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Have we reached peak sportive? Etape Pennines axed due to lack of participant interest

Organisers pull plug on closed-road event which moved from October to July this year

England’s first closed road sportive, the Marie Curie Cancer Care Etape Pennines, has been axed after three editions by organisers IMG Challenger World due to lack of interest among potential entrants, raising the question - have we reached peak sportive?

The first two editions of the event, based near Barnard Castle in County Durham, took place in October but it was moved to July this year in response to feedback from participants.

The change of date saw the event, launched in 2012 and which aims to attract 2,000 entries, come under criticism from local farmers who said it would disrupt the haymaking season, reports the Northern Echo.

Meanwhile its new slot at the start of the school holidays also led to concerns it would disrupt tourism in the area.

In a statement, IMG Chalenger World said: “We are sorry to announce that the Marie Curie Cancer Care Etape Pennines cycling sportive will not be happening in 2015.

“We have delivered Etape Pennines for three consecutive years, having invested a lot of time and effort to deliver a high quality closed road sportive; but unfortunately the event has not generated enough participant interest to continue.”

Its managing director, James Robinson, added: “Etape Pennines has been a fantastic project to be involved with and we are proud to have given many cyclists the chance to ride this fantastic, beautiful route over the last three years.

He added: “It is disappointing that this event will not be taking place in 2015, and we would like to thank the local community and County Durham for all of their support over the last few years.”

Richard Varcoe, owner of Barnard Castle bike shop Spitfire Cycles, told the Northern Echo that he believed local opposition to the event may also have been a possible factor behind the decision to curtail it.

“There’s been too much pushback locally so maybe the organisers have had enough,” he said.

He added that axing the event is “extremely bad for the businesses because it brings 2,000 people to the area, some of which are here for three days, so all the accommodation fills up.

“It’s the farmers that are complaining about it because for one day of the year they cannot trunk around in their tractors.”

Durham County Council’s strategic manager of culture and sport, Nigel Dodds, said that while the disappearance of the sportive was regrettable, the council remained committed to hosting cycling events.

“We are disappointed to lose the Etape Pennines which we believe introduced many people to the stunning beauty and visitor offer of the Dales,” he said, “however we understand and respect IMG’s decision.

He added: “Being part of the Etape from its concept has allowed us to gather a wealth of experience which we will now use to enrich the range of cycling events which the county has a growing reputation for hosting.”

IMG Challenger also organises the Etape Caledonia, which continues to thrive. Entries for next year’s edition of the closed-roads sportive in Scotland opened at the start of this month, and general places – that is, excluding 500 Charity Pledge places – sold out within 58 hours.

With the Etape Pennines costing £63 to enter this year, does the decision to pull the plug on it mean that cyclists are losing their appetite for high-priced sportives?

Not necessarily. IMG Challenge World also organises the Etape Caledonia, which continues to thrive.

Entries for next May’s edition of the closed-roads sportive in Highland Perhshire opened at the start of this month, and general places – that is, excluding 500 Charity Pledge places – sold out within 58 hours.

But besides clashing with the start of the school holidays, moving the Etape Pennines to July will have put it in direct competition with many more events than was the case when it was held in October.

Those include the UK’s biggest sportive, the Prudential Ride-London Surrey 100, which had its second edition in early August.

This year’s edition of the Etape Pennines also took place a fortnight after the Grand Depart of the Tour de France from Yorkshire.

That saw cyclists from across the UK converge on the north of England, and may have deterred some potential entrants to travel back to the region for another event so soon.

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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40 comments

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Paul J | 10 years ago
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It isn't elitist or sneering to point out that sportives are expensive and that a confident cyclist can easily do without them.

I did a few sportives too as I got back into cycling. I enjoyed them. It was helpful having a planned route with signs, lots of other cyclists, and the knowledge there was a voiture balai that'd come along in the worst case.

