Team updates: BMC, Euskaltel-Euskadi, FDJ-BigMat and Orica-GreenEDGE

At the beginning of the season, each member of the VeloVoices team selected one ProTeam to follow for the duration of 2012. Here’s our year-end update on how each squad fared over the closing months of the season.

BMC

WorldTour ranking: 7th, 917 points.

Major results:

  • Road World Championships: Philippe Gilbert 1st – Road Race; Taylor Phinney 2nd, Tejay van Garderen 4th – Individual Time Trial; second in Team Time Trial
  • Vuelta a Espana: Philippe Gilbert – 1st, Stages 9 & 19; Steve Cummings – 1st Stage 13
  • USA Pro Challenge: Tejay van Garderen, 2nd in GC, plus 1st Stage 2, 3rd Stage 4, 3rd Stage 7; Taylor Phinney – 2nd, Stage 5, 1st Stage 7.
  • Tour of Utah: Johann Tschopp – 1st in GC, plus 1st Stage 5; Michael Schar – 2nd, Stage 3; Brent Bookwalter – 3rd, Stage 3.
  • Eneco Tour: Taylor Phinney – 3rd stage 1, 2nd stage 6; Alessandro Ballan – 1st Stage 7
  • GP Wallonie and GP Cycliste de Quebec: Greg van Avermaet – 2nd GC
  • Binche-Tournai-Binche: Adam Blythe – 1st in GC
  • Tour of Beijing: Steve Cummings – 1st Stage 5
  • Chrono des Nations: Taylor Phinney – 3rd

Well, from an early season of not really meeting expectations that many had for this superteam, the last part of the team’s season saw the young guns of Taylor Phinney, Adam Blythe, Steve Cummings and Greg van Avermaet storming through their races, placing high in most of them.

But of course, the team scored biggest in the World Championships with Philippe Gilbert, finally returning to form in the Vuelta after a disappointing season, taking the rainbow jersey in the road race. Taylor Phinney has been going from strength to strength all season and earned a silver in the individual team time trial, narrowly missing the TT rainbow jersey by 5sec, and the team came 2nd in the team time trial.

Cadel Evans ends the season as the highest ranking rider in the team, at 24. George Hincapie retired this year, just after the Tour de France and before the publication of the USADA’s reasoned decision, which contained testimony from Hincapie on his use of performance-enhancing drugs during his time as teammate to Lance Armstrong.

And Tejay van Garderen – best young rider jersey in this year’s Tour de France – has extended his contract with BMC. DS John Lelangue had this to say about the up and coming rider:

“He was very regular for us all year – very good in time trials and climbing and someone who could also find his place in the peloton. So he has all the qualities to become a big tour winner in the future. That’s important for us. We’re already building a team around him.”

Next year, the team will again be under scrutiny, with the World Champion looking to dominate in the spring as he did last year and everyone looking for the return of Thor Hushovd and Cadel Evans to good form. Add to that, the young riders mentioned above hoping to ride to their potential – with Phinney targetting Paris-Roubaix – it should be an exciting year for BMC in 2013.

Euskaltel-Euskadi

WorldTour ranking: 13th, 555 points.

Major results:

  • Clasica san Sebastian: Igor Anton – 11th.
  • Vuelta a Espana: Igor Anton – 9th overall, 7th on stages 12 & 14. Romain Sicard – 5th on stage 20. Ruben Perez – 2nd on stage 15. Gorka Vedugo – 12th on stage 12. Second overall in team  competition.
  • Tour of Britain: Pablo Urtasun – won stage 7. Samuel Sanchez – 14th overall, 4th on stage 7.
  • Road World Championships: 16th in team time trial.
  • Gran Piemonte: Gorka Verdugo – 3rd.
  • Il Lombardia: Samuel Sanchez – 2nd.
  • Tour of Beijing: Ivan Velasco – 11th overall. Samuel Sanchez – 12th overall.
  • Tour de Vendee: Ricardo Garcia – 16th. Romain Sicard – 18th.

The good news about the team having secured additional funding for the next four years has been tempered by the disappointing results and the untimely death of one of their young promising riders, Victor Cabedo, while out training. It will have been particularly painful for the team not to have secured even a stage win in their home Tour, the Vuelta, which spent a significant amount of time in the Basque country.

