The UCI ProTour was a series of
road bicycle races in Europe, Australia and Canada organised by the
UCI (International Cycling Union). Created by
Hein Verbruggen, former president of the UCI, it comprises a number of 'ProTour'
cycling team
A cycling team is a group of cycle sport, cyclists who join a team or are acquired and train together to compete in bicycle racing, bicycle races whether amateur or professional – and the supporting personnel. Cycling teams are most important i ...
s, each of whom are required to compete in every round of the series. It was initially the basis of a season long competition for rankings points, created for
2005
2005 was designated as the International Year for Sport and Physical Education and the International Year of Microcredit. The beginning of 2005 also marked the end of the International Decade of the World's Indigenous Peoples, Internationa ...
to replace the
UCI Road World Cup series, which ended at the end of the 2004 season (although the World Cup did not include any
stage races). The ProTour was the subject of continuing disputes involving the UCI, cycling teams, and the organizers of the world's most prominent bicycle races (most notably, the
Grand Tours), and in 2009 and 2010 the ranking element of the ProTour was superseded by the
UCI World Ranking. For 2011, the ProTour and World Ranking were fully merged into the
UCI World Tour. ProTour status for teams – relabelled UCI ProTeams – will continue as the highest level of registration, and will carry the right and obligation to participate in all World Tour races.
Licensing
The ProTour licences are given to a maximum of 20 teams, to which sponsors must commit multiple years of sponsorship (4 years at the ProTour's inauguration). The exception to this rule was the
Phonak team, which was given only a two-year licence due to previous doping allegations. Licence holders can apply for registration each year, which is dependent upon a check on contracts and budgets.
After 2005, the
Fassa Bortolo and
Domina Vacanze teams folded and the vacant places were given to
AG2R Prévoyance and
Team Milram respectively. Following the 2006 season the designated replacement principal sponsor for the
Phonak Hearing Systems team,
iShares, pulled its support as a results of the
Floyd Landis doping scandal and the team was disbanded. The
Unibet.com Cycling Team received Phonak's ProTour license, and the Swiss-based, Kazakh-backed
Astana Team received the license previously owned by
Manolo Saiz and his
Liberty Seguros–Würth. Unibet.com and
Discovery Channel
Discovery Channel, known as The Discovery Channel from 1985 to 1995, and often referred to as simply Discovery, is an American cable channel that is best known for its ongoing reality television shows and promotion of pseudoscience.
It init ...
discontinued after the 2007 season, bringing down the number of ProTour teams to 18. At the end of 2008, another two teams dropped out:
Crédit Agricole and
Gerolsteiner. Their licenses were taken over by
Garmin–Slipstream and
Team Katusha.
Bbox Bouygues Telecom and
Cofidis were denied licence renewals for the 2010 season, and new licences were given to and . Although had had its licence renewed until 2013, its registration (a separate process from licensing, concerning finances) for 2010 season was temporarily rejected, but restored after they had missed one race. UCI bylaws were later changed to require a team to be registered before its license is granted or renewed, to avoid a repeat of this situation.
History
Season-long competitions for professional road racing were first instituted in 1948, and continued until the late 1980s when the UCI instituted the
UCI Road World Cup series which ran until 2004.
In replacing the World Cup, the ProTour was designed to follow the format of the
Formula One
Formula One (F1) is the highest class of worldwide racing for open-wheel single-seater formula Auto racing, racing cars sanctioned by the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA). The FIA Formula One World Championship has been one ...
motor-racing series, and was intended to address several concerns:
* The
Grand Tours were not part of the UCI Road World Cup series
* Different riders and different teams targeted different types of races, making direct comparisons difficult
* Team sponsorships tended to last only a very few years
* Many teams had financial difficulty in paying their riders and staff members
* Several teams had been plagued by doping issues
The UCI lobbied the organizers of the Grand Tours to participate in the ProTour, and was successful in obtaining their agreement despite prior disagreements and threats to completely pull out of the ProTour.
The ProTour has been criticized for not having a system in place for a timely
upgrade and downgrade of teams from/to the lower-tier
UCI Continental Circuits.
UCI versus Grand Tour organisers
Originally, UCI and the organisers of the Grand Tours had been unable to come to terms on the 2006 UCI ProTour, with the result that the status of both the Grand Tours and some of the other races organised by those organisations behind the Grand Tours was unclear until well into the season, but they were eventually included.