However, after a while of cycling, as your abilities, knowledge, self-reliance and confidence develops and you go out yourself on longer runs at the weekend, it becomes hard to not to develop the feeling that you're paying a hell of a lot of money to ride on public roads like you'd do anyway.

Also, with how the prices of sportives have generally rapidly increased over the years, it is hard to avoid the thought that the sportive organisers are fleecing you. That thought is particularly hard to escape when you've finished a sportive you paid a good few tens of pounds for, are famished and find there is no complementary food at the finish. You're left ponder as you queue at the hot food stand, where you'll have to hand over another £5 or so. For me, the conclusion was inescapable.

Do them when you start off cycling, if it helps give you the confidence to cycle. After a certain point, if you can't figure out how to better spend that money, well... maybe you're a mug.  3

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Flying Scot | 10 years ago
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A lot of my friends are into Sportives and I tag along.

They don't train all year round, so target these so they don't lose their 50/ 70 quid !

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brian_the_snail | 10 years ago
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Organisers IMG are rip off merchants who are only interested in making money. I have done plenty of sportives but there is no way I would spend that amount of money on what is a relatively short event. I did Wiggle Hell of Hexham last year and it used many of the same roads and couldn't understand why they bother closing the roads.. Passed by about a dozen cars all day... Roads were deserted! Seems like sportive events are either over subscribed or get virtually no entries. The reputation of events seems to matter most for potential entrants.

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watercrook | 10 years ago
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To many event management companies especially the likes of IMG have jumped on the sportive bandwagon to make cash for themselves while pretending to raise money for charity

There are still plenty about organized by clubs and raising directly for charity such as Fred whitton (lakes road club)etape dales (Dave Rayner fund) just think carefully which you book

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AmYerMan | 10 years ago
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"IMG Challenge World also organises the Etape Caledonia, which continues to thrive."
Positively thriving for the organisers . . . the charity I'm not too sure about.

Here's some required reading from a couple of years ago about IMG for anyone thinking of entering a "charity" event . . .
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/bike-blog/2012/jun/20/charity-bik...

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fenix | 10 years ago
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A mate persuaded me to enter a closed road sportive this year.

I wasn't convinced before the event - I ride those roads anyway and they are fairly quiet.

In the end I really did enjoy it - especially the last 15 miles into the finish where we had a proper little bunch working. Before that it was too hilly and people were strung out.

The closed roads made that part quite fun - but it wasnt a long drive for us and it wasnt £63.

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ir_bandito | 10 years ago
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Problem was it clashed with the North Pennines NTB Marathon in the same area on the same weekend which only cost £28 to enter.  3
Doesn't help the appeal that even though the Etape is for Marie Curie, none of the entry fee goes to the charity, its merely an opportunity to raise sponsorship on top. Money from the MTB Marathon went into local access development.

Quote:

the course was awful IMHO - all first gear climbs and descents on the brakes

Welcome to the North  1

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Joeinpoole | 10 years ago
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What we need is an Etape New Forest.

Organise it and they will come.

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Guyveall | 10 years ago
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Just too expensive
I am all for a good charity but within reason
Market forces should prevail and they should compete not just give up

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mrmo | 10 years ago
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I did a couple of Sportives a few years ago, what put me off was the attitude of some "competitors" and the fact that I got hit by someone trying to run a red light...

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Phil T replied to mrmo | 10 years ago
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mrmo wrote:

I did a couple of Sportives a few years ago, what put me off was the attitude of some "competitors" and the fact that I got hit by someone trying to run a red light...

Exactly, I saw the word elitist mentioned above, and in my experience this is definitely not a term that could be used for the majority of Audaxers.
In my experience I have always found Audax events a bit friendlier than sportives.

However, please don't think I'm knocking all sportives or their riders I'm not. As mentioned above these events have helped to raise the profile of cycling in the UK enormously, and often have some pretty serious riders.

I was just pointing why these events are not, in most cases for me.

