Before stage 4, Movistar sports director Jurgen Roelandts said Uijtdebroeks had endured a tough night with stomach issues and diarrhoea. The issue was labelled as a gastrointestinal infection and that the high temperatures made the illness more complicated than usual.
Describing his fever, Roelandts said it was just below 37.5 degrees celsius, which would rule him out of the stage if he hit and that the team were monitoring the situation.
Cian Uijtdebroeks' Tour de France fever
“With more than 37.5 degrees, he definitely would not have started. Today it was 37.3. That is more feverish than fever, but it is on the limit.” Roelandts told Sporza.
However, Belgian sports doctor Tom Teulingkx, chairman of the Belgian association for sports and medical screening doctors, has blasted the actions as counter-productive and marked a lack of progress on athlete wellness.
“I nearly fell off my chair when I heard it,” he
told Het Nieuwsblad. “We thought riders and teams had slowly understood it by now: do not do sport with a fever. But apparently we are back to square one.”
Teulingkx on Uijtdebroeks' gastrointestinal infection
Teulingkx also singled out comments from the Belgian rider, in which he insinuated that riding with such a fever was allowable due to other riders doing so in previous races.
“Cian is an intelligent young man, but those are very unfortunate and foolish statements," he said.
In a warning to Uijtdebroeks, Teulingkx described how riding with a fever as a result of a gastrointestinal infection could cause it to spread and do more damage.
He added: “Ninety percent of gastrointestinal infections are viral. During exercise, a lot of blood is pumped around the body, which increases the chance that the virus spreads further. And the organ where such a virus likes to settle is the heart.”