Teams & Riders Cian Uijtdebroeks - From the wetlands to the top of cycling

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So V|LAB and Uijtdebroeks get away from a clear breach of rules 2.15.121ff without penalty?

Just as with their frequent ignoring of their own rules for conduct on the road, non-enforcement of rules leads to poor respect for them. If they expect the current rules to hold water, apply them and be willing to explain why any unpenalised breach is considered exceptional; if they do not trust their own legislation to be fit for purpose, reform it rapidly to protect more effectively whatever the rule was intended to protect in the first place.
 
So V|LAB and Uijtdebroeks get away from a clear breach of rules 2.15.121ff without penalty?

Just as with their frequent ignoring of their own rules for conduct on the road, non-enforcement of rules leads to poor respect for them. If they expect the current rules to hold water, apply them and be willing to explain why any unpenalised breach is considered exceptional; if they do not trust their own legislation to be fit for purpose, reform it rapidly to protect more effectively whatever the rule was intended to protect in the first place.

Yeah, the impression I get from the UCI press release here is that it's case closed

 
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So V|LAB and Uijtdebroeks get away from a clear breach of rules 2.15.121ff without penalty?

Just as with their frequent ignoring of their own rules for conduct on the road, non-enforcement of rules leads to poor respect for them. If they expect the current rules to hold water, apply them and be willing to explain why any unpenalised breach is considered exceptional; if they do not trust their own legislation to be fit for purpose, reform it rapidly to protect more effectively whatever the rule was intended to protect in the first place.

VLAB paid a compensation at the 19th hour after trying to not do it and drag this out. Denk was prepared to go to a lengthy court saga.
 
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You are missing the point here. The issue isn't so much whether it works for the riders, but whether it works for the poacher team, i.e. Jumbo. In both cases, Jumbo have gained an unfair advantage over other teams because they signed a rider who wasn't legally available at the time. In both cases, the breach of contract likely doesn't even happen in the first place if Jumbo don't make a move, so it's not truly unilateral in the sense that a third party is heavily involved. In this case, this advantage has been amplified because the settlement cost them less than what other teams were trying to buy out Uijtdebroeks' contract for The fact that Bora agreed to said settlement when they didn't to said moves is moot - their hand was forced, it was either settle or face a long, energy and time-consuming legal battle. So Bora have lost out, and other interested teams have lost out too, and Jumbo are the only team gaining an advantage in a situation with a lot of players, solely because a) Jumbo are once again the only team willing to break the rules (by signing a rider who is legally still employed elsewhere) and b) breaking the rules is once again easily worth it for them.
Nothing was forced, Bora were prepared to go to court and were ready for a lengthy process.
VLAB came at the last minute before their team launch to settle this.
 
That's funny. So it was ok for Bora to poach Roglic, who had a valid contract, but not Visma with Cian? The bias in this thread is hilarious.

How was Roglic poached when Jumbo accepted his request to leave and got compensation?

It is rather obvious that with Roglic all 3 parties were in agreement about the transfer, while (at least initially) it was not the case with Uijtdebroeks.