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ragtimecyclist | 10 years ago
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Too expensive. That's it.

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tomturcan | 10 years ago
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Mmm, I think people are being a bit unfair to sportives and their riders on this comment thread. Sportives have played their part in the UK's cycling boom we are all enjoying - they are an easy way for new and less committed riders to participate with like-minded others over well-planned but unfamiliar routes. They help people enjoy the sport, achieve fitness goals and, for some, go on to more ambitious cycling, whether competitive or otherwise. They don't cost nothing to put on, and the for-profit group of organisers usually sets the standard in booking, routing and support. If the market is now maturing and some events are surplus, that sends useful signals to the organisers about quantity, product and pricing, and they can adjust. Many sportives also raise money for charity, whether or not the organising body is for profit. Audaxes and clubs are great, but they are more specialist propositions, not cheap sportives. Not everyone wants to commit to a club, or gets as much fun out of longer-distance audax rides, but their memberships are benefiting from people entering the sport, many of whom will try a local or high-profile sportive before deciding whether to join in. I'd suggest the success of sportives are something for all kinds of cyclists to celebrate, not to sneer at, and they present aficionados of other aspects of the sport a great recruitment platform.

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Daveyraveygravey replied to tomturcan | 10 years ago
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tomturcan wrote:

Mmm, I think people are being a bit unfair to sportives and their riders on this comment thread. Sportives have played their part in the UK's cycling boom we are all enjoying - they are an easy way for new and less committed riders to participate with like-minded others over well-planned but unfamiliar routes. They help people enjoy the sport, achieve fitness goals and, for some, go on to more ambitious cycling, whether competitive or otherwise. They don't cost nothing to put on, and the for-profit group of organisers usually sets the standard in booking, routing and support. If the market is now maturing and some events are surplus, that sends useful signals to the organisers about quantity, product and pricing, and they can adjust. Many sportives also raise money for charity, whether or not the organising body is for profit. Audaxes and clubs are great, but they are more specialist propositions, not cheap sportives. Not everyone wants to commit to a club, or gets as much fun out of longer-distance audax rides, but their memberships are benefiting from people entering the sport, many of whom will try a local or high-profile sportive before deciding whether to join in. I'd suggest the success of sportives are something for all kinds of cyclists to celebrate, not to sneer at, and they present aficionados of other aspects of the sport a great recruitment platform.

Well said, there is a lot of elitist sneering at sportives and sportive riders from "proper" cyclists. £63 is a lot, but closed roads are brilliant; at least Ridelondon is brilliant mainly because of the closed roads and number of cyclists. A smaller event on much quieter roads might put that in a different light.

I've done a couple of personal challenges myself this year, to do with the 14 climbs in the SE that are part of the 100 Greatest Climbs. At least two of these rides involved trying to group 3 or 4 of the climbs into one ride, and the hardest most frustrating part of it for me was trying to stay on a route I'd planned on the pc for hours. Never mind the frustration of what Google maps suggest is fine for a road bike doesn't always work in reality, it is a pita when you've ridden 80 miles and you think this doesn't look right and you really don't want to be going 200 yds in the wrong direction never mind a couple of miles. Coombe Gibbet was the low point for me, I'd done 3 others that day, and I went up and down the bloody ridge looking for the right ascent. If I hadn't have been so tired I would have realise the hill runs from north to south, not the other way. So, a well sign posted route is worth paying something for.

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KiwiMike replied to Daveyraveygravey | 10 years ago
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Daveyraveygravey wrote:

... Coombe Gibbet was the low point for me, I'd done 3 others that day, and I went up and down the bloody ridge looking for the right ascent. If I hadn't have been so tired I would have realise the hill runs from north to south, not the other way. So, a well sign posted route is worth paying something for.