As usual, Samu Sanchez was the team’s top rider in the rankings. After a stellar start to the year, a terribly unlucky crash-riddled mid-part, and a moderately satisfying conclusion, the 34-year old finishes up ninth overall with 332 points, more than half of the squad’s 2012 haul. Just nine of the team’s riders scored WorldTour points, although this was a better spread  than in previous years. The total points haul is better than last year’s and only 40 short of the 2010 mark – the year the team took a record 17 victories.

To be sure of getting a World Tour licence for 2013, the team have ended their stance of employing only riders who were either born or developed in the Basque country. Long-serving, faithful riders such as Amets Txurruka and Ivan Velasco have been let go. While Basques Jon Aberasturi and Garikoitz Bravo are joining as neo-pros, the team’s hunt for points and sprinter fire-power means they’ve hired an additional interesting mix of riders:

  • Tarik Chaoufi (26) Moroccan – National team
  • Jure Kocjan (28) Slovenian – Team Type 1
  • Juan Jose Lobato (24) Spanish – Andalucia
  • Ricardo Mestre (29) Portuese – Carmim-Prio
  • Steffen Radochla (34) German – Team NSP-Ghost
  • Andre Schulze (38) German –  Team NetApp
  • Alexander Serebryakov (25) Russian –  Team Type 1
  • Ioannis Tamouridis (32) Greek –  SP Tableware
  • Robert Vrecer (32) Slovenian – Vorarlberg

According to General Manager Igor Gonzalez de Galdeano at a recent press conference where the new riders were unveiled:

The objective with signing these foreigners is based on a strategic commitment to make Euskaltel-Euskadi stronger and more complete. They’re riders with UCI points, but they complement the other riders on the team. The signings will bring quality to some of our weaknesses: Classics and sprint finishes. The Classics are getting more important on the world calendar – and they’re races we haven’t been able to get good results in. As such, we’re missing out on a lot of big races and a lot of points. This is what we want to change in 2013.

Reality has forced us to sign riders who complement and strengthen the current roster in certain sections. Still, we’ve got 20 Basques against the 23 this year. We have more Basque cyclists in the team than in all other WorldTour teams combined. And we’d like to increase the number of Basques in the future. But if that is to happen, we need a team that wins more. These signings will make us more competitive. Cycling continues to evolve, and we must aspire to stay at the elite level.

FDJ-BigMat

WorldTour ranking: 18th, 246 points.

Major results:

  • Tour du Limousin: Jeremy Roy – won stage 4.
  • Vattenfall Cyclassics: Arnaud Demare – 1st.
  • Tour de l’Eurometropole: Nacer Bouhanni – won stage 4.

As the season has drawn to a close FDJ’s results on the bike have slowed too, with young French national champion Nacer Bouhanni unable to repeat his heroics of the early season with any real showing at the Vuelta a España, though he did pick up a stage win at the Tour de l’Eurometropole (formerly known as the Circuit Franco-Belge). Arnaud Demare picked up a rather more prestigious win at the annual one-day Classic in Hamburg, the Vattenfall Cyclassics, while Jeremy Roy won a stage at the Tour du Limousin.

As is inevitable at this stage in the year the attention is now beginning to focus on next season, and the comings and goings of riders. Fortunately, despite being the lowest-ranked team in the UCI WorldTour ranking FDJ already hold a licence to race at the top level through 2013, so Marc Madiot does have one less thing to worry about, though making signings to bolster the outfit’s position come this time next season must be a top priority.

There have been six confirmed arrivals already, with the most notable being Brazilian Murilo Fischer, a rouleur-cum-lead-out man with a fast finish. He arrives from Garmin-Sharp and could prove to be a shrewd signing and a strong rider for the breakaways. Young French climber Alexandre Geniez arrives from Argos-Shimano after a quiet 2012, though a fourth place at last year’s Critérium International is hopefully a sign of his potential. 22-year-old Johan Le Bon looks even more exciting and joins from Bretagne-Schuller, having been twice the national TT champion of France at junior level and 2008 Junior Road World Champion. Cyclocross specialist Emilian Viennet is another unknown quantity, while Laurents Mangel and Pichon arrive with much-needed experience.