During the 2007 UCI ProTour season, the
ASO,
RCS and Unipublic, organisers of the
Tour de France,
Giro d'Italia
The Giro d'Italia (; ), also known simply as the Giro, is an annual stage race, multiple-stage bicycle racing, bicycle race primarily held in Italy, while also starting in, or passing through, other countries. The first race was organized in 19 ...
and
Vuelta a España
The Vuelta a España (; ) is an annual stage race, multi-stage bicycle racing, bicycle race primarily held in Spain, while also occasionally making passes through nearby countries. Inspired by the success of the Tour de France and the Giro d'Ital ...
respectively, remained at odds with each other. The primary reason was that grand tour organisers wanted more freedom to invite popular national teams (e.g., UCI Professional Continental teams) and the right to exclude some UCI ProTour teams such as
Unibet.com. Failure to achieve agreement lead UCI chairman
Pat McQuaid to send a letter in February 2008 to all professional teams urging them to
boycott
A boycott is an act of nonviolent resistance, nonviolent, voluntary abstention from a product, person, organisation, or country as an expression of protest. It is usually for Morality, moral, society, social, politics, political, or Environmenta ...
Paris–Nice because it was an 'outlawed' race. In response, the
AIGCP (Association International des Groupes Cyclistes Professionels) announced that the teams had unanimously decided to take part in Paris–Nice, the organisation of which was to be taken over by the
French Cycling Federation.
Quick Step team manager
Patrick Lefevere commented: "I'm more than fed up with all the arguing. ASO and UCI don't know how much damage they are doing to the sport. What am I supposed to tell my sponsors? This conflict has been going on for three years and is escalating all the time. Can the teams be certain that they will be able to take part in the Tour de France later in the year?".
From 2008, the ProTour was largely devalued by the withdrawal from its calendar of the three
Grand Tours, namely the
Tour de France,
Giro d'Italia
The Giro d'Italia (; ), also known simply as the Giro, is an annual stage race, multiple-stage bicycle racing, bicycle race primarily held in Italy, while also starting in, or passing through, other countries. The first race was organized in 19 ...
and
Vuelta a España
The Vuelta a España (; ) is an annual stage race, multi-stage bicycle racing, bicycle race primarily held in Spain, while also occasionally making passes through nearby countries. Inspired by the success of the Tour de France and the Giro d'Ital ...
, as well as the early-season stage race
Paris–Nice and key single-day events such as
Paris–Roubaix,
Milan–San Remo
Milan–Sanremo (in italian language, Italian ''Milano-Sanremo''), also called "''The Spring classic''" or "''La Classicissima''", is an annual road bicycle racing, road cycling race between Milan and Sanremo, in Northwest Italy. With a distance ...
,
Liège–Bastogne–Liège,
La Flèche Wallonne and the
Giro di Lombardia.
On 15 July 2008, the 17 ProTour teams participating in the
2008 Tour de France announced that none of them would seek ProTour licenses for the 2009 season,
[Agence France-Presse, 15 July 2008]
"17 teams will not seek ProTour licenses for '09"
but in the end all but two of them re-committed. In 2008 the
Tour Down Under in Australia became the first ProTour event to be held outside Europe.
In 2009 UCI and organizers had agreement that events will be counted towards
UCI World Ranking, which also included, in its first two seasons, Professional Continental teams. Grand Tour organizers kept the right to choose teams for the races, and also some of the teams chose not to race certain races. From 2011, all races on the World Calendar, those that yield World Ranking points, are to be classified as World Tour events, and the Pro Tour as a distinct series of races is to be discontinued.
Events
Key:
*

: Included in ProTour
*

: Race held, but not as part of ProTour
* N/A: Race not held, or not as elite professional race
History of team participation
Dark grey indicates that the team was not operating in the year in question.
Mid-grey indicates that the team was competing at a lower level in the year in question.
UCI ProTour winners
In 2009 and 2010, the season-long competition element of the ProTour was replaced by the
2009 UCI World Ranking and the
2010 UCI World Ranking
The 2010 UCI World Ranking was the second edition of the ranking system launched by the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) in 2009; the following year it would be merged with the UCI ProTour to form the UCI World Tour. The series started with t ...
.
See also
*
Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI)
*
List of UCI ProTour records
References
Bibliography
* Luca Rebeggiani/Davide Tondani
Organizational Forms in Professional Cycling – Efficiency Issues of the UCI Pro Tour(describes strengths and weaknesses of the UCI ProTour from a social scientists' point of view)
External links
*
Official Union Cycliste Internationale website
{{DEFAULTSORT:Uci Protour
Defunct cycle racing series
ProTour
Recurring sporting events established in 2005
Men's road cycling
Recurring events disestablished in 2010