Wait... what?
Why are score at the end of round, and total score "now" (October last year) not the same?
He had scored 57 points before the start of the 2022 season.

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Wait... what?
Why are score at the end of round, and total score "now" (October last year) not the same?
He had scored 57 points before the start of the 2022 season.
22 pts for the win this morning, and 6 more for the race lead: she probably doesn't mind loss of consistency in this manner.Daniek Hengveld of Ceratizit has been in the pro peloton for 4 seasons: she got exactly the same CQ score in three of them (26 points each time, 20 instead in the 3rd season). At 22 years of age, she would probably rather not have flatlined already.
You have too much free time 😁Continuing from earlier:
AG Insurance - Soudal Team
10 different nationalities
6 riders: Belgium
3 riders: Australia and the Netherlands
1 rider: France, Italy, Mauritius, Slovenia, Spain, South Africa, and Sweden
CANYON//SRAM zondacrypto
11 different nationalities
4 riders: Germany
2 riders: Australia, Great Britain, Italy, and Poland
1 rider: Belarus, Denmark, Finland, the Netherlands, Portugal, and the United States
CERATIZIT-WNT Pro Cycling Team
10 different nationalities
2 riders: France, Germany, and the Netherlands
1 rider: Afghanistan, Canada, Czech Republic, Hungary, Italy, Poland, and Spain
FDJ - SUEZ
5 different nationalities
9 riders: France
5 riders: The Netherlands
2 riders: Italy
1 rider: New Zealand and Switzerland
Fenix-Deceuninck
5 different nationalities
9 riders: The Netherlands
3 riders: Belgium
2 riders: Austria and Great Britain
1 rider: Italy
Human Powered Health
9 different nationalities
5 riders: Italy
2 riders: Austria, the Netherlands, Poland, and the United States
1 rider: Canada, France, Germany, and Spain
Lidl - Trek
9 different nationalities
4 riders: The Netherlands
3 riders: Australia, Great Britain, and Italy
2 riders: Canada
1 rider: Belgium, Denmark, France, and New Zealand
Liv AlUla Jayco
6 different nationalities
4 riders: Australia and the Netherlands
3 riders: Italy
1 rider: New Zealand, Spain, and Sweden
Movistar Team
11 different nationalities
4 riders + 1 future trainee: Spain
3 riders: Great Britain
2 riders: The Netherlands
1 rider: Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Cuba, France, Germany, Serbia, and Switzerland
Roland
8 different nationalities
4 riders: Italy
1 rider: Cyprus, France, Ireland, the Netherlands, Poland, Russia, and Switzerland
Team Picnic PostNL
8 different nationalities
5 riders: The Netherlands
4 riders: Great Britain and Italy
1 rider: Belgium, Canada, Colombia, Germany, and the United States
Team SD Worx - Protime
11 different nationalities
7 riders: The Netherlands
2 riders: Italy
1 rider: Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Hungary, Luxembourg, New Zealand, Poland, the United States, and Switzerland
Team Visma | Lease a Bike
6 different nationalities
11 riders: The Netherlands
3 riders: France
1 rider: Germany, Great Britain, Italy, and Slovakia
UAE Team ADQ
11 different nationalities
6 riders: Italy
2 riders: Great Britain and the Netherlands
1 rider: Australia, Belarus, Czech Republic, France, Ireland, Poland, Russia, and the United Arab Emirates
Uno-X Mobility
8 different nationalities
8 riders: Norway
3 riders: Denmark
2 riders: The Netherlands
1 rider: Canada, Finland, Great Britain, Italy, and Switzerland
Euskaltel - Euskadi
6 different nationalities
16 riders: Spain
1 rider: France, Great Britain, Hungary, the Netherlands, and Poland
But more importantly, they have 14 Basque riders, plus Iker Bonillo who probably has a Basque connection.
Maybe I'll make more detailed overviews later... I also didn't differentiate between the various Brits.
I, for one, would like to know from which Swiss cantons the Tudor riders originate from.
Might as well list it by streets they grew up on!
We both know you're never going to do that much research.
Would also be... slightly creepy.
(I don't think info like that is publically available.)
You could travel around the world and knock on doors in the cities bike riders are from to get the information from locals who have witnessed them growing up.
Don't you speak English? I think that would get you by in most cases.I don't have that much free time.
Or money...
Or linguistic abilities...
Don't you speak English? I think that would get you by in most cases.
Since nobody is offering to pay for my global research trip, I'm just gonna continue what I was doing...
Arkéa B&B Hotels Women
8 different nationalities
5 riders + one future trainee: France
2 riders: The Netherlands
1 rider: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada (future trainee), New Zealand, and Sweden
Cofidis Women Team
7 different nationalities
7 riders + one pending: France
2 riders: Germany, Italy, and Slovenia
1 rider: Czech Republic, Denmark, and the Netherlands
EF Education-Oatly
11 different nationalities
4 riders: Canada
3 riders: The Netherlands
2 riders: New Zealand and the United states
1 rider: Australia, Finland, France, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, and Switzerland
Laboral Kutxa - Fundación Euskadi
5 different nationalities
6 riders: Spain
5 riders: Italy
1 rider: Chile, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan
St Michel - Preference Home - Auber93 WE
4 different nationalities
6 riders: France
3 riders: Australia
1 rider: Canada and Spain
VolkerWessels Women's Pro Cycling Team
2 different nationalities
16 riders: The Netherlands
3 riders: Belgium
Winspace Orange Seal
5 different nationalities
4 riders: Canada and France
2 riders: Poland
1 rider: China and Ireland
(I'm sure @Samu Cuenca will come by quickly to give a more detailed breakdown of the Basqueness of the Kutxa riders. Because, apparently it's a Danish guy who's our "in house" Basque Expert...)
Well a Danish woman is our resident shot put expert and was recently offered the opportunity to become our official spokesperson on the Swiss road network.
How does one go from athletics coach to spokesperson for the national road network? (Whilst not being from that country)Well a Danish woman is our resident shot put expert and was recently offered the opportunity to become our official spokesperson on the Swiss road network.
GB...really?The only country that has cycling at the top of its all-time Olympic medal table (summer and winter) is Latvia.
Countries that have cycling in 2nd position are Belgium, Netherlands, France, Italy, GB, Denmark, Portugal, Colombia, Malaysia, and Jamaica.