The 2025 Vuelta a España Femenina got off to a chaotic and
controversial start in Barcelona, as organisational issues marred the opening
team time trial. Multiple teams, including
Team Visma | Lease a Bike and Uno-X
Mobility, were forced to start the stage late or with incomplete squads due to
delays at the pre-race bike checks, prompting widespread outrage and criticism
of both the organisers and the UCI.
Teams arrived for routine equipment checks, but a lack of
coordination and communication saw several squads unable to begin the time
trial as scheduled. Riders were left stranded as time ticked down, unable to
line up in time for their official start, with some forced to start without key
teammates or even begin late.
The situation sparked immediate backlash, most notably from mountain
bike legend and Paris-Roubaix winner
Pauline Ferrand-Prévot, who took to social
media, before later deleting the post, to vent her frustration.
“What the fuck! How can the organization of a Grand Tour be
so amateurish?” she wrote. “Was the jury asleep when they had to check our
bikes? We were there 20 minutes before the start, for the check, and two of our
riders weren’t ready in time. We kept telling the jury to go, but it looked
like they were just chilling.”
Ferrand-Prévot went on to condemn the impact on her team’s
general classification chances.
“We have done so much preparation and effort, for nothing. We are now losing so
much time in the general classification. Hey UCI, you want a fair sport, but
this is not the way to do it.”
Uno-X Mobility's Anouska Koster echoed those frustrations,
revealing the knock-on effects caused by delays earlier in the schedule.
“We arrived late at the start because of one of the teams in
front of us. We were at the bike checkpoint more than fifteen minutes before
the start, but because another team arrived later, we had to wait and our
checkpoint wasn’t ready in time,” she told ProCyclingUK.
“We had no idea that we had to start because no one was telling us the time. So
we weren’t in the starting grid yet, so we weren’t clicked in and there was no
countdown. In the end, we left ten seconds late.”
According to WielerFlits, the blame appears to lie
with
Movistar Team, who reportedly arrived late to the checkpoint and created a
bottleneck that impacted subsequent teams. The Spanish outfit was just able to
start with all riders present, but the damage to other teams had already been
done.
Doctor’s waiting room syndrome, easy to fix.