Come round my 'hood 10th May. I'll introduce you to Coombe Gibbet and its nastier sibling, West Woodhay Down  1

Proper signage guaranteed.

www.primarypedal.org.uk

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mtbguiding | 10 years ago
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We travelled up from Wales and stayed in the area a week so perhaps perfect clients? But the course was awful IMHO - all first gear climbs and descents on the brakes. Difficult to get in a rhythm and enjoy and also pretty unsociable as difficult to ride as a couple or in a group. Organisation was brilliant though - probably the best I've been to.

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KiwiMike | 10 years ago
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Or, spend £15 and ride the hilliest, prettiest 60 miles of your life, just an hour from Waterloo: www.primarypedal.org.uk - May 10th 2015  1

The folks trumpeting Audaxes as the solution are missing a MAJOR point: with an Audax, you have to know where you are going. Saying Audaxes are the solution to Sportive-fatigue is like saying the AA mapbook is the solution to SatNav rage.

Sure SatNavs aren't perfect, but they make life a hell of a lot easier. Gone are the days you needed a pile of books in the car, or to stop at a local services to buy the local map that wouldn't be stocked anywhere else.

Most people don't want to have to work their brains that hard. They want to turn up and ride, with no-brainer fatigue-proof signage at every turn, regular marshals and the knowledge that if the shit does hit the fan, there is someone to help medically or technically. The actual entry fee is usually a tiny fraction of the overall opportunity cost for most cyclists who have had to travel more than 50 miles, and let's face it, the Pennines or other rides in the wilderness do attract people from far away.

Plus Audaxes are frequently on god-awful main roads. Although with the increase in GPS-routed non-routecard-stamping ones this is changing and AUK recognise this.

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dassie replied to KiwiMike | 10 years ago
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I'd say it's always useful to to have a level of independence and know where you're going; a back-up if you like. On my first and only sportive last year, some 'bright sparks' removed a significant number of event signs (for the short, medium & long circuits), causing problems. Fortunately following a previously downloaded gpx track on a garmin/phone/etc, is pretty easy these days. This year I've done a mix of 100 & 200km Audax rides. Very sociable, great rides with very low a-road content (if that's an issue), & low entry fees (<£10). There are no event motorcycles buzzing around, and, self-sufficiency is needed (which may not be for everyone), but this for me is all part of the freedom, and if worst comes to the worst for a more major mechanical, there are always fellow riders, local bike shops, and other options.

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Paul J | 10 years ago
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If you're paying £40 to £60+ just for a few feed zones, you need to learn how to use google maps to plan a route that goes through a village or town with a petrol station or newsagent at appropriate intervals. For £40+ you should be stopping at gourmet restaurants for your feed zones, instead of grabbing a few bananas, sugary gels & flap jacks from a table at the side of the road!

Sportives: Massive waste of money.

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Phil T | 10 years ago
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That's the beauty of Audax, you get a prepared route in a part of the country you're not familar with, and in most cases it costs less than a tenner. In fact for just a bit more, £12, on last years snow roads 300k, snacks were available at the start, there was a free conrol with beans on toast etc laid on at Braemar, and also bridies, (a kind of Scottish steak pasty), soup and beers laid on at the finish all covered by the entry fee.
Most of the time too Audaxes are of a sufficient length to make it really worthwhile travelling to the other end of the country. I'm sure many people spend more time actually getting to a sportive than they do riding them!

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Matt eaton | 10 years ago
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£63 to enter a sportive? And they wonder why they can't attract enough takers?

I'm not much of a sportivist but I can see the value in paying £20 for someone to plan a nice route for you and provide food and drink stops along the way. Having a broom wagon in case of a major mechanical is also nice. Doing a big ride with no support takes a bit of planning and organisation and paying a small fee to have someone else do this for you represents good value in my book but £63? I don't think so, even if the roads are closed.

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Yorkshie Whippet | 10 years ago
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I do sportives for the reasons given above, the main one being the feedzones. Although the standard has plummeted recently, one event thought the biscuits and water was sufficient. The navigation issues are a close second followed by the goodie bag/medal and after ride food.

