Along with the rest of the cycling world, we have been deeply saddened by the passing of Tijl De Decker five days ago following a training accident. Even if his presence in the ManGame and with our team is just the tiniest aspect in all of this, we would like to extend our condolences to his family, his loved ones and everyone else affected by this tragedy.
In consultation with the MGUCI, we've agreed that Tijl will no longer be part of the game. The roster spot, including skill points, wages and all that comes with it, will instead be filled by Jago Willems. Even if he wasn't originally intended to enter the ManGame, and despite the circumstances which have changed that, we welcome Jago to the team with open arms and hopes of a long future together.
Tijl's memory will live on in many people's minds and hearts for a long time. And, insignificant as it might be in the grand scheme of things, so too will it in this little corner of the internet.
redordead wrote:
You should be more than safe this season, but with the ages of your leaders you'll probably need to add some new ones again next year.
I didn't pay any attention to talents this year (PT sucks ), but it seems like everyone got some really good riders
Going through planning, I'm fairly confident to be safe, too, but lots of teams looking pretty strong this year in PCT. Tough to really assess the year for me. Meintjes at least has one more year at max and Stallaert should still be a solid rider even after one year of decline, depending on his salary demands. But yeah, another small rebuild will be coming. The talents I've signed will hopefully reduce that necessity in a few years.
TheManxMissile wrote:
Van Eetvelt is a steal at 200k imo. Not quite the total overhaul I thought was coming, but the talents are in, relegation is far far behind you. All very settled and positive.
I'm very happy with Van Eetvelt! I'm always glad to read optimistic views of my roster, so thanks
Laurens147 wrote:
I'm jealous of your new pool of talent I've looked at all 4 of them, but I couldn't join the bidding war.
Like always a cool combination of African talent with foreign leaders. And now with Meintjes as GC leader it looks even better All the best!
Thank you! Getting Meintjes is really cool, might be the best African rider I can reasonably expect to get my hands on for a bit, except perhaps for the ones I'm gonna be developing myself ...
Fabianski wrote:
Meintjes is a perfect fit for you, although I'd obviously have preferred getting him myself
Picking up Habimana was a given as well, I didn't even bother bidding against you there. Van Eetvelt obviously is fantastic, even though I didn't expect you to be going for him
Overall, I think you don't have to worry about relegation. Stallaert and Meintjes should bring you close to safety already, and you've got enough depth riders to secure the missing points. From nothing to a solid TTT core is impressive as well, should be pretty valuable! And we shouldn't forget about Silvestre, despite his first decline. In any case, looking forward to be racing against you again
Didn't love that interjection in the Meintjes transfer, but you can't blame someone for trying And indeed, Habimana would have ended up on the team no matter what, too. Good to get another confident read of the team, putting me more at ease. And I'm looking forward to racing you as well
cunego59 wrote:
Didn't love that interjection in the Meintjes transfer, but you can't blame someone for trying
Yeah, sorry for that. I don't usually hijack deal threads, but I was already talking to jph about Meintjes - and just as I told him I'd go for 1.4m, he had put up the thread some seconds before. Otherwise I guess he'd have opened the thread with 1.5m right away
Looking forward to some Stallaert vs. Theuns battles, hopefully not always with the better end for the former
cunego59 wrote:
Didn't love that interjection in the Meintjes transfer, but you can't blame someone for trying
Yeah, sorry for that. I don't usually hijack deal threads, but I was already talking to jph about Meintjes - and just as I told him I'd go for 1.4m, he had put up the thread some seconds before. Otherwise I guess he'd have opened the thread with 1.5m right away
Looking forward to some Stallaert vs. Theuns battles, hopefully not always with the better end for the former
Don't worry, jph was very open about other negotiations happening, I thought it was a fair process. By "didn't love" I really just meant I wasn't happy because I had to pay a bit more, not that I thought it was in bad faith or anything
In that sense, I also really didn't love the Theuns addition to the division, as I said in your thread Should be very interesting to see their battles.
Plans can often change, but these won't: After much deliberation, we have the 2023 PCT Season for Barlirwa - Stevens all mapped out. Getting all of our preferred bands in the PTHC and HC categories as well as our favorite C2 races, we have no excuses to not perform well.
