I think you've secured your PCT status and can continue to only look up
From your lips to the MGUCI gods' ears I don't have quite that confidence yet, but I can at least see a way, which is nice.
Up to promotion contention now with the latest signings
I feel like you're messing with me at this point Thanks, though! To everyone else, too, as before
Not messing with you at all I really like your team, I think you're in for a great season
Thanks, I certainly hope so Maybe I'm just a slightly pessimistic person by nature
aidanvn13 wrote:
Great signings and great team I was after a couple of those names myself, but thought I'd rather not make an enemy of you
Fortunately we don't have too much of an intersection terrain wise - will be cheering you on come cobbled classics.
Ha, I had the same thought at a few points, too I'm honestly a bit surprised how little friction we've had both last and this year, but it does seem to be working out for both of us. Gonna be rooting for you as well
As previously mentioned, the leadership roles have been filled, but that did not mean the roster construction had come to and end. There was still some money to be spent and some deals to be made, so we went ahead and did just that.
First, while we have two fast men in Stallaert and Silvestre, there are plenty of stage races with a sprint stage or two that will not fit into their schedule. So we went into free agency to look for another sprinter, and we found him outside of our usual fishing grounds. And then, we added to our hills department via deals.
Madushanka Perera
4.100
28yo
Sprinter
€50.000
Fl
Mo
Hi
TT
St
Rs
Rc
Co
Sp
Ac
Fi
Dh
Pr
71
53
64
58
69
73
77
64
79
80
50
61
74
Sri Lankan Madushanka Perera is our first rider from the Asian continent. He joins us for the minimum salary of 50.000€, mirroring our signing and the role of Rüdiger Selig - who was not willing to settle for an amount close to that - from last year.
Despite not being from our focus regions, at 28 years old he has the potential to stay with us for a while - or he'll follow Selig once more and seeks greener pastures after a (hopefully) successful season with us. He'll have plenty opportunity to show his skills, that's for sure.
Andrea Vendrame
4.100
27yo
Puncheur
€75.000
Fl
Mo
Hi
TT
St
Rs
Rc
Co
Sp
Ac
Fi
Dh
Pr
72
62
76
58
75
73
73
60
71
75
67
67
70
With Perera in, and coming off a disappointing previous season, Eritrean sprinter Mikiel Habtom became expendable. We eventually landed on a deal with our friends at Jura - Fiat for Italian puncheur Andrea Vendrame, who joins us in exchange for Habtom and 125.000€.
Vendrame offers a blend of puncheur skills and speed that we previously did not have on our team. Whether from reduced bunch sprints or breakaways, we hope he can score a decent amount of points this year.
Loic Vliegen
4.100
28yo
Puncheur
€70.000
Fl
Mo
Hi
TT
St
Rs
Rc
Co
Sp
Ac
Fi
Dh
Pr
71
67
77
61
76
70
70
68
66
74
71
69
67
Without a true contender for the hills, and in a division that is as stacked on that terrain as it maybe ever was, our strategy there for this year is to throw as many darts as possible and hope that some of them stick. Vendrame was one of these dart throws, and when Loic Vliegen became available from Aegon - Peroni at just 80.000€, we decided to make him another.
Not quite as fast and a bit weaker physically than Vandrame, he is still a solid pure puncheur and we hope Vliegen can play a good role in a handful of races, too. He is also eligible for C2 races, which could come into play.
While neither Vendrame nor Vliegen are from our usual focus regions - and in case of Vendrame, we even gave up such a rider to acquire him -, we feel like these moves both increase our short term chances of survival, as well as set us up well for the future, as both riders should have value on the trade market given their skill set and age. For whichever division, we have hopefully established a sturdy foundation from which to progress - and ultimately foster our core rider group even more.
At this point, our budgets are pretty much maxed out. We're happy with where we're at, but if there is interest in any of our riders, our PMs are still open. It ain't over until it's over, after all.
