Originally, UCI and the organisers of the Grand Tours had been unable to come to terms on the 2006 UCI ProTour, with the result that the status of both the Grand Tours and some of the other races organised by those organisations behind the Grand Tours was unclear until well into the season, but they were eventually included. During the 2007 UCI ProTour season, the
ASO,
RCS and Unipublic, organisers of the
Tour de France,
Giro d'Italia and
Vuelta a España respectively, remained at odds with each other. The primary reason was that grand tour organisers wanted more freedom to invite popular national teams (e.g., UCI Professional Continental teams) and the right to exclude some UCI ProTour teams such as
Unibet.com. Failure to achieve agreement lead UCI chairman
Pat McQuaid to send a letter in February 2008 to all professional teams urging them to
boycott Paris–Nice because it was an 'outlawed' race. In response, the
AIGCP (Association International des Groupes Cyclistes Professionels) announced that the teams had unanimously decided to take part in Paris–Nice, the organisation of which was to be taken over by the
French Cycling Federation.
Quick Step team manager
Patrick Lefevere commented: "I'm more than fed up with all the arguing. ASO and UCI don't know how much damage they are doing to the sport. What am I supposed to tell my sponsors? This conflict has been going on for three years and is escalating all the time. Can the teams be certain that they will be able to take part in the Tour de France later in the year?". From 2008, the ProTour was largely devalued by the withdrawal from its calendar of the three
Grand Tours, namely the
Tour de France,
Giro d'Italia and
Vuelta a España, as well as the early-season stage race
Paris–Nice and key single-day events such as
Paris–Roubaix,
Milan–San Remo,
Liège–Bastogne–Liège,
La Flèche Wallonne and the
Giro di Lombardia. On 15 July 2008, the 17 ProTour teams participating in the
2008 Tour de France announced that none of them would seek ProTour licenses for the 2009 season, but in the end all but two of them re-committed. In 2008 the
Tour Down Under in Australia became the first ProTour event to be held outside Europe. In 2009 UCI and organizers had agreement that events will be counted towards
UCI World Ranking, which also included, in its first two seasons, Professional Continental teams. Grand Tour organizers kept the right to choose teams for the races, and also some of the teams chose not to race certain races. From 2011, all races on the World Calendar, those that yield World Ranking points, are to be classified as World Tour events, and the Pro Tour as a distinct series of races is to be discontinued. == Events ==