This experience is needed as much due to departures as the new arrivals. Belarusian sprinter Yauheni Hutarovich leaves after years of loyal service to join AG2R, with fellow veterans Gabriel Rasch, Remi Pauriol, Arnaud Gerard, Steve Chainel and Dominique Rollin also departing.

Orica-GreenEDGE

WorldTour team ranking: 6th, 920 points.

Major results:

  • Eneco Tour: Won stage 2 team time trial. Svein Tuft – 7th overall, won stage 6 ITT. Luke Durbridge – 5th overall. Sebastian Langeveld – 9th overall.
  • Clasica San Sebastian: Simon Gerrans – 2nd.
  • Poitou Charentes: Luke Durbridge – 1st overall, won stage 4 ITT. Aidis Kruopis – won stages 1 & 2.
  • GP Ouest France-Plouay: Matt Goss – 4th.
  • Vuelta a Espana: Simon Clarke – won stage 4. Allan Davis – 2nd in stage 2, 3rd in stages 7 & 18. Cameron Meyer – 2nd in stage 13.
  • GP Cycliste de Quebec: Simon Gerrans – 1st.
  • GP Cycliste de Montreal: Simon Gerrans – 4th.
  • Tour of Britain: Leigh Howard – 4th overall, won stage 2, 2nd in stages 3 & 4, 3rd in stage 4. Aidis Kruopis – 3rd in stage 3.
  • Road World Championships: 3rd in team time trial.

A successful run of late season results saw Orica-GreenEDGE finish their debut season an impressive sixth in the WorldTour team rankings, despite not possessing a serious Grand Tour GC rider. Ahead of the Vuelta, three top ten placings and two stage wins at the Eneco Tour netted over 100 points. And while the Spanish Armada ruled at the Vuelta, the team would have been pleased with Simon Clarke‘s maiden pro win and three top-three finishes in the sprints for Allan Davis behind the unbeatable John Degenkolb.

Elsewhere, Luke Durbridge and Leigh Howard registered wins at Poitou Charentes and the Tour of Britain respectively, and third in the trade team time trial at the World Championships netted a hefty 140 points, but it was Simon Gerrans – the Tour Down Under winner and early WorldTour leader – who tore through the closing two months of the season. The Aussie finished second behind Luis Leon Sanchez at San Sebastian, then was first and fourth at the Quebec/Montreal Canadian double-header – a run of results which netted an impressive 180 points.

Overall, the team won four of the 29 WorldTour events – second in number only to Omega Pharma-Quick Step and Sky – courtesy of Michael Albasini‘s Volta a Catalunya victory and Gerrans’ hat-trick of the Tour Down Under, Milan-San Remo and GP Quebec. Not bad for a rookie squad!

Previous updates: August 12thJune 24th, April 13thFebruary 24th,

Websites: BMC, Euskaltel-EuskadiFDJ, GreenEDGE

Twitter: BMC, Euskaltel-Euskadi, FDJGreenEDGE

Team updates: BMC, Euskaltel-Euskadi, FDJ-BigMat and Orica-GreenEDGE

At the beginning of the season, each member of the VeloVoices team selected one ProTeam to follow for the duration of 2012. Here’s an update on how each squad is progressing ahead of the start of the Vuelta a Espana.

BMC

WorldTour ranking: 5th, 649 points.

Major results:

  • Tour de France: Tejay van Garderen – 5th overall, won best young rider classification. George Hincapie – record 17 starts and 16 finishes. Cadel Evans – 7th overall, 2nd in stages 7 & 8.
  • Tour of Austria: Steve Morabito – 2nd overall.
  • Paris-Correze: Johann Tschopp – 3rd overall. Adam Blythe – won stage 1.
  • Eneco Tour: Taylor Phinney – 3rd in stage 1, 2nd in stage 6 ITT.

Cadel Evans had started his run-up to the Tour de France by riding the Critérium du Dauphiné, in which he did rather well by winning a stage and the points classification, and finishing on the third step of the podium. The stage was set for what was expected to be a close-run Tour between Evans and Bradley Wiggins. It was not to be, however, as Evans could not defend his title, finishing seventh in the race in July.

