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Tour de Yorkshire bites the dust – but a new one-day event may replace it

Hugely popular race built on legacy of 2014 Grand Départ but fell victim to collapse of region’s tourism agency

The Tour de Yorkshire , last held in 2019 with subsequent editions postponed due to a combination of the coronavirus pandemic and the collapse of Welcome To Yorkshire, the region’s tourism and inward investment agency, will not return – but plans are reportedly in place to replace it with a new one-day event.

Silicon Dales, a Lancashire-based company which earlier this year bought certain assets of Welcome To Yorkshire, including its interest in the race it ran jointly with Tour de France owners ASO, in partnership with British Cycling, had hoped to revive the race.

> Tour de Yorkshire: New hope that race may be back next year

But the Yorkshire Post reports today that discussions with the Paris-based media and sports events company have broken down.

Instead, it is hoped to stage a new event with the support of SweetSpot, the Surrey-based organiser of events including the Tour of Britain, the Women’s Tour and the Tour Series.

ASO however owns the rights to the Tour de Yorkshire name, meaning that any new event would need to have a fresh identity.

Robin Scott, owner of Silicon Dales, told the Yorkshire Post: “We couldn’t have tried any harder to get agreement with ASO for the Tour de Yorkshire event, but we needed a partner on the delivery side who wanted the event to go ahead in future.

“In SweetSpot, who organise the Tour of Britain, we have found a partnership which will be good for Yorkshire.”

The Tour of Britain is due to visit Yorkshire this year for the first time since 2009 this September with a stage from Redcar to Helmsley, and Scott hopes that the relationship with SweetSpot, which has not yet been formalised, will lead to more top-level racing in the region.

“We expect Yorkshire to achieve the same number of televised cycling days in 2023 as in 2019,” he said.

“In 2024, we’re hoping to deliver a marquee event for the region which evokes a similar energy to the amazing 2014 Grand Départ we remember so fondly.”

It was not reported whether plans are for a one-off event or one that aims to be a regular fixture on the racing calendar, but comments made by Hugh Roberts, chief executive of SweetSpot, suggest it may be the latter.

He said: “The very first edition of the modern Tour of Britain in 2004 had its roots in Yorkshire so we are delighted to be renewing our partnership with Welcome to Yorkshire for years to come, which can only benefit the whole cycling community in the region.”

Launched the year after the region hosted the Grand Départ of the Tour de France in 2014, the four-day Tour de Yorkshire men’s race, as well as the women’s event – originally a one-day race, but later expanded to two – quickly became among the best supported bike races in the world in terms of supporters lining the roadside.

But misuse of expenses and allegations of bullying employees against chief executive Sir Gary Verity – who brought the Grand Départ to the region – tarnished Welcome To Yorkshire’s image and he resigned in March 2019, six months before Harrogate hosted the UCI Road Cycling World Championships that he had fought hard to secure.

Following his departure, a number of the local councils throughout Yorkshire that funded the agency withdrew their financial support – some also questioning the value of hosting high-profile cycling events – and the agency collapsed, entering administration in March this year.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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6 comments

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VIPcyclist | 1 year ago
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A Lancashire based company organising the Tour of Yorkshire. I'm chuckling to myself.

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mdavidford replied to VIPcyclist | 1 year ago
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Maybe time for a 'Roses Tour' through Lancs, Yorks, and Derbys (Working in Hants and Northants might be a bit awkward though).

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brooksby replied to mdavidford | 1 year ago
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They could stop for coffee at Towton and Ferrybridge.

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pockstone replied to brooksby | 1 year ago
1 like

And a slice of 'Simnel' cake at East Stoke, (by which time they're half way to Bosworth...may as well make it a'tour of England'))

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brooksby replied to pockstone | 1 year ago
0 likes

Maybe we're onto something here... yes

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pockstone replied to brooksby | 1 year ago
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I did a nice little 'battlefield' ride taking in Towton and Bramham Moor (a slightly earlier conflict). Wasn't aware of the battle of Ferrybridge until now. Plenty more to go at around there, Marston Moor, Stamford Bridge, Sherburn in Elmet for starters. Towton has some interesting information boards on a rideable (gravel bike) circuit, not marked as a bridleway, and the bridge over Cock Beck is on a bridleway from Stutton. Bramham Moor has the very well hidden remains of a  cross just off the Bramham-Tadcaster road.

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