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

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Very recently Cian and Del Toro were genuinely a debate. I really hope Cian gets it together, figures things out, and fulfills more of his potential. Besides that he seems like a nice guy, and I wouldn’t wish that kind of bad luck and murky situations on anyone.

What doesnt kill you makes you stronger.Hoping to see him back with a huge win soon, him and Bernal I would genuinly be happy to see win a big race just from perseverance.
Del Toro was no competition for Cian prior to 2024 when the road went uphill. Del Toro made a giant leap in 2024 and another one in 2025. UAE seems to be the place to be the last two years, not Visma.
 
In a way Cian apologised when claiming he didn't made any bullying accusations. So was it his manager, some journalist, then, or who made that part up? That one should i guess indeed apologise for the conduct, good luck with that.
I mean, saying "no, I didn't do that" about something you've done is not the same as apologising for having done it. It's kinda the complete opposite.

If he never made the accusations and it was made up by a journalist or an agent and was actually sorry about it, then he should've come out with that at the time, rather than taking advantage of it.
 
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I mean, saying "no, I didn't do that" about something you've done is not the same as apologising for having done it. It's kinda the complete opposite.

If he never made the accusations and it was made up by a journalist or an agent and was actually sorry about it, then he should've come out with that at the time, rather than taking advantage of it.
I think he wanted to stay away from all of it as much as possible. Probably advised by Plugge. Just let us handle it and we’ll see you in January
 
I think he wanted to stay away from all of it as much as possible. Probably advised by Plugge. Just let us handle it and we’ll see you in January
That would make sense, but I feel once those accusations were out there then if this was the case, then it was bad advice. If it was him that made those accusations, later saying "no I didn't make them" is just fuel to the fire of him being a liar and a conniver, and if it wasn't him that made those accusations then by not correcting any misconceptions he is tacitly endorsing them by allowing them to proliferate, and obviously he, Visma or both were able to take advantage of that and inappropriately smear another team's name and reputation in order to make personal gain, which is opportunistic and manipulative at best and downright conspiratorial at worst.

None of which really reflects particularly well on the young man.
 
I mean, saying "no, I didn't do that" about something you've done is not the same as apologising for having done it. It's kinda the complete opposite.

If he never made the accusations and it was made up by a journalist or an agent and was actually sorry about it, then he should've come out with that at the time, rather than taking advantage of it.
You generally apologise for something someone you have no relation with did? If Bora knew whatever was being said was a load of bollocks, they could have pushed for whatever legal and contractual tools at their disposal. In the end they agreed and got paid.

It's quite simple, nobody here knows what exactly happened, whether Uijtdebroeks is the biggest scumbag or whether somebody else had been manipulating him. Whether there was a reason well beyond a higher paycheck or not. I have always thought Vlasov attacking him with the help of Denz in the Vuelta two years ago, was what sparked it all. But it's just conjecture. I personally doubt it was about the money, because it's not like Bora is a nickle and dime team who could not have improved the contract if they had felt he was feeling underappreciated on that front and they really wanted to keep him.
 
You generally apologise for something someone you have no relation with did? If Bora knew whatever was being said was a load of bollocks, they could have pushed for whatever legal and contractual tools at their disposal. In the end they agreed and got paid.
If somebody releases something untrue about you, then you don't need to apologise, but correcting the misconception would show a whole lot more integrity than weaponising and taking advantage of that misconception for personal gain.
 
Del Toro was no competition for Cian prior to 2024 when the road went uphill. Del Toro made a giant leap in 2024 and another one in 2025. UAE seems to be the place to be the last two years, not Visma.

Del Toro's rise began on the U23 scene in 2023 after Uijtdebroeks had already turned pro. He's 9 months younger than the Belgian and from a smaller country in cycling terms, so it's not exactly extraordinary that he wasn't yet at his best in 2022 and early '23. He's also been fortunate not to be hit by the same amount of bad luck as Uijtdebroeks has. That said, I do agree that UAE have generally surpassed Visma when it comes to rider development.
 
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If somebody releases something untrue about you, then you don't need to apologise, but correcting the misconception would show a whole lot more integrity than weaponising and taking advantage of that misconception for personal gain.
I'm a bit fuzzy on the how it all went down, so i honestly don't recall if / how he weaponised whatever Zonneveld claimed. But again, if Bora knew all of this was BS, they should not have let that affect them. It would be up to Uijtdebroeks to prove it if he wanted to use that as leverage. It being a Dutch reporter and not a Belgian reporter or German, kind of tells me what direction i would be reverting my focus.
 
Del Toro's rise began on the U23 scene in 2023 after Uijtdebroeks had already turned pro. He's 9 months younger than the Belgian and from a smaller country in cycling terms, so it's not exactly extraordinary that he wasn't yet at his best in 2022 and early '23. He's also been fortunate not to be hit by the same amount of bad luck as Uijtdebroeks has. That said, I do agree that UAE have generally surpassed Visma when it comes to rider development.
UAE have way more money than Visma does, and they offer young riders way bigger salaries. That's also why they have managed to sign the bigger talents. I think most young riders Visma have signed wouldn't even be on UAE's radar, because they simply aren't good enough. That's nothing to do with rider development, just with talent.

Uijtdebroeks is obviously a different story, but he's mostly been injured or otherwise impeded from reaching his potential. That's a bit difficult to compare. I'd say another young talent Simon Yates is happy he signed with Visma and not UAE :)
 
UAE have way more money than Visma does, and they offer young riders way bigger salaries. That's also why they have managed to sign the bigger talents. I think most young riders Visma have signed wouldn't even be on UAE's radar, because they simply aren't good enough. That's nothing to do with rider development, just with talent.

Uijtdebroeks is obviously a different story, but he's mostly been injured or otherwise impeded from reaching his potential. That's a bit difficult to compare. I'd say another young talent Simon Yates is happy he signed with Visma and not UAE :)

Sure, money matters, but they also had more than Visma a couple of years ago when they were still lacking behind.