With the transfer window closed, it is now time to present our full squad for our first year in the PCT division. It's been a challenge for sure, but we look back on the last two weeks with very few regrets. Let's go through the riders by specialization before concluding with some general thoughts.
Cobblestones
Fl
Mo
Hi
TT
St
Rs
Rc
Co
Sp
Ac
Fi
Dh
Pr
J. Stallaert
77
60
67
58
76
68
80
81
79
76
67
66
58
Y. Lampaert
75
60
66
56
74
73
69
78
60
61
71
67
56
T. Okbamariam
73
66
65
59
70
73
67
76
72
68
65
78
59
B. Schoonbroodt
72
63
75
63
75
73
67
74
68
72
61
74
63
Like last year, cobblestones are our strongest area and our main focus. With Naesen out and Stallaert in, we've upgraded our leader in the hopes that he'll carry us to safety. Lampaert adds to last year's stalwarts Okbamariam and Schoonbroodt to support and assist Stallaert throughout the year.
Mountains
Fl
Mo
Hi
TT
St
Rs
Rc
Co
Sp
Ac
Fi
Dh
Pr
V. Ndayisenga
66
78
75
65
69
68
73
52
63
73
72
69
65
B. Uwizeyimana
71
76
72
74
76
75
77
50
56
68
69
58
74
M. Eyob
68
76
76
66
74
69
73
55
62
66
72
73
66
J. Hadi
68
74
72
74
73
70
71
61
74
71
68
69
74
While Valens Ndayisenga is still our strongest pure climber, the signings of Mektel Eyob and Bonaventure Uwizeyimana give us additional options, the latter especially for stage races with time trials. We'll see how they fare against the competition of the division though, as neither are particularly close to the top tier.
Sprinters
Fl
Mo
Hi
TT
St
Rs
Rc
Co
Sp
Ac
Fi
Dh
Pr
F. Silvestre
78
61
67
73
70
71
74
56
80
81
70
63
77
M. Perera
71
53
64
58
69
73
77
64
79
80
50
61
74
Fabio Silvestre was the second big addition of this off-season next to Stallaert - who could also be counted in this category - and will be our leader for all flat classics and sprinter stage races. Madushanka Perera will spend his season mostly hunting for decent results in other stage races. Looking at sprint dynamics last year, we've consciously decided against bringing on any leadouts, though how much those experiences will be worth this year remains to be seen.
Time Trials
Fl
Mo
Hi
TT
St
Rs
Rc
Co
Sp
Ac
Fi
Dh
Pr
J. Fiedler
76
57
65
80
70
71
73
57
63
58
64
60
79
J. Rosskopf
73
73
75
76
73
71
70
57
61
70
68
67
77
This is a new category as we didn't have any dedicated time trialists last year. Jacob Fiedler should hopefully score a good amount in flat time trials, while Joey Rosskopf will be our leader for hilly stage races. Note that both Uwizeyimana and Hadi are also decent time trialists who might fare well in those races, while Fabio Silvestre has a chance to do well in a few prologues.
Hills
Fl
Mo
Hi
TT
St
Rs
Rc
Co
Sp
Ac
Fi
Dh
Pr
L. Vliegen
71
67
77
61
76
70
70
68
66
74
71
69
67
S. Khederi
67
74
76
61
68
67
71
59
58
73
67
71
59
A.Vendrame
72
62
76
58
75
73
73
60
71
75
67
67
70
Just like last year, hills are easily our weakest area. Still, with the additions of Loic Vliegen, Andrea Vendrame and Mektel Eyob, we've gotten stronger and can hopefully land a few surprises or maybe a breakaway result here and there.
