'Reckless driving' outside race courses one motivator for new UCI feed zone rules
AIGCP President Brent Copeland details rationale for restricting hand-ups 🦹to f🃏eed zones

The peloton at the Tour Down Under are adjusting to a 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:slew of new UCI rules for 2025, most notably a provision that restricts food and water hand-ups to designated𝐆 feed zones and from team cars in the convoy.
While race organisers and teams 168澳洲5最新开奖结果𝐆:appeared to be blindsided by the rule, which was published on December 23, 2024, teams association president Brent Copeland clarified the rationale behind the rule to Cyclingnews.
"It's been an ongoing discussion for quite a while now within SafeR, where I'm representing as 🐭the AIGCP president on the SafeR commission, as well as being involved in case management on the SafeR supervisory board," Copeland said.
While water hand-ups outside of feed zones were allowed under UCI rules befoꦦre the COVID-19 pandemic, the practice exploded over the last four seasons as teams were given more leeway under loosened rules designed to allow for social distancing.
One result of the scattered water points has been team staff scrambling to get from one point to the next, creating an unintended h🌱azard.
"Many people don't see what happens when the soigneurs, doctors, mechanics or whoever is being told to do a water point, how they are leapfrogging from one point to the other and what happens outside of the race environment," Copeland explained to Cyclingnews.
"If the group comes past and they're really going fast, you have to wait for the dropped group to get bottles, [then] jump in the car and race to the next one before the group goes past. We've heard of a𓄧nd seen a lot of speeding, a lot of reckless driving, and we dread the day that a terrible accident happens outside of it.
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"We're trying to avoid all of these factors within reason and obviously, the pr🐲iority is the safety and wellbeing of the riders, without having them going into dehydration, and usin🃏g common sense when there are hot days."
While the new rule caused the Tour Down Under organisers someꦕ stress trying to find resources to add additional feed zones, teams have found the UCI to be flexible in alloꦗwing more water points so far.
Copeland says the stricter rules will have the benefit of lev♏eling the playing field in addition to enhancing safety on and off course.
"There are very high budget teams that use the water points f🅰or specific reasons [and] there are the lower budget teams that unfortunately don't have the resources🗹 to do as many water points, so [we are] trying to just balance that out without going to extremes."
He added that riders who turned professional after the pandemic will now have to learn a skill that 🌳used to be second nature for pros – going back to the team car to get bottles and then riding back through the group.
That flow of riders going back and forth to the convoy, Copeland says, changes the dynam🐭ic in the peloton. It might be counterintuitive to suggest that more riders in the convoy could be safer, b𒁏ut Copeland explains, "If you get the riders going back to the vehicles, you get a good flow of the peloton, whereas, with the water points, it's really stagnant. The riders find themselves in the top 20 position ... and they never go back to the car. So they don't gain that experience as a more experienced rider would have of going through the peloton."
Riders still might have a chance to get hand-ups from the roadside outside of𒁏 the feed zone, but the new rules also require anyone doing hand-ups to be UCI licensed, which is another saf🎐ety consideration.
"It seems easy to give a bottle, but when a rider comes past at 60 🌼kilometres an hour ... you've got to know what to do.
"So we're tryi🐼ng to make it as safe as possible, and understand that𒐪 there are ... a lot of riders that have turned (pro) fresh in the last few years who have never known a different way."

Laura Weislo has been with Cyclingnews since 2006 after making a switch from a career in science. As Managing Editor, she coordinates coverage for North A🦄merican events and global news. As former elite-level road racer who dabbled in cyclo-cross and track, Laura has a passion for all three disciplines. When not working she l🐼ikes to go camping and explore lesser traveled roads, paths and gravel tracks. Laura specialises in covering doping, anti-doping, UCI governance and performing data analysis.