on my morning commute i drove past a ekectronic SARS Info panel on the highway that would during tax season show the amount of taxpayers that have filed up to that stage. It never went over 4milion poeple. So in my head atleast...4milion people alone are carrying this country...and that number is getting smaller everyday. Thats also basically the same 4 million who’d be on one side of the trench in that civil war imo. I read somewhere last late year that there are only about 2million registered tax payers left in this country.... odds don't stack up. EDIT: sorry read that wrong...Its circa 7mil, but only 2mil collected from income rax. Still though...

Hardly 10%.

 

https://www.news24.com/fin24/Budget/why-budget-2019-will-create-more-pain-for-taxpayers-20190220

 

When the push comes to shove...we’ll all rather fabricate a family lineage from Europe to get a passport than get down and dirty.

Anyway, I am starting to share many of your sentiments regarding the final outcome of all this BS though. It’s clear as day. Time for the braindrain to start accelerating imo.

Shebeen

Jul 28, 2020, 8:15 AM

I like to reflect on history a bit, reflect where we are now and then venture a guess on what the future will look like....

 

History: 1918 Spanish flu.  I did a top line read somewhere and they conquered the virus after about 2-3 years.  Also went through the 2nd and 3rd waves, and they found people to have natural high levels of immunity + a vaccine. Life was back to normal circa 1921.

 

Current: 2020 - Globally,we are < 7 months into Covid, As we all know, some are over the 1st wave (Italy, France, Germany, etc) and some are very much still in it (RSA, India, US, Brazil, Russia).  Some are in their 2nd wave (Australia and perhaps Spain?).  Initial indications are immunity is temporary, no vaccine yet.  Truth be told, we know very little on how to conquer this one.

 

Future:  Perhaps oversimplified - if we get the vaccine/immunity combo right, we will have life as we had from 1921 - 2019. If not, who knows, but cycling will not be top of mind, survival - economic and otherwise will become the focus.

actually incorrect.

 

the 1918 flu never ended, and what we know as the common flu can be traced back to H1N1 from 1918.

how do we know this for sure? this guy

 

https://www.si.com/more-sports/2020/05/27/johan-hultin-the-virus-hunter

Jase619

Jul 28, 2020, 8:32 AM

Agreed. People might be more cautious in the way they live but eventually normality will return. As soon as media stops harping on about Covid we'll see a big change for the better and if everyone tried to stop watching the news for a while the levels of positivity will return in a big way.

 

This is very true, people that i know that never watched the news now follow it religiously and are super negative all the time

Underachiever

Jul 28, 2020, 8:38 AM

actually incorrect.

 

the 1918 flu never ended, and what we know as the common flu can be traced back to H1N1 from 1918.

how do we know this for sure? this guy

 

https://www.si.com/more-sports/2020/05/27/johan-hultin-the-virus-hunter

Yep, conquered means exactly that. 

 

Point is that life went from social distancing and masks to back to normal.

dave303e

Jul 28, 2020, 8:41 AM

Why does anything have to change?

Did the world change after the previous pandemics that killed way more people?

 

Sure it might take a while to get back to normal but assuming it cant go back to the way it was before seems nonsensical to me.

 

Maybe Im naive and there is more to it, but we arent going to spend the rest of our lives on lockdown and hiding away from each other.

 

Honestly I want to use it to change as much as possible:

 

Humans should do as best they can to work from home, it saves time, money and is really good for traffic and more importantly the environment. A lot of companies will not return 100% to an office environment.

 

Same goes for flying, fewer flights and flights for only special occasions not people flying to ct from jhb for a meeting and flying home same day.

 

Use it to highlight value in places that were under valued. Like our medical staff and the poor people who have to clean hospitals. 

 

Highlight how we need less footballers and more doctors. Less politicians and more scientists(and far less facebook politics and facebook science)

 

I hope we use it to change our ideas as to whether we breed or not because overpopulation is a runaway train.

 

How many should be realising they have a drinking problem, in stead they are buying over priced booze or home brewing concoctions when they could be improving their life in the long run.

 

There are so many things we can take away from this pandemic to improve the world. Reality is none of the above will happen and we will go back to square one and most will be happy about that.

VicanZA

Jul 28, 2020, 9:49 AM

happy to see that some people here know whats best for me! how about you stay home till nobody dies and i will get on with it? SA is still a democracy, how about we try to preserve that?  never be afraid to be the one who stands against thousands.

VicanZA

Jul 28, 2020, 9:52 AM

Honestly I want to use it to change as much as possible:

 

Humans should do as best they can to work from home, it saves time, money and is really good for traffic and more importantly the environment. A lot of companies will not return 100% to an office environment.

 

Same goes for flying, fewer flights and flights for only special occasions not people flying to ct from jhb for a meeting and flying home same day.

 

Use it to highlight value in places that were under valued. Like our medical staff and the poor people who have to clean hospitals. 

 

Highlight how we need less footballers and more doctors. Less politicians and more scientists(and far less facebook politics and facebook science)

 

I hope we use it to change our ideas as to whether we breed or not because overpopulation is a runaway train.

 

How many should be realising they have a drinking problem, in stead they are buying over priced booze or home brewing concoctions when they could be improving their life in the long run.

 

There are so many things we can take away from this pandemic to improve the world. Reality is none of the above will happen and we will go back to square one and most will be happy about that.

 

how about you go first and we will all follow, start by stopping you family from breeding.

 

We waiting..

ChrisF

Jul 28, 2020, 12:39 PM

happy to see that some people here know whats best for me! how about you stay home till nobody dies and i will get on with it? SA is still a democracy, how about we try to preserve that? never be afraid to be the one who stands against thousands.

You do realise you are part of the 90% .... NOT the one standing against thousands ....

 

 

But as you say, free country and all that, so you are most welcome to join the masses ...

 

 

(Really need Comic Sans font on the phone ... )

Rocket-Boy

Jul 29, 2020, 7:30 AM

Honestly I want to use it to change as much as possible:

 

Humans should do as best they can to work from home, it saves time, money and is really good for traffic and more importantly the environment. A lot of companies will not return 100% to an office environment.

 

Same goes for flying, fewer flights and flights for only special occasions not people flying to ct from jhb for a meeting and flying home same day.

 

Use it to highlight value in places that were under valued. Like our medical staff and the poor people who have to clean hospitals. 

 

Highlight how we need less footballers and more doctors. Less politicians and more scientists(and far less facebook politics and facebook science)

 

I hope we use it to change our ideas as to whether we breed or not because overpopulation is a runaway train.

 

How many should be realising they have a drinking problem, in stead they are buying over priced booze or home brewing concoctions when they could be improving their life in the long run.

 

There are so many things we can take away from this pandemic to improve the world. Reality is none of the above will happen and we will go back to square one and most will be happy about that.

Yeah its pretty sad, my wife and I went through most of those personal changes in the last two years that you mention. It seemed like the natural way things were going to go if the planet is going to survive us humans.

The only other thing I would add to you list is cutting down/cutting out eating meat.

 

Hopefully the improvements we have seen during C19 last, things like lower pollution and less congestion. I doubt they will though, people will always slide back into old habits.

mecheng89

Nov 29, 2020, 8:52 AM

Anyone on the inside that may know what the Western Cape might do with their proposed provincial closure? From what I read in the media they were supposed to meet on Friday with an answer to be given in the course of the coming week.

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