Talents
Fl
Mo
Hi
TT
St
Rs
Rc
Co
Sp
Ac
Fi
Dh
Pr
Pot
H. El Sabbahi
73
64
68
63
70
72
68
64
73
73
68
67
68
5
N. Tesfatsion
66
68
70
60
64
68
68
60
68
71
66
62
61
5
M. Mugisha
66
68
70
61
62
72
69
60
62
69
76
63
60
4
S. Mugisha
72
63
68
70
67
70
68
63
62
68
71
64
64
4
H. Mulubrhan *
66
64
68
65
64
68
68
61
66
70
66
63
66
5
Y. Debesay *
64
66
68
59
66
67
68
62
62
69
68
64
59
6
J. Rutsch **
73
63
67
61
72
72
67
71
65
67
69
68
66
5
* Stagiaires
** Loaned out
Once more, a very important category. El Sabbahi, Moise and Samuel Mugisha have developed from last year and new signing Natnael Tesfatsion immediately becomes our most promising youngster. Finally, we signed two stagiaires in Henok Mulubrhan and Yacob Debesay, who will have the opportunity to put themselves forward for a proper contract next year. Jonas Rutsch meanwhile spends the season at Eurosport x GCN to develop further.
Full Team
Rider
Type
AVG
Age
Wage
Valens Ndayisenga
Climber
75,24
27
€ 115.000
Bonaventure Uwizeyimana
Stage Racer
74,84
28
€ 115.000
Janvier Hadi
Allrounder
73,09
29
€ 50.000
Moise Mugisha
Puncheur
69,87
24
€ 50.000
Samuel Mugisha
Rouleur
68,9
24
€ 50.000
Mektel Eyob
Climber
74,61
28
€ 55.000
Tesform Okbamariam
Cobbles
73,51
30
€ 50.000
Natnael Tesfatsion
Puncheur
70,1
22
€ 100.000
Henok Mulubrhan *
Puncheur
68,57
22
€ 10.000
Yacob Debesay *
Puncheur
68,07
22
€ 10.000
Souheil Khederi
Puncheur
73,44
30
€ 50.000
Houcaine El Sabbahi
Sprinter
71,49
24
€ 50.000
Jacob Fiedler
Time Trials
75,03
34
€ 150.000
Joeri Stallaert
Cobbles
78,56
30
€ 850.000
Loic Vliegen
Puncheur
74,47
28
€ 70.000
Yves Lampaert
Cobbles
74,36
30
€ 70.000
Fabio Silvestre
Sprinter
78,11
31
€ 370.000
Madushanka Perera
Sprinter
75,49
28
€ 50.000
Joey Rosskopf
Time Trials
75,05
32
€ 100.000
Andrea Vendrame
Puncheur
74,66
27
€ 75.000
Bob Schoonbroodt
Allrounder
74,15
30
€ 60.000
* Stagiaires
Average
73,41
27,6
Closing thoughts
As I mentioned at the top, there are few major regrets we have this off-season. The thing that gives us the most pause is the national composition of our squad. Our share of Rwandans dropped from 6 of 20 to 5 of 21 after we unfortunately weren't able to fit Didier Munyaneza into the team. The number of African riders dropped from 13 of 20 to 12 of 21, though that is still a good number. And with Rutsch out on loan, we have only one German left, which does not make our title sponsor Stevens very happy.
But in the end, we sacrificed the short-term national representation in favor of increasing our chances of staying in the PCT, thus hopefully creating a more stable base from which to re-focus on the development of our key regions in the future. In the process, we've increased our average overall by almost two full points while getting less than half a year older. Only two riders will regress at the end of the season, and while Fiedler and Rosskopf will (hopefully) be among our better points scorers this year, they will be manageable losses.
The big question for this season is obviously: Will we be able to remain in PCT? We think we've done about as much as we could to reach that goal, but it is far from a certainty. On the other hand though, we simply want to enjoy the season as much as we can, and we have fun riders on every terrain, so there will hardly be any race where we don't have at least an outside chance to score a few points. Thus, we can look forward to every report with pleasant anticipation and that, ultimately, is what matters most.
I love what you did these transfers. Stallaert, Silvestre and Fiedler is a nice group of leaders, strong depth signings and a lovely focus on Rwandan/Eritrean riders. Really hope that things work out succesfully for you!
