The team was caught in a no-win scenario, targeted for
political reasons yet unable to pull out without distorting the sporting
contest. "There was undoubtedly pressure on the team to leave the Vuelta.
The UCI didn't respond, which meant there was an impasse and the team had to
decide for itself."
"I don't think that acted as an extra red rag to the
bull. There was simply such a gathering of protesters that the race couldn't
even take place. So the organizers saw no other option than to stop the
race." The situation spiraled beyond the control of security services,
leaving officials with no alternative but to halt proceedings altogether.
Attention now shifts forward, to the 2026
Tour de France,
which is set to start in Barcelona. For ASO, the race organiser, the lessons of
the Vuelta cannot be ignored. "The Tour starts next year in Barcelona. So
I think ASO, the organizer of the Tour, which is also involved in the Vuelta,
will ask Spanish politicians for guarantees," said Schotte. The challenges
of Madrid suggest that without firm commitments, staging another grand tour in
Spain could be fraught with uncertainty. "In these circumstances, it is
difficult to organise a top event like the Tour if this is hanging over your
head."
It is actually something of a surprise that the Tour did not suffer from the protests like the Vuelta did. The Tour is cycling's main event, with more global reach and a considerable number more spectators. The organisers will be in deep distress for the safety of next year's grand depart, having watched the Vuelta suffer neutralisations and disruption as high up as the Angliru, and in the cities like Bilbao and Madrid.
The Vuelta ended in the most subdued way possible, without
even a final podium ceremony. Schotte called it a tragedy for the riders who
earned their place in history. "There won't be one today. That's a
terrible thing for a rider; you don't win the Vuelta every day." For
Vingegaard, Pidcock, and others, the defining image of their achievement
will be absence, not celebration. But, at some point fans and enthusiasts must accept that cycling is an insignificant matter when compared to the geopolitical tensions at play.
Organisers may attempt a symbolic gesture and schedule the
podium later in the year. "Maybe they'll make up for it with an
alternative ceremony in the fall, but that will never replace the real feeling
of standing on the podium as the final winner," Schotte thinks.