Tejay van Garderen did have a good Tour, however, by winning the best young rider jersey en route to fifth overall. And soon-to-be-retired George Hincapie was honoured by the peloton by being allowed to lead out the riders on the first lap of the Champs-Élysées first on the final Sunday. He also holds the record for completing the most Tours with 16, from 17 starts.

Euskaltel-Euskadi

WorldTour ranking: 12th, 424 points.

Major results:

  • Tour de France: Egoi Martinez – 17th overall, 7th in stage 10, 3rd in stage 12.  Gorka Izagirre – 39th overall, 5th in best young rider classification, 5th in stage 14, 3rd in stage 16.
  • Tour de Pologne: Jon Izagirre – 7th overall, 9th in stage 6.
  • Prueba Villafranca de Ordizia: Gorka Izagirre – winner.
  • Vuelta a Burgos: Igor Anton – 9th overall, 3rd in stage 5. Gorka Verdugo – 13th overall.

After a great start to the season, Euskaltel have experienced a number of lows in the past month or so, most notably in the Tour de France where half the team, including defending mountains champion Samu Sanchez, crashed and exited injured. Samu, having briefly lost consciousness, was in tears as he realized the impact this would have on his team and his own ambitions both for the Tour and defending his Olympic crown. He’s well on the road to recovery and looking forward to the World Championships in late September on a course which perfectly suits him. Those riders remaining in the Tour did their best to animate and win stages with Egoi Martinez ultimately their best placed finisher at 17th overall.

Samu still accounts for most of the team’s UCI points (252 of 424) but Mikel Nieve, the Izagirre brothers, Martinez and Gorka Verdugo have also picked up points. They’ll now be looking to Igor Anton to add to that tally in the forthcoming Vuelta a Espana where he’s team leader with support from the French Basque pair of Pierre Cazaux and Romain Sicard, Miguel Minguez, Ivan Velasco, Amets Txurruka, Verdugo, Mikel Landa and Juan Jose Oroz.

The one piece of very good news is that the team has secured funding of €9m per annum for the next three years enabling it to retain the services of its key riders, such as Sanchez, Anton, the Izagirres and Nieve, and retain its WorldTour licence. Pro Cycling Team Basque, managed by Igor Gonzalez de Galdeano, will take over the running of the team from the Euskadi Foundation. The team effectively will be boosted to 28 riders (currently 26) and, if necessary, they will take those of non-Basque origin. Carlos Barredo (Rabobank) and Dani Navarro (Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank) have been linked with a move to the new team. However, rest assured they will remain with their bright orange livery and we can still call them the ‘Carrots’.

FDJ-BigMat

WorldTour ranking: 17th, 173 points.

Major results:

  • National road race championships: Nacer Bouhanni – French national champion. Yauheni Hutarovich – Belarusian national champion.
  • Tour de France: Thibaut Pinot – 10th overall, won stage 8, 2nd in best young rider classification. Pierrick Fedrigo – won stage 15.
  • Tour de Wallonie: Nacer Bouhanni – won stage 1.
  • Paris-Correze: Kenny Elissonde – won stage 2.
  • Tour de l’Ain: Yauheni Hutarovich – won stages 1 & 2. Thibaut Pinot – won stage 5.

FDJ-BigMat have had an extraordinarily successful period since our last update, with the Tour de France a resounding success for Marc Madiot’s outfit. Not only has a new climbing star of the future been born in Thibaut Pinot, but another national favourite Pierrick Fedrigo delivered with a win on home turf. Pinot’s top ten finish sat alongside a memorable mountainous stage win, which culminated in Madiot yelling out of the team car, knowing that such a sponsor-pleasing success could guarantee his team’s future.

Speaking of young French talents, Nacer Bouhanni‘s quite astonishing season continued by taking the tricolore at the French national championships – a jersey he will proudly wear at the Vuelta later in the month. Bouhanni is only 22, but has had a resoundingly successful campaign this far, with a win on the opening stage of the recent Tour de Wallonie. His teammate Kenny Elissonde, one year his junior, will also have French mouths watering with a win at Paris-Correze.

Yauheni Hutarovich is comparably elderly at 28, but the sprinter has hit good form recently, collecting the Belarusian national road race title as well as a couple of wins at the ongoing Tour de l’Ain. 26-year-old Arnold Jeannesson will lead FDJ at the final Grand Tour of the year, and will be aiming for a high finish after a 14th place at last year’s Tour de France.

