UCI invites Africa to host 2025 UCI Road World Champs
Friday, July 27, 2018
Rwanda Cycling Federationu2019s president Aimable Bayingana has revealed that Rwanda could bid to host the 2025 UCI Road World Championships. File photo.

The Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) has encouraged African countries to submit bids to host cycling’s flagship event in 2025.

As announced during the UCI presidential campaign in 2017, and as unanimously adopted by the Management Committee in Arzon in June 2018, the UCI hopes to see Africa host its first UCI Road World Championships in 2025.

The bid deadline is September 2019, at which point the UCI, following the approval of its Management Committee, will announce the name of the city selected at its annual Congress.

A letter of invitation and a document designed to help prospective candidates with their bids have been sent to all 50 National Federations of the African Cycling Confederation (CAC).

The aim of what will be a landmark event in cycling’s history is to consolidate the growth of cycling in Africa.

In recent years, Africa has shown its considerable interest in organising major events across various disciplines, such as the Mountain Bike and Para-cycling Road UCI World Championships, held in Pietermaritzburg (South Africa) in 2013 and 2017 respectively.

The road races on the UCI Africa Tour calendar, such as the Tour du Rwanda, La Tropicale Amissa Bongo, and the Tour du Maroc, attract a number of professional teams from elsewhere in the world and provide an indication of the continent’s increasingly high profile on the UCI International Calendar.

In the meantime, and thanks to the support of the UCI World Cycling Centre (WCC) in Aigle, Switzerland, and the continent’s satellite centre in Capetown, South Africa, a clutch of African riders have broken through at the highest level, including the UCI World Tour.

Among them are the Eritrean trio of Daniel Teklehaimanot, Natnael Berhane and Tsgabu Grmay, Ethiopia’s Merhawi Kudus, Rwanda’s Valens Ndayisenga, and Youcef Reguigui of Algeria.

Over the last 15 years, the UCI WCC and its African satellite centre have welcomed nearly 1,000 trainees from the continent.

Since the 1970s, the UCI Road World Championships have regularly ventured beyond Europe to new pastures in a bid to grow the popularity of the sport around the world, heading to the Americas (Canada: Montreal in 1974 and Hamilton in 2003; Venezuela: San Cristobal in 1977; Colombia: Duitama in 1995; the USA: Colorado Springs in 1986 and Richmond in 2015), Asia (Japan: Utsunomiya in 1990; Qatar: Doha in 2016), and Oceania (Australia: Melbourne in 2010).

The UCI hopes that Africa will now take its turn in hosting the major annual gathering of the world’s national road cycling teams, who will vie for the coveted UCI World Champion’s rainbow jersey.

According to Rwanda Cycling Federation (Ferwacy) president Aimable Bayingana, Rwanda is considering to bid for the world’s biggest cycling showdown.

editorial@newtimes.co.rw