Ulrich Ulriksen wrote:
I think your African focus is impressive, particularly in the talents.
I am a big fan of the no lead out strategy unless you have a really top tier sprinter and Silvestre's flat means he can better take care of himself.
Good luck in the PCT.
Thank you! I hope the sprinting works out roughly similar to last year, in which case I'm pretty optimistic about Silvestre's chances. And yes, building up a good base of African riders is a big goal, too!
knockout wrote:
I love what you did these transfers. Stallaert, Silvestre and Fiedler is a nice group of leaders, strong depth signings and a lovely focus on Rwandan/Eritrean riders. Really hope that things work out succesfully for you!
Thank you I have no idea if or how the depth pays off, but I think we have a few different lanes to success this year. But also none that is really certain. Not a terribly high floor, but a decently high ceiling I reckon.
I'm happy we won't meet Stallaert very often, given that I avoid cobbles whenever it's possible
Of course, he's an amazing signing - especially given that he can be used as a sprinter if there aren't enough cobbles available!
Silvestre/Stallaert is actually an amazing sprint duo - but yeah, given the sprint uncertainty, I definitely hope for you (and me btw) that they indeed work +/- like last year.
I also like your depth on the hills; no top puncheur, but plenty of good riders who could get some breakaway wins or depth results in stage races. The mountains look pretty similar; I guess you're really going the attacking strategy, given that there are probably too many strong climbers in PCT for Ndayisenga to get decent GC results.
Fiedler obviously looks nice, and is a great national target. No doubt he'll score some points for you, there are quite some well-suited races available And you're definitely going to be stronger in TTTs than last year
Overall, I hope you can stay up! Cobbles should be great for you, but you're going to need some luck in the sprints, and lots of depth points from your uphill department. It's definitely possible!
Stallaert is an awesome signing, and he has a great support squad with him so should score really well and at the very least keep you up. Hopefully Okbamariam can be of help too
I guess this is what happens when a competent manager does a good job in transfers, unlike me who always spends too much money on the wrong riders I think your sponsors will quickly forget your small detour from regional talents when you deliver a top 10 finish this year
You got great leaders and nice depth. 12 Africans, including 5 Rwandans, is still a very nice number as well imo, and I'm sure it'll only grow in the coming years Best luck this season, I'll be looking forward to reporting your cobbled races, as I've joined Fabianski's aversion of cobblestones for at least a season now
We're back with a belated jersey presentation and a recap of the first four races of the year, the first races in PCT in team history! And as luck (and a strong individual performance) has it, we can combine those two a little bit.
First, let's have a look at the jersey in full:
Spoiler
Like last year, we're indebted to designer extraordinaire the_hoyle, who has updated his design from the previous season. Once again, we present our colors on a timeless white background, but with a modernized pattern, going from stripes to beautifully arranged triangles.
But as alluded to earlier, you won't just get to see an artificial rendition of this beautiful piece, you will also get to see it presented in full effect at the best possible place: the top step of a podium.
Down Under Classic
Fabio Silvestre celebrating our first win of the season.
Fabio Silvestre was one of our two major additions in the off-season, an elite sprinter we hoped could be a pillar in our push to remain in PCT. And what do you know - at the very first opportunity, he delivers in the best way possible.
On the first day of the season, he takes the third win in team history, and the most high-profile one to date. Just like we had planned, we did not provide him with a sprint train, instead relying on his instincts to jump from wheel to wheel. And that paid off. The rest of the team was very timid in the finale, but that was only of secondary concern. Samuel Mugisha did represent us in the breakaway, which was a nice bonus.
1
Fabio Silvestre
Bralirwa - Stevens
1h46'24
2
Asbjorn Kragh Andersen
Carlsberg - Danske Bank
s.t.
3
Peter Kennaugh
Binance Cycling
s.t.
4
Tom Van Asbroeck
Philips - Force India
s.t.
5
Jiankun Liu
Voyagin - Bird
s.t.