Orica-GreenEDGE

WorldTour team ranking: 8th, 486 points.

Major results:

  • Tour de France: Matt Goss – 2nd in stages 5 & 18, 3rd in stages 2, 6 & 20, 4th in stage 4, 3rd in points classification. Daryl Impey – 3rd in stage 14. Michael Albasini – 5th in stage 3.
  • Tour de Pologne: Aidis Kruopis – won stage 4.
  • Vuelta a Burgos: Simon Clarke – 2nd in stage 2, 3rd in stage 4. Allan Davis – 4th in stages 1 & 3.
  • Eneco Tour: Won stage 2 team time trial. Svein Tuft – won stage 6 ITT, leads general classification going into today’s final stage.

It has been a disappointing couple of months for Orica-GreenEDGE. Targeting stage wins at the Tour de France through Matt Goss, the team’s lead sprinter registered five top three finishes but never really looked like claiming a victory despite GreenEDGE possessing the second-best sprint train on show (behind Lotto-Belisol). Third in the points competition, well adrift of Peter Sagan, was a flattering reflection of the performance of the 2011 Milan-San Remo winner as he watched key rivals Sagan, Andre Greipel and Mark Cavendish take three stages apiece. Daryl Impey and Michael Albasini also registered top-five finishes, but this was a Tour to forget for the ambitious Australian squad.

Things have improved somewhat since. Lithuanian sprinter Aidis Kruopis sped to his third win of the year during the Tour of Poland, and he was also part of the winning team time trial squad at this week’s Eneco Tour. Canada’s Svein Tuft took yesterday’s individual time trial to catapult himself to the top of the general classification, although he is highly unlikely to retain it on today’s queen stage.

Overall though, GreenEDGE cannot be unhappy with a debut season which continues to see them in the top half of the team rankings, even if the heady days of spring which saw Simon Gerrans sit atop the individual standings are now but a fond and distant memory.For 2013, however, the team will undoubtedly look to bring on board riders who can help them compete more prominently for overall finishes at key stage races.

Previous updates: June 24th, April 13thFebruary 24th,

Websites: BMC, Euskaltel-EuskadiFDJ, GreenEDGE

Twitter: BMC, Euskaltel-Euskadi, FDJGreenEDGE

Team updates: BMC, Euskaltel-Euskadi, FDJ-BigMat and Orica-GreenEDGE

At the beginning of the season, each member of the VeloVoices team selected one ProTeam to follow for the duration of 2012. Here’s an update on how each squad is progressing before the start of the Tour de France.

BMC

WorldTour ranking:  9th, 432 points.

Major results:

  • Giro del Trentino: Team time trial – 1st. Taylor Phinney – one day in leader’s jersey.
  • Flèche Wallonne: Philippe Gilbert – 3rd.
  • Giro della Roscana: Alessandro Ballan – 1st.
  • Giro d’Italia: Taylor Phinney – 1st in stage 1 ITT, three days in maglia rosa and white jersey. Marco Pinotti – 1st in stage 21 ITT.
  • Amgen Tour of California: Yannick Eljessen – most aggressive rider in stage 4. Six of the top ten places on GC were BMC riders, with Tejay van Garderen 4th overall.
  • Tour de Suisse: Mathias Frank – Best Swiss Rider. Martin Kohler – most aggressive rider in stage 4. Klaas Lodewyck – most aggressive rider in stage 5.
  • Critérium du Dauphiné: Cadel Evans – 3rd overall, 1st in stage 1, points classification winner.

The past two months for BMC seemed like a slow build for July with moments of brilliance. Philippe Gilbert didn’t win any of the Ardennes Classics this year – his highest placement was the third podium spot for Flèche Wallonne but Alessandro Ballan took the Giro della Roscana, building on his good showing in the cobbled Classics. BMC also had a fairly successful Tour of California, with a most aggressive rider award for Yannick Eljessen in stage four and six of the top ten places in the final standings, with Tejay van Garderen fourth overall. This was good news for van Garderen, as he was injured by a falling branch and had to abandon the Tour of Romandie in April.

