JERUSALEM—The Giro d’Italia cycling race will open next year’s event in Israel, marking the first time any leg of the sport’s Grand Tours will take place outside of Europe.
Organizers said on Thursday that details of the exact route of the three-day leg in Israel will be announced next week, with Italian and Israeli ministers making the announcement in Jerusalem along with Spanish great Alberto Contador.
More than 175 of the world’s best cyclists will arrive in Israel for the race, one of cycling’s top 3 stage races along with the Tour de France and the Spanish Vuelta. For the first time in its 101-year history, the Giro will begin outside Europe.
Viewed by hundreds of millions across the globe, it will be the biggest sporting event ever held in Israel and is expected to draw tens of thousands of tourists and cycling enthusiasts.
“This is a hugely exciting moment for cycling and for Israel. An event of this magnitude is something that the country will always remember,” said Daniel Benaim, CEO and owner of Comtec Group, the Giro’s Israeli production company.
A delegation from the Giro d’Italia is currently in the country, scoping out locations for the race. The race was previously opened 11 times outside Italy, but never outside the European continent.
Contador will soon be arriving in Israel after ending his career in front of his home crowd at the Vuelta. Considered one of Spain’s greatest riders, the 34-year-old Contador won that event three times, along with the Tour de France twice and the Giro d’Italia twice. He was stripped of a third Tour victory for doping.
Italian racer Ivan Basso, a two-time Giro winner, will also attend the ceremonial announcement in Jerusalem.
Three Russian cyclists, meanwhile, are suing the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) and the Canadian lawyer who led the recent investigation into Russian doping allegations.
The cyclists contend that Montreal-based Wada and Western University law professor Richard McLaren “unfairly implicated them”. Kirill Sveshnikov, Dmitry Strakhov and Dmitry Sokolov call the investigation “rushed and compromised”.
The suit has been filed in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice.
The cyclists say they were banned from the Rio Olympics as a result of the McLaren Report and suffered “great reputational harm”. All three unsuccessfully appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport before the Olympics.
McLaren detailed in two reports last year an orchestrated program of cheating that involved the Russian government, national sports groups and its antidoping organizations.