...but Quickstep keep winning, and the guys who leave don’t. They must have a good eye for the neopros.Breh said:Baffling howmuch talent Quick Step has lost the past two seasons. All that talent replaced by some neopro's, Sénéchal, Morkov and Viviani.
A few weeks ag there was rumour about Viviani wanting to have Cimolai as a part of his train, but if Fernando is leaving they have more that enough riders to be part o Viviani's train.lemon cheese cake said:Peak Barnabas has already signed with SEG Academy for next seasonRedheadDane said:Hmm... with Gaviria leaving they'll be one down from the 23 riders claimed by Lefevre. So... Peak?
Breh said:Richeze needs a new sprinter.
I know, QS are only left with Viviani, Hodeg, Jakobsen, Sabatini and Martinelli.Breh said:Richeze needs a new sprinter.
Nirvana said:Three years with UAE it's an almost career ending injury.
Considering that colombians usually tends to plateau and fade very early could be a disgrace for him.
Anyway i can see Quick-Step win at least a couple of stages at the Giro with Hoedg, at the Tour with Viviani and at the Vuelta with Jakobsen like nothing would have changed.
MuskyOurSaviour said:Nirvana said:Three years with UAE it's an almost career ending injury.
Considering that colombians usually tends to plateau and fade very early could be a disgrace for him.
Anyway i can see Quick-Step win at least a couple of stages at the Giro with Hoedg, at the Tour with Viviani and at the Vuelta with Jakobsen like nothing would have changed.
Except now Gaviria will win them, for UAE 😉
Gigs_98 said:This is actually a move nobody would have believed in only a few years ago. I think it was when tinkoff folded and Sagan was on the market that lefevre said "why do I need Sagan, I have Gaviria". That Lefevre did not sound like someone who would sell Gaviria only two years later. But now this actually doesn't look like that big of a surprise. Gaviria has been very good but only as a sprinter and he completely failed to develop into a serious contender for the classics despite being in the best of environments. I think qs did the right thing.
Gaviria however probably made the same mistake many have made before him to cash in and go to UAE. When one rider goes there and underperforms it might be coincidence. If two go there and underperform it's either a big coincidence or the start of a pattern. But if half a dozen riders go to a team and all underperform it's getting very clear which of the two it is. I hope he'll prove me wrong but I fear this won't end well for him. Also why on earth did UAE think having kristoff and Gaviria in one team would be a good idea?
That's sort of what happened to Alex Rasmussen some years ago. In the first week of the vuelta Alex asked about the following year and Vaughters said he would get an extension no problem. Alex worked hard for the team and when the race ended it turned out Vaughters had lied and then it was too late for Alex to find another team.search said:According to yesterday's Het Nieuwsblad TvA agreed on a low-priced one year deal last year because Vaughters gave him his word that a multi-year contract at better conditions would follow. This never happened though, and in the end of September he got a mail from the team that his contract would not be prolonged at all.Anderis said:Tom van Asbroeck is still without a contract. I find it surprising considering his form in 2nd part of the season.
So he probably didn't even look for a new team until he got that mail. And now it's a bit late of course...
Lampre/UAE actually has a better track record when it comes to sprinters, they developed Benna and did a decent job with Modolo (who had a great short train, Ferrari and Richeze, when he won a few Giro stages).qwerty16 said:Gigs_98 said:This is actually a move nobody would have believed in only a few years ago. I think it was when tinkoff folded and Sagan was on the market that lefevre said "why do I need Sagan, I have Gaviria". That Lefevre did not sound like someone who would sell Gaviria only two years later. But now this actually doesn't look like that big of a surprise. Gaviria has been very good but only as a sprinter and he completely failed to develop into a serious contender for the classics despite being in the best of environments. I think qs did the right thing.
Gaviria however probably made the same mistake many have made before him to cash in and go to UAE. When one rider goes there and underperforms it might be coincidence. If two go there and underperform it's either a big coincidence or the start of a pattern. But if half a dozen riders go to a team and all underperform it's getting very clear which of the two it is. I hope he'll prove me wrong but I fear this won't end well for him. Also why on earth did UAE think having kristoff and Gaviria in one team would be a good idea?
Kristoff has only one year left with UAE. I think they (UAE) think they are better off with Gaviria, despite Kristoff actually being the only one of their big stars who had a half-decent year in 2018.
How that will turn out we will see in the future
qwerty16 said:Gigs_98 said:This is actually a move nobody would have believed in only a few years ago. I think it was when tinkoff folded and Sagan was on the market that lefevre said "why do I need Sagan, I have Gaviria". That Lefevre did not sound like someone who would sell Gaviria only two years later. But now this actually doesn't look like that big of a surprise. Gaviria has been very good but only as a sprinter and he completely failed to develop into a serious contender for the classics despite being in the best of environments. I think qs did the right thing.
Gaviria however probably made the same mistake many have made before him to cash in and go to UAE. When one rider goes there and underperforms it might be coincidence. If two go there and underperform it's either a big coincidence or the start of a pattern. But if half a dozen riders go to a team and all underperform it's getting very clear which of the two it is. I hope he'll prove me wrong but I fear this won't end well for him. Also why on earth did UAE think having kristoff and Gaviria in one team would be a good idea?
Kristoff has only one year left with UAE. I think they (UAE) think they are better off with Gaviria, despite Kristoff actually being the only one of their big stars who had a half-decent year in 2018.
How that will turn out we will see in the future
Bewley one of the fun guys in their behind the scenes content, so that's an added bonousyaco said:Bewley extends with Mitchelton Scott for 2 years - Valuable support rider who can ride on the front of the peleton for long periods - let's hope he's used more often this year as he only had 47 race days.
the asian said:Really stupid move by Gaviria.
Joining Team UAE is career suicide.
Red Rick said:Bewley one of the fun guys in their behind the scenes content, so that's an added bonousyaco said:Bewley extends with Mitchelton Scott for 2 years - Valuable support rider who can ride on the front of the peleton for long periods - let's hope he's used more often this year as he only had 47 race days.