The Giro d’Italia was a very good race for BMC, with young Taylor Phinney keeping the spotlight trained on him and his team for the first week. Phinney took stage one and the first maglia rosa, a jersey he would keep, along with the white jersey, for the next three stages. Marco Pinotti closed the Giro in the manner that Phinney started it, by winning the final stage’s ITT in Milan.

Cadel Evans and the team took on Bradley Wiggins and Sky at the Critérium du Dauphiné in what may prove to be a dress rehearsal for next week’s Tour de France. Evans showed that his form was improving, often animating the stages with attacks and counterpunches, but the Sky team proved too strong. Evans did, however, win stage one of the race, the overall points jersey and ended on the third step on the podium. Here is what he told CyclingNews about his preparation for the Tour:

The main thing for most riders is just getting to a good level, a level you know you need to be at to race – avoiding injuries, health issues and so on. This year it’s been a good progression for me into the Tour and in some ways, not having some race results, it keeps people’s attention away from me. That also helps make life a little bit easier.

And finally, Mathias Frank, Martin Kohler and Klaas Lodewyck helped keep BMC’s colours prominent in the Tour de Suisse with the overall award for Best Swiss Rider, and stage four and five’s Most Aggressive Rider award respectively.

Euskaltel-Euskadi

WorldTour ranking: 12th, 374 pts.

Major results:

  • Amstel Gold: Samuel Sanchez – 7th.
  • Vuelta a Castilla y Leon and Vuelta a la Rioja: Pablo Urtasun – 3rd overall in both.
  • Vuelta a Madrid: Mikel Landa – 4th in stage 2.
  • Volta a Catalunya: Samuel Sanchez – 2nd overall, won stage 6, 4th in stage 5.
  • Vuelta Ciclista Asturias: Jon Izagirre – won stage 2b.
  • Giro d’Italia: Mikel Nieve  – 10th overall, 9th in stage 7, 8th in stage 19. Jon Izagirre – won stage 16.
  • Tour de Suisse: Mikel Nieve – 5th overall, 3rd in stage 2, 2nd in stage 8.

In what will definitely be their final season in their current format, the Carrots have been muy agresivo [very aggressive – Ed], animating every race they’ve taken part in. This has not been without consequences as a number, including leaders Sammy Sanchez and Igor Anton, have come to grief respectively in the Critérium du Dauphiné and Liège-Bastogne-Liège.

The good news is that the points are being spread around the team – although Sammy still accounts for 252 –  with Mikel Nieve finishing well overall in both the Giro d’Italia and Tour de Suisse, while young sensation Jon Izagirre racked up his first  – and it won’t be his last – stage win in his maiden Grand Tour. Afterwards team manager Alvaro Gonzalez de Gladeano said:

The revelation of the team has been Jon Izagirre, not just for victory but for his consistency in helping Mikel Nieve in difficult times in the mountains. He’s performed really well in the third week of his first Grand Tour and looks set to become one of the strong men in a three-week tour.

More good news as it appears Euskaltel are prepared to continue and even incease their sponsorship of the team. The Euskadi foundation will drop out of the picture though will still support the Orbea and Naturgas feeder and amateur squads. There have also been unconfirmed reports that Festina will return to the pro peloton as co-sponsor. All these additional funds have arrived just in the nick of time as Samuel Sanchez reportedly has three offers on the table while other teams have been sniffing around the team’s young talent pool.

Sammy’s sufficiently recovered from his fall in the Dauphiné and, with other team members, has been altitude training in the Sierra Nevadas in order to mount a robust defence of his King of the Mountains spotted jersey in the forthcoming Tour de France.

FDJ-BigMat

WorldTour ranking: 17th, 79 pts.

Major results:

  • Circuit de Lorraine: Nacer Bouhanni – 1st overall, 1st in stage 1.
  • Critérium du Dauphiné: Arthur Vichot – 1st in stage 5.
  • Route du Sud: Arnaud Demare – 1st in stage 2.
  • Halle–Ingooigem: Nacer Bouhanni – 1st.
21-year-old Frenchman Nacer Bouhanni has continued his spectacular season by winning both the Circuit de Lorraine and Halle–Ingooigem, following on from a stage win at the Étoile de Bessèges earlier on in the season. There’s a very distinct youthfulness about FDJ recently, with 23-year-old Arthur Vichot and 20-year-old future Classics star Arnaud Demare the other riders to collect wins since our last update.

