Finally, the Tour de France is giving women a more visible role than just congratulating the male riders, reports USA Today.
On July 27 cycling's best-known race will host "La Course by Le Tour de France" — a one-day women's competition staged hours before Tour riders race on the same circuit to finish the three-week event on Paris' Champs-Elysées.
The International Cycling Union announced the innovation Saturday as part of its 2014 racing calendar. Tour organizers, the Amaury Sport Organization, say they aim to make the women's competition "one of the most decisive races of the season."
Until now, the 110-year-old Tour has been almost exclusively a male preserve, with women sometimes employed as team staffers or on the winners' podium handing out flowers.
A number of women's races have collapsed in recent years and some competitors have criticized poor funding and promotion. A "Tour Feminin" event in France was staged in the past, but not since 2009.
"Women's races have had financial difficulties — little television exposure, little media fallout and, as a result, few sponsors," said UCI sport director Philippe Chevallier in a phone interview. "We are working hard so that will change," he said, acknowledging that "it's a long-term job."
A group of cyclists, including Olympic gold medalist and road race world champion Marianne Vos of the Netherlands and Olympian Emma Pooley of Britain, launched a petition last summer to push for a professional women's race in parallel to the Tour de France over the same distances.
Read more of this Associated Press report published by USA Today.