...
72
Yves Lampaert
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
81
Houcaine El Sabbahi
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
148
Tesfom Okbamariam
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
154
Samuel Mugisha
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
158
Bob Schoonbroodt
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
159
Natnael Tesfatsion
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
171
Moise Mugisha
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
Hong Kong Challenge
The Hong Kong Challenge was the first opportunity for another new signing to prove himself: Joey Rosskopf. Expectations were modest, but the puncheur/time trialist hybrid was able to convince with a solid all around performance.
On both hill stages, he managed to stay in the main group of favorites, scoring a strong 8th place on the final day. A mediocre time trial prevented a better result, but a 13th place in the final GC against some high-level competition is definetely a solid start. In addition Janvier Hadi had possibly his best race of his Bralirwa career, ending up in 20th overall. Nothing spectacular, but every point counts.
1
Eduard Alexander Beltran
Cedevita
8h01'08
2
Matthias Brändle
Red Bull Zalgiris
+ 29
3
Martijn Keizer
Red Bull Zalgiris
+ 31
4
Jack Bobridge
Project: Africa
+ 41
5
Tom Jelte Slagter
Sauber Petronas Racing
+ 52
...
13
Joey Rosskopf
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 1'26
20
Janvier Hadi
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 2'40
44
Bonaventure Uwizeyimana
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 5'59
57
Mektel Eyob
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 7'09
61
Loic Vliegen
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 7'22
82
Bob Schoonbroodt
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 8'51
87
Andrea Vendrame
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 9'38
119
Moise Mugisha
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 15'22
Clasico San José
Loic Vliegen on the left comes in second behind winner Matthew Holmes.
Perhaps the biggest surprise of this young season - both for us and in general - was the result of the Clasico San José, a new race on the C2 calendar. Once again, a Bralirwa newcomer provided us with a big result.
Loic Vliegen joined us late in the window from Aegon, and he immediately made an impact, finishing second behind shocking winner Matthew Holmes. With a similarly stellar performance, youngster Natnael Tesfatsion finished 25th, scoring his first of what will hopefully be many more points in the future.
1
Matthew Holmes
cycleYorkshire
5h30'36
2
Loic Vliegen
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
3
Odd Christian Eiking
Gjensidige Pro Cycling Team
s.t.
4
Anatoliy Budyak
Team Popo4Ever p/b Nemiroff
+ 13
5
Andrea Palini
Strava
s.t.
...
25
Natnael Tesfatsion
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 3'44
38
Janvier Hadi
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 4'12
42
Souheil Khederi
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
45
Yacob Debesay
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 4'46
106
Henok Mulubrhan
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 12'58
Franceville Classique
Joeri Stallaert concludes a successful month with another podium.
Two podium places in three races, that's not bad, right? But you know what's better? Three podium places in four races!
Joeri Stallaert was by far the biggest (read: most expensive) addition to the team this year. In order to remain in PCT, we depend on him to justify his wage with a big haul of points. And the Belgian is off to a great start on that path! Coming second only to cobblestone doyen Sam Bewley in a sprint from the final trio, Stallaert makes his first mark on the season, showing he can compete against the very best, an encouraging sign for the rest of the year.
1
Sam Bewley
Mapei
4h31'09
2
Joeri Stallaert
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
3
Lukasz Wisniowski
Grieg-Maersk
s.t.
4
Mads Pedersen
Grieg-Maersk
+ 28
5
Mekseb Debesay
Generali
s.t.
...
24
Yves Lampaert
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
30
Tesfom Okbamariam
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
48
Bob Schoonbroodt
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 1'50
59
Houcaine El Sabbahi
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
100
Samuel Mugisha
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
127
Moise Mugisha
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 9'28
128
Mektel Eyob
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 11'40
February Preview
Cat.