That said, organisers seemingly made enough out of £10 entry with well stocked feedzones a few years ago. My focus has shifted to doing a few well organised events over on the continent anyway.

The biggest problem with this event is that it was too close to Le Tour. Hmm let's think, international event that was effectively free to watch and possibly not repeated. Or an expensive ride?

The next biggest problem is that there are just too many events all chasing the same money. Ok so the event is say £25 to enter, add in another £25 for food, £50 for fuel and maybe £100 for accommodation, that's £200 for one day riding. Do five events and that's a £1k. The cost of a good bike. As for "It's for charity" events come on, please give us a break what they are after is often ridiculous, entry is £25 plus £500 sponsership. Hello guys, my workmates wages have been below inflation for the last 5 years.

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rodsfaria | 10 years ago
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I do a few sportive events a year.Reason I enjoy is because it does gives me the opportunity to ride different routes I wouldn't necessarily be aware of.The Wiggle/UK cycling events are usually well organised and with prices around £30.Only paid that sort of cash for the prudential London.I also have had enough of charity events . unless if you a really popular figure how can you keep receiving donations from friends and family all the time?

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bobbinogs | 10 years ago
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I must admit that I feel very ambivilent about the whole corporate ethos of these events with cyclists seemingly just there to balance the books. Corporate charities PAY large sums of money to be associated with the events and then, in turn, go on the hard sell offensive to recoup the outlay. I just like riding my bike...rather than being an upsell opportunity whilst I am doing it.

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exilegareth | 10 years ago
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I live just up the road from Co. Durham, and ride occasional sportives. Etape Pennines had no reason for me to pay the extra above what, say, the Wooler Wheel type events charge. As someone else pointed out, there are plenty of high quality sportives around Hexham and Haydon Bridge, like the Hexham Hell, Angel and even the Cyclone, that cost a lot less for the same outcomes.

More than that though, the greed of huge corporate charities like Marie Curie can stifle events. They seem to demand a USP from the events they partner with that can make those events unviable. Like other people have said, why do you need closed roads? We don't need closed roads to ride time trials; closed roads are only required for road races, and the whole point of a sportive is it isn't a race.

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willythepimp | 10 years ago
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I have never ridden a sportive. The only thing that would make me keen would be closed roads. What sportives are?

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truffy | 10 years ago
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For your money you also got to piss off all those other people who like to use the roads. That's gotta be worth something?

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HalfWheeler | 10 years ago
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I've had it with sportives, waste of money. Unless it's something with a USP (like the Maratona, Etape abroad or the Bealach Mor in the UK) they're not worth the money.

The last one I did was on local roads. It wasn't cheap and for your money you got a handful of energy gels, a crappy finishing medal and a bowl of pasta at the end. There wasn't even any chipped timing!

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truffy | 10 years ago
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Not only this:

Quote:

IMG Challenger also organises the Etape Caledonia, which continues to thrive. Entries for next year’s edition of the closed-roads sportive in Scotland opened at the start of this month, and general places – that is, excluding 500 Charity Pledge places – sold out within 58 hours.

But this:

Quote:

Not necessarily. IMG Challenge World also organises the Etape Caledonia, which continues to thrive.

Entries for next May’s edition of the closed-roads sportive in Highland Perhshire opened at the start of this month, and general places – that is, excluding 500 Charity Pledge places – sold out within 58 hours.

Just like my wife; if it's worth saying once, it's worth saying more than once.

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Phil T | 10 years ago
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As a long time Audaxer, I have to say that although I've ridden a few sportives, I've never really 'got' them. I don't understand why people are willing to spend £50 or more to ride roads they can ride for free.
Maybe we have reached peak sportive as the article mentions, if IMG aren't able to fill an event with closed roads.
For me, closed roads would be the only reason I'd bother to enter another sportive.

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