I see many interpretations / opinions that seem to drift quite a bit from the reality, so I thought I give it one last try:
Cian wanted to leave Bora. That's a fact. Cian thought the only way out was a team buying out his contract (Trek, Ineos), until someone told him that the context (e.g. the whatsapp) could be enough reason for Cian to unilaterally break his contract and go wherever he wanted to go.
Visma is where Cian wanted to go. Visma said they didn't want to buy him out, but as they got info about the bullying, they saw what Cian's agent saw (no reason to pay for the buy-out) and thus the deal with Visma was settled (unilaterally): Cian would break his contract, Visma was happy with a 'free' rider and Bora was forced to either take the loss / settle or battle it out in court.
Thijs Zonneveld mentioned the existence of the Whatsapp (a group that Cian confirmed to exist, by the way...!). A smart Cian will not say this directly to the press (especially not if a court case is looming, and also not if the case is settled, like how it is now). But his entourage knows, and rumours inevitably spread.
The unknowns in the story:
1. who would take the risks (pay up front for the court case and pay if the court case was lost)? Visma or Cian?
2. as a settlement has been reached, who came closest to what they thought they could claim: Cian / Visma not wanting to pay at all, or Bora demanding a million? Could bullying be used as leverage for avoiding all or part of the money Bora claimed?
We'll probably never know.
And breaking the transfer doesn't work: In the case of van Aert, he lost and had to pay approx. 560.000 euros. That's not just a little bit of money. In case of Cian, they settled. A settlement means that everyone agrees. So until know, you have 2 cases of a pro rider unilaterally breaching his contract. In one case, he lost and thus the rules and regulations wrt contracts were applied, in the other case, they settled. Ofcourse, any agent / team will take lessons from this wrt future contracts in order not to allow too many riders to force their way out, but it seems not many riders have a conflict and want to get out of their teams in the way WvA and Cian tried to do.
Cian wanted to leave Bora. That's a fact. Cian thought the only way out was a team buying out his contract (Trek, Ineos), until someone told him that the context (e.g. the whatsapp) could be enough reason for Cian to unilaterally break his contract and go wherever he wanted to go.
Visma is where Cian wanted to go. Visma said they didn't want to buy him out, but as they got info about the bullying, they saw what Cian's agent saw (no reason to pay for the buy-out) and thus the deal with Visma was settled (unilaterally): Cian would break his contract, Visma was happy with a 'free' rider and Bora was forced to either take the loss / settle or battle it out in court.
Thijs Zonneveld mentioned the existence of the Whatsapp (a group that Cian confirmed to exist, by the way...!). A smart Cian will not say this directly to the press (especially not if a court case is looming, and also not if the case is settled, like how it is now). But his entourage knows, and rumours inevitably spread.
The unknowns in the story:
1. who would take the risks (pay up front for the court case and pay if the court case was lost)? Visma or Cian?
2. as a settlement has been reached, who came closest to what they thought they could claim: Cian / Visma not wanting to pay at all, or Bora demanding a million? Could bullying be used as leverage for avoiding all or part of the money Bora claimed?
We'll probably never know.
Visma didn't do that much: Cian's agent thought there was enough reason to terminate the contract. Visma was supportive of Cian coming, but it was Cian's decision to opt for the unilateral departure at Bora.Which is why it's bad that a team can do what Visma did and why I hope they have a shitty season next year
Lawyers were key in deciding whether or not a settlement was preferred compared to a court case.No. It doesn't look like it came down to lawyers, or better agents. As lawyers would get involved latter. So all in all it didn't come down to the people that made this mess.
It came down to real people, like Denk, and i assume Cian, discussion, respect, agreement and a hand shake. That is what solved this mess.
Zonneveld got inside info and did what a good journalist has to do: report it.Zoneveld is such a clown. But good to know that he can be bought as a hitman. Will come in handy for Jumbo when they want to sign the next rider from another team for a lower price.
Maybe that's because there was a case to be made wrl bullying. Visma didn't start the bullying within Bora...All other teams have somehow managed to avoid doing this all these decades so maybe it's not that the transfer system is bad but that Visma are dicks.
Those accusations were never made in public, by Cian, but 100% sure the accusations were the very basis of Cian opting (/daring) to unilaterally terminating the contract.Accusations were anything but modest. Now confirmed that such accusations were never made by Cian.
You wouldn't last long, as a journalist, ending up snitching all of your sources...There is literally no reason for Zonneveld not name any sources now, unless he genuinely believes in some kind of cycling wide culture of retribution against whistleblowers (and I am not sure those people can even be named as such if they even exist).
Both cases are quite exceptional as both times, riders saw a case to be made to unilaterally terminate their contracts. In most cases in the pro cycling world, there aren't that kind of conflicts.Between Van Aert and Uijtdebroeks, the conclusion is that breaking the transfer rules works. No matter what you think about transfer systems in cycling, that's a big problem.
And breaking the transfer doesn't work: In the case of van Aert, he lost and had to pay approx. 560.000 euros. That's not just a little bit of money. In case of Cian, they settled. A settlement means that everyone agrees. So until know, you have 2 cases of a pro rider unilaterally breaching his contract. In one case, he lost and thus the rules and regulations wrt contracts were applied, in the other case, they settled. Ofcourse, any agent / team will take lessons from this wrt future contracts in order not to allow too many riders to force their way out, but it seems not many riders have a conflict and want to get out of their teams in the way WvA and Cian tried to do.