Race
Leader(s)
PTHC
Volta a Portugal
V. Ndayisenga, B. Uwizeyimana
HC
Omloop Het Nieuwsblad
J. Stallaert
C2
GP Herning
Y. Lampaert
HC
Tour of Ukraine
J. Rosskopf
C1
Tour of Southland
A. Vendrame, J. Stallaert
Stallaert is expected to do well in the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad, Ukraine is one of Rosskopf's bigger races of the year. Depending on the sprinting field in Southland, Stallaert and Perera can maybe do something. Everything else will be considered a bonus.
I love the jersey, it looks great!
A slew of great results for your team, congratulations! I hoped to challenge more for the Clasico San Jose, but that race is still an improvement for Chaves after Gisborne, so it's not entirely bad. Also that result from Natnael Tesfatsion is really encouraging.
You're being proven more and more correct with every passing race, it seems I won't complain at all!
DarkWolf wrote:
I love the jersey, it looks great!
A slew of great results for your team, congratulations! I hoped to challenge more for the Clasico San Jose, but that race is still an improvement for Chaves after Gisborne, so it's not entirely bad. Also that result from Natnael Tesfatsion is really encouraging.
Thank you Love the shirt as well, and good spotlight on Tesfatsion! Hope it's just the beginning!
February was a very diverse month for us, in every respect. 2 classics and 3 stage races, from C2 to PTHC and from very successful to almost anonymous. In general, we continued our good run of form, as reflected in the end-of-month rankings update, which we'll look at to conclude this update.
Volta a Portugal
The first PTHC stage race in team history provided us with the first "bad" race of the season. This is not entirely unexpected, as our climbers are at best 3rd tier compared to the elite of the division. That said, there were hardly any small highlights throughout, which was a bit disappointing.
Madushanka Perera had his first outing for the team, but in two sprints was only able to provide us with one 15th place - the fact that that would stand as our best stage result gives you a good impression of our overall performance. Both Andrea Vendrame and Samuel Mugisha featured in the breakaway twice, and on the final stage, all of Bonaventure Uwizeyimana, Valens Ndayisenga and Mektel Eyob went into the breakaway, with the latter ending up as 25th on the day and 35th in the GC as our strongest rider.
1
Aleksandr Pluchkin
Team Popo4Ever
29h54'14
2
Ki Ho Choi
MOL
+ 8
3
Tim Wellens
Tryg - Ritter Sport
+ 17
4
Yonathan Monsalve
Assa Abloy
+ 35
5
Daan Olivier
Aegon - Peroni
+ 1'41
...
35
Mektel Eyob
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 12'13
41
Valens Ndayisenga
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 13'14
58
Bonaventure Uwizeyimana
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 16'32
115
Andrea Vendrame
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 33'48
131
Houcaine El Sabbahi
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 40'28
157
Moise Mugisha
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 51'31
165
Samuel Mugisha
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 1h00'59
170
Madushanka Perera
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 1h06'48
Omloop Het Nieuwsblad
Joeri Stallaert gives us our second win of the year!
Halfway through the Volta a Portugal, all those mediocre-at-best results were completely overshadowed by our second big win of the year. Following a second place in his first race of the year in Franceville, Joeri Stallaert came to Belgium to one-up that. After a long hard day in the saddle, our team captain won a sprint from a reduced group of 4 to continue our streak of fantastic results in classics.
He was heavily assisted in this endeavor by teammate and compatriot Yves Lampaert, who continues to prove himself as an excellent late signing. Not only was he pivotal in distancing some of the major rivals, but he also hung on to collect quite a few points himself, finishing 9th! In addition, both Tesfom Okbamariam and Bob Schoonbroodt provided some depth points to round out a fantastic day.
1
Joeri Stallaert
Bralirwa - Stevens
5h02'19
2
Maxime Daniel
Carrefour - ESPN
s.t.
3
Adam Blythe
Eurosport x GCN
s.t.
4
Lukas Spengler
Team UBS
s.t.
5
Hampus Anderberg
Aker - MOT
+ 1'38
...