Elsewhere, fan favourite and resident breakaway madman Jeremy Roy rode an exceptional time trial in the recent French national championships, where he finished in second place, just 13 seconds in arrears of eventual winner Sylvain Chavanel. Roy has spoken of how he’s improved his time-trialling over the last few years:

I learned to better manage my effort, especially with the coaching staff and with power sensors that allow me to correct errors in the climbs where I should not get into the red. And it’s a circle, the results breeds confidence and confidence can get results.

FDJ are one of the few teams yet to announce their Tour de France outfit, something expected to be announced after the French national road race later today. Ahead of that prestigious event, Roy has commented:

The team has two  in-form sprinters and we will assume the role of favorites. In this race, all scenarios are possible. There may be a race with a lot of nervous attacks. Everyone will believe they can win, and if a good breakaway goes, we should not miss it.

With Pierrick Fedrigo and Sandy Casar likely joining Roy in the team, Marc Madiot will no doubt be sending the plucky trio into near-daily breakaway charges, in a bid to retain the Prix de la Combativité Roy won at last year’s race.

Orica-GreenEDGE

WorldTour team ranking: 7th, 440 pts.

Major results:

  • Flèche Wallonne: Michael Albasini – 2nd.
  • Tour of Turkey: Matt Goss – 2nd in stages 1, 2, 4 & 6.
  • Giro d’Italia: Matt Goss – won stage 3, 2nd in stages 2 & 5. Tomas Vaitkus – 3rd in stage 11.
  • Tour of California: Pieter Weening – 10th overall. Leigh Howard – 4th in stage 1, 3rd in stage 2.
  • Tour of Norway: Simon Clarke – 2nd overall, 2nd in stages 4 & 5. Aidis Kruopis – won stage 3.
  • Bayern Rundfahrt: Allan Davis – 2nd in stages 1 & 5.
  • Critérium du Dauphiné: Luke Durbridge – won stage 1 ITT. Pieter Weening – 11th overall, 5th in stage 7, 6th in stage 8.
  • Tour de Suisse: Michael Albasini – won stage 8, 3rd in stage 4, 4th in stage 6. Baden Cooke – 2nd in stage 3. Allan Davis – 3rd in stage 6.
  • Tour of Slovenia: Daryl Impey – won stage 2.

Orica-GreenEDGE’s strong debut season continues as they have consolidated their position in the upper half of the team rankings. Former individual WorldTour leader Simon Gerrans was unable to add to his Milan-San Remo win through the remainder of the Classics season, finishing a disappointing 20th and 19th at Amstel Gold and Liège-Bastogne-Liège respectively. However, Volta a Catalunya winner Michael Albasini has continued to impress in uphill races, claiming second behind solo winner Joaquim Rodriguez at Flèche Wallonne and adding a breakaway mountain victory at his ‘home’ Tour de Suisse this month.

The team entered their first Grand Tour at May’s Giro d’Italia with the aim of delivering stage victories, and lead sprinter Matt Goss duly obliged. Having warmed up with four second places (behind four different rivals) at the Tour of Turkey, Goss was edged out by Mark Cavendish on stage two in Italy before claiming victory the next day. He added another second place (again behind Cav) on stage five, before Lithuanian Tomas Vaitkus took third on stage 11.

Luke Durbridge claimed a notable victory in the short opening time trial of the Critérium du Dauphiné, while Daryl Impey and Aidis Kruopis have also taken stage wins in Slovenia and Norway respectively.  Pieter Weening claimed good GC finishes at both the Tour of California (1oth) and the Dauphiné (11th). And the team have shown off their sprinting depth with a string of top three finishes from Aussies Simon Clarke, Allan Davis, Leigh Howard and Baden Cooke. Clarke also finished as runner-up in the general classification of the Tour of Norway, behind Sky’s Edvald Boasson Hagen.

GreenEDGE will now look to repeat their Giro success by sending a sprint-focussed team to support Goss at the Tour de France.

Previous updates: April 13thFebruary 24th

Websites: BMC, Euskaltel-EuskadiFDJ, GreenEDGE

Twitter: BMC, Euskaltel-Euskadi, FDJGreenEDGE