The History of Professional Road Cycling
Jean-François Mignot
Chapter Chapter 2 in The Economics of Professional Road Cycling, 2016, pp 7-31 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract Why did cycling become professional as early as the late nineteenth century, while other sports (such as rugby) and other sport events (such as the Olympic Games) remained amateur until the 1980s? Why are the organizers of the most important bicycle races private companies, while in other sports such as soccer the main event organizer is a nonprofit organization? To what extent have bicycle races changed since the late nineteenth century? And how does cycling reflect long-term economic changes? The history of professional road cycling helps answer these questions and understand many related phenomena. This chapter provides a long-term, historical perspective on (1) professional road cycling’s economic agents, i.e., the public, race organizers, team sponsors and riders, and the relationships amongst them; (2) cycling’s governing body, the International Cycling Union; and (3) professional cycling’s final product, i.e., the show of bicycle races. More precisely, the chapter mostly focuses on the history of male professional road cycling in Western Europe since the late nineteenth century. It is founded on both an analysis of quantitative time series on the Grand Tours (and, to some extent, the classics) and a review of the existing literature on the history of professional cycling, whether economic history, institutional history, cultural history, or sport history.
Keywords: Late Nineteenth Century; Olympic Game; Competitive Balance; World Championship; Tour Organizer (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2016
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Working Paper: The history of professional road cycling (2016) 
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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-22312-4_2
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