9
Yves Lampaert
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 2'37
26
Tesfom Okbamariam
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 6'03
37
Bob Schoonbroodt
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 7'26
88
Loic Vliegen
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 16'12
121
Janvier Hadi
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 29'27
131
Souheil Khederi
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 34'27
GP Herning
Bob Schoonbroodt finishes 9th in Denmark.
All of our 10 C2 race days this year are one day classics. Loic Vliegen excelled with a second place at the Clasico San Jose in late January, and on the cobblestones of the GP Herning, Bob Schoonbroodt delivered another good result. While not quite being able to hang on to the first group, he won the sprint for 9th place of the first chasing trio.
1
Amund Grondahl Jansen
Aker - MOT
4h20'36
2
Sep Vanmarcke
Pas Normal Studios - Mikkeller
s.t.
3
Pieter Vanspeybrouck
Trans Looney Tunes
s.t.
4
Tim Declerq
Crabbe-CC Chevigny
s.t.
5
Salvatore Puccio
HelloFresh
s.t.
...
9
Bob Schoonbroodt
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 50
27
Tesfom Okbamariam
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 3'13
65
Loic Vliegen
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 6'58
89
Natnael Tesfatsion
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 13'32
100
Henok Mulubrhan
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 16'32
108
Souheil Khederi
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 19'19
114
Yacob Debesay
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 21'17
Tour of Ukraine
Bonaventure Uwizeyimana doing his best in the first time trial.
The Tour of Ukraine - two time trials, a hill stage - is the exact type of race we pay Joey Rosskopf big bucks for (well, if you consider 100k big bucks). Unfortunately, after an okay 13th place in Hong Kong last month, he wasn't able to continue on that path. In fact, his two time trial performances were abysmal for a rider of his caliber - 67th and 49th!
A 31st place in the hilly stage did little for his GC ranking, which ended up being 43rd. Similarly, out time trial leader Jacob Fiedler was not able to muster more than 67th in the final time trial, which proved more hilly than it looked on paper - that's the charitable reading, at least.
In their stead, Bonaventure Uwizeyimana had his best outing for us yet, a strong 15th place in the opening TT laying the groundwork for a decent 26th overall, and Janvier Hadi slipped into the points in 50th place as well. Still, in total it feels like we ended up way below our possibilities - though in light of our overall performances, I won't complain too much.
1
Aleksandr Pluchkin
Team Popo4Ever p/b Nemiroff
3h38'03
2
Ion Izagirre
Polar
+ 48
3
Jack Bobridge
Project: Africa
+ 1'04
4
Martijn Keizer
Red Bull Zalgiris
+ 1'25
5
Jose Fernandes
Binance Cycling
+ 1'48
...
26
Bonaventure Uwizeyimana
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 3'35
43
Joey Rosskopf
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 4'01
50
Janvier Hadi
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 4'15
129
Bob Schoonbroodt
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 6'53
137
Moise Mugisha
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 7'11
150
Jacob Fiedler
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 8'03
170
Samuel Mugisha
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 9'20
180
Houcaine El Sabbahi
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 10'36
Tour of Southland
Our final race of the month was the Tour of Southland. Three flat stages, two hilly ones. Madushanka Perera and Joeri Stallaert, who had five race days left over, were our main hopes for points in the sprints, but it wasn't meant to be. Perera finished 11th, 10th and 13th with Stallaert not even trying.
However, we still avoided our first zero pointer of the year. Thanks mostly due to a good performance on the first of the two hilly stages, both Souheil Khederi (who finished 13th on the day, his best result in our jersey ever) and Loic Vliegen somehow managed to get into the backend of the Top 30 to combine for a massive 3 points.
1
Bruno Borges
Duolingo
15h58'15
2
Marko Kump
HelloFresh
+ 8
3
Michael Van Stayen
Carrefour - ESPN
s.t.
4
Oleksandr Prevar
Team Popo4Ever p/b Nemiroff
s.t.
