Gear ratio limits trial proposed for 2025 to improve pro rider safety
Gear limits, y✨ellow cards and protective clothing among measures to offer ongoing improvements in rider safety addres💞sed by first SafeR Supervisory Board meeting in 2025

Gear ratio restrictions, safet🧜y equipment and targeted events for this season were among the topics addressed in the first meeting in 2025 of the SafeR Supervisory Board, 🐻the body tasked with improving rider safety in road cycling.
168澳洲5最新开奖结果:SafeR was set up in 2023 as a way to bring together teams, race organisers, rider unions and the UCI to work together t🐲o improve safe🦋ty within races, and their activity has been fairly nebulous so far, but the body’s first-ever press release, issued on Friday, shed light on their current focuses and activities.
The meeting was attended by 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Giro d’Italia race director Mauro Vegni, Vuelta a España technical director Kiko García, AIGCP president Brent Copeland, Picnic-PostNL team representative Emily Brammeier, CPA preside🌳nt Adam Hansen, and Roccဣo Cattaneo and Amina Lanaya of the UCI.
A big takeaway from the meeting is that the body intends to explore the possibility of limits on gear ratios, a suggestion backed by Wout van Aert (Visma-Leas𒁃e a Bike), to help reduce high-speed crashe🌱s.
Following the results of a rider survey, SafeR &🤪ldquo;will propose to the Professional Cycling Council that it endorses the organisation of a gear ratio limitation test later this season”, the press release reads.
The idea of gear restrictions is the latest contribution to the long and complex conversation around ride💜r safety. Whilst more race regulations and practical protections are being put in place each year, the inevitable fact that the peloton is going faster than ever remains a concern, and restricted gear ratios would seek to limit the maximum speeds riders can reach.
“Limiting the gears would make the sport a lot safer, in my opinion,” Van Aert told Sporza in January. &ldq🌸uo;Other riders don't think so but I'm convinced about it. If you are on that descent with a gear limi🧸t, no one can move up. Now the gears are so big that you still think about overtaking."
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Gear restrictions were previously mandated for junior riders – more from the positi🐻on of not over-stressing their bodies than in-race safety – but this was scrapped in 2023.
As well as gear restrictions, SafeR’s rider survey, completed by 287 male and female riders, also focused on the topic o💯f protective equipment such as abrasion-resistant clothing and wearable airbags, which SafeR says there is an “interest” for, as well as “an openness to seeing the development of more regulation on topics related to equipment and their safety”.
SafeR has also agreed to expand their racing jurisdiction, now including a selection of Class 1 events, where many in♐cidents were identified.
“Many of the issues occurred at Class 1 events, a class of events not originally included in SafeR scope of activity, which was focused on the UCI WorldTour, UCI Women’s WorldTour and UCI ProSeries. The SafeR Supervisory Board decided to include a selection o𝄹f Class 1 events in the future to be supported and analysed by SafeR analysts.”
The press release confirmed that former Swiss rider Steve Morabito will take over from Romain Caubin as the organisers’ representative on the SafeR Case Management Committee. He joins former riders Rubens Bertogliati and Dan Martin and CPA and CPA Women presidents Adam Hansen and Alessandra Cappellotto on the panel that meets 🍒weekly and analyses race incidents.
SafeR laid out which events would be analysed in 2025, with t🌟he criteria being “new event, event with security incidents in previous years or other reasons”. The current list of 15 events includes Itzulia Basque Country, the scene of last year’s horror crash, the Tour de Pologne, and new r🗹aces such as Milan-San Remo Women and the Copenhagen Sprint.
The body says: “The analysts will work with the organisers ahead of their race on safety-relat⭕ed aspects, in particular, to identify potentially dangerous sections of the route, and will be present at the events. They will then draw up a report to be shared with SafeR, which will then use this as the basis for making recommendations to the UCI on areas for improvement.”
SafeR analysts will also attend selected stag🐓es of each G𒀰rand Tour.
On the topic of yellow cards, implemented fully this year after a test in 2024, the board “welcomed the now systematic applicat༒ion of the yellow card system in the relevant events organised so far this year”.
Though SafeR has been in p🔯lace since 2023, Friday’s press release and the meeting on March 4 are some of the most concrete communications around what the body is doing, and their intentions and areas of focus in 2025.
Matilda is an NCTJ-qualified journalist based in the UK who joined Cyclingnews in March 2025. Prior to that, she worked as the Racing News Editor at GCN, and extensively as a freelancer contributing to Cyclingnews, Cycling Weekly, Velo, Rouleur, Escape Collective, Red Bull and more. She has reported from many of the biggest events on the c꧃alendar, including the Giro d'Italia, Tour de France Femmes, Tour of Flanders and Paris-Roubaix. She has particular experience and expertise in women's cycling, and women's sport in general. She is a graduate of modern languages and sports journalism.
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