25000 Water Bottles in 4 Days

The Abu Dhabi Tour just published an article that said that at the Abu Dhabi Tour, the teams at the race used 25000 water bottles. That is just for a 4 day stage race. Divide that by the 107 riders that started the race and it comes to nearly 60 bottles per day/per rider. Anyone going for this? So if you were the water bottle fetcher for one of the teams, you would have had to drop back, say, 50 times, if you could carry 6 bottles back to your team, 300 total, plus the 60 that you were going to use. That means you would have 2 miles on a 100 mile stage to drop back into the caravan, get the bottles and pass them out again. Pretty much a continuous rotation. Maybe they are counting all the water bottles they gave out to the public for souvenirs during the race? But that wasn’t what the article implied. Maybe just an inflated number? Guess they think that is an impressive thing? Shows me it was just really hot, no matter what the real figure was. And the Tinkoff team brought their own bottles, it seems, so we need to refigure the number.

Comments (14)

Franz

2015-10-12 21:09:23

•25,000 – water bottles for the whole staff, including riders still seems like to many. probably a metric conversion problem


Steve Tilford

2015-10-12 22:51:47 In reply to Franz

Franz - Okay, 30 for the staff and 30 per rider per day. That would still be a bottle every 3 miles for the rider and every 3 miles for the staff. That is if the stages averaged around 150 km a day.


Mike Rodose

2015-10-12 23:45:36 In reply to Franz

There is a Democrat candidate that has a platform based solely on the US converting to the metric system. Wow! Now. How many water bottles were consumed in the metric system?


John

2015-10-13 03:04:11

I’m all for water, but that is ridiculous.


The Cyclist

2015-10-13 05:04:08 In reply to Mike Rodose

Probably more than a republican could count ;)


Telford

2015-10-13 06:18:18

I’ve lived and worked in the Middle East quite a bit in my past. Most places its not advisable to drink the tap water and instead you get the small plastic bottled water - about 10 ounces per. So, I’m wondering if the story is referring to this type of bottle vs. a typical 21-24 ounce bike bottle. That would roughly cut the number in half and with staff might be a bit more reasonable.


Rod Lake

2015-10-13 06:53:42 In reply to Mike Rodose

As long as they are free, the Democrat doesn’t care how many.


RGTR

2015-10-13 11:06:02

Maybe they were watering the camels along the way too?


Sean YD

2015-10-13 12:49:36 In reply to Telford

Though not clearly specified in the news release, the 25,000 water bottles listed was the total number of bottles on offer for the entire event. It does not necessarily mean every bottle was consumed.


Larry T.

2015-10-13 14:12:51

Thought I read somewhere that one guy went through 58 bottles between what he poured over his head and consumed due to the ridiculous heat during one stage? If the riders had any cojones they’d form a strong union and put a stop to money-grabs like these sandbox events. But fly ’em over 1st class and put ’em up in a fancy hotel and they forget all about all the stupidity pretty quickly I guess?


Robert

2015-10-13 15:39:18 In reply to Larry T.

Or…maybe they’re smart enough to realize that these “money grab” events are paying their salaries?


mike crum

2015-10-13 18:24:42

hey steve, you raced all over the world, and i imagine in extreme hot, cold, rainny windy conditions, so what the most bottle you have taken in a race? pour over your head, drink ,whatever.. how many have you used? thanks


Larry T.

2015-10-14 10:33:01 In reply to Robert

Could you explain how these petro-dollars are paying the rider’s salaries? Were teams paid to show up and “race” there?


nisa

2015-11-14 12:08:00

please tell me from where I can buy these bottles?