5
Jay McCarthy
cycleYorkshire
+ 12
...
27
Loic Vliegen
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 1'24
29
Souheil Khederi
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
36
Andrea Vendrame
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 1'55
37
Valens Ndayisenga
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
62
Madushanka Perera
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 2'32
70
Joeri Stallaert
Bralirwa - Stevens
s.t.
163
Mektel Eyob
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 6'33
173
Natnael Tesfatsion
Bralirwa - Stevens
+ 7'00
PCT Rankings Update
We missed to report on the first rankings update in January, which had us - incredibly - in 3rd place with the highest PpRD. We knew we wouldn't continue like that, but the February rankings still looked incredibly kind for us:
Pos
Last
Team
Total
RD
PpRD
Proj
1
23
Team Popo4Ever p/b Nemiroff
921
34
27,09
4741
2
9
Duolingo
686
31
22,13
3873
3
21
Red Bull Zalgiris
686
42
16,33
2858
4
24
Team UBS
579
34
17,03
2980
5
4
Bralirwa - Stevens
576
30
19,2
3360
6
6
Carrefour - ESPN
534
32
16,69
2921
7
8
cycleYorkshire
516
31
16,65
2914
8
20
Project: Africa
513
39
13,15
2301
9
3
Binance Cycling
485
36
13,47
2357
10
18
Podium Ambition
472
19
24,84
4347
11
15
Los Pollos Hermanos
470
40
11,75
2056
12
1
Aker - MOT
441
20
22,05
3859
13
22
Sauber Petronas Racing
429
36
11,92
2086
14
10
Eurosport x GCN
394
33
11,94
2090
15
5
Carlsberg - Danske Bank
365
28
13,04
2282
16
19
Polar
356
11
32,36
5663
17
25
Tryg - Ritter Sport
346
41
8,44
1477
18
2
Assa Abloy
316
32
9,88
1729
19
17
Philips - Force India
283
25
11,32
1981
20
16
Minions
253
21
12,05
2109
21
14
Lierse SK - Pizza Ullo PCTeam
231
18
12,83
2245
22
11
Indosat Ooredoo
230
19
12,11
2119
23
7
Cedevita
226
16
14,13
2473
24
26
Voyagin - Bird
159
17
9,35
1636
25
13
Kraftwerk Man Machine
158
13
12,15
2126
26
12
Jura - Fiat
155
23
6,74
1180
5th overall and 6th in PPrD is more than we could have dreamed of at this point in the season. Obviously, we're overperforming a good bit right now and especially the stage races that are still to come will not be great for our PPrD, but we're incredibly happy with where we're at and the cushion we have already built up on the relegation ranks.
We also have Joeri Stallaert in 3rd place and Fabio Silvestre in 17th of the individual standings, which is fantastic but also an indication of the top heavy-ness of our roster - Yves Lampaert is our next best rider in 89th. But this is just a snapshot at the beginning of the season of course.
March Preview
Cat.
Race
Leader(s)
HC
Barbados Cycling Festival
F. Silvestre
C1
Jelajah SKL
J. Rosskopf
HC
Vuelta al Pais Vasco
J. Rosskopf, B. Uwizeyimana
C2
Badaling International
L. Vliegen
C1
Circulo de Juarez
F. Silvestre
C2
Coppa Placci
L. Vliegen
HC
Strade Bianche
A. Vendrame, L. Vliegen
C1
Tour of Eritrea
V. Ndayisenga, J. Stallaert
HC
E3 Prijs
J. Stallaert
C1
Kuurne - Bruxelles - Kuurne
J. Stallaert
A very busy month for us, much of which has already been raced of course, since we're a little late with this summary. We'll review March in two parts, the first of which hence will come out relatively soon.
High hopes for Silvestre in the first and Stallaert in the latter part of the month, of course, but also lots of opportunities for other riders to prove themselves. Looking forward to all of it (or what is remaining of it now) - it does feel like we're playing with house money already after these great first few weeks and months.