In addition, we have also received entry to six PT races via wild cards. While those will be used for development purposes for our youngsters, we also bring our leaders to challenge the PT teams. Fabio Silvestre leads us at the Tour of Qatar for the second year in a row, and in sprint stages at Paris - Nice, where Louis Meintjes will compete in the GC. Louis is also in contention at the GP Liechtenstein, while Joeri Stallaert will get a chance to prove himself at the highest level at Strada Appia Antica, Macskako Kerekparverseny and the E3 Prijs.
Have a look at our full calendar (shoutout to Fabianski for the assist):
Start
End
Race
Category
09-Jan
Down Under Classic
HC
17-Jan
22-Jan
Tour of Qatar
PT
25-Jan
27-Jan
Hong Kong Challenge
C1
---
01-Feb
08-Feb
Volta a Portugal
PTHC
04-Feb
Omloop Het Nieuwsblad
HC
10-Feb
GP Herning
C2
10-Feb
Le Samyn
HC
13-Feb
20-Feb
Paris - Nice
PT
26-Feb
Kuurne - Bruxelles - Kuurne
C1
--
03-Mar
Isle of Man TTT
C1
05-Mar
10-Mar
Vuelta al Pais Vasco
C1
17-Mar
20-Mar
Tour of Guadeloupe
C1
18-Mar
Strade Bianche
HC
20-Mar
Strada Appia Antica
PT
22-Mar
27-Mar
Tour of South Africa
HC
23-Mar
Macskako Kerekparverseny
PT
27-Mar
E3 Prijs
PT
30-Mar
Lillestrom GP
C1
---
01-Apr
03-Apr
Tour du Faso
C2
12-Apr
18-Apr
Tour de Pologne
HC
20-Apr
GP Liechtenstein
PT
23-Apr
Roma Maxima
PTHC
25-Apr
GP Wallonie
HC
28-Apr
Veenendaal - Veenendaal
PTHC
28-Apr
Lisbon Classic
HC
---
03-May
08-May
Tour de Romandie
C1
13-May
16-May
Tour of Lithuania
PTHC
19-May
1 Jour de Dunkerque
C1
27-May
31-May
Tour of Norway
HC
---
01-Jun
02-Jun
Franceville Classique
PTHC
01-Jun
Hanko Classic
C1
04-Jun
Pro Hallstatt Classic
HC
09-Jun
13-Jun
La Tropicale Amissa Bongo
C1
22-Jun
28-Jun
Tour of California
HC
23-Jun
Monterrey TTT
C2
---
01-Jul
Torshavn GP
C1
03-Jul
06-Jul
Arab Tour
HC
09-Jul
11-Jul
Tour of Eritrea
C1
13-Jul
18-Jul
Benelux Challenge
HC
25-Jul
29-Jul
Tour of Slovenia
PTHC
25-Jul
29-Jul
Tour d'Andorra
C1
---
02-Aug
06-Aug
Deutschland Tour
PTHC
10-Aug
15-Aug
Tour du Maroc
C1
20-Aug
GP Kigali
C1
23-Aug
31-Aug
Tour de l'Avenir
U23
---
01-Sep
05-Sep
Tour of Britain
C1
02-Sep
Riga - Jurmala GP
PTHC
08-Sep
13-Sep
Balkans International
PTHC
24-Sep
Chrono d'Arenberg
PTHC
26-Sep
Rheden GP
PTHC
---
01-Oct
06-Oct
Tour of Japan
HC
09-Oct
Grand Prix Cycliste de Québec
PTHC
18-Oct
Giro dell'Emilia
HC
One fact that we're especially happy with is that we compete in every single African race on the entire MGUCI calendar, from the Franceville Classique in PTHC down to the Tour du Faso in C2. That also includes a debut at the Tour of South Africa, which is certainly fitting, given our new team leader.
One African race also made it to our season goals:
Cat.
Race
Goal
HC
Omloop Het Nieuwsblad
Win
C1
Kuurne - Bruxelles - Kuurne
Win
PTHC
Rheden GP
Top 5
PTHC
Franceville Classique
Top 5
PCT
Team Standings
Top 15
We're all in for Joeri Stallaert here, unsurprisingly perhaps. He has won both Omloop Het Nieuwsblad and Kuurne - Bruxelles - Kuurne twice in a row, so we hope he can do it again. He also finished 2nd and 1st in Franceville these last two years, although the race is different this year. Finally, we're making our team debut at the Rheden GP, but Joeri is no stranger to this race: He won it in 2015 and came 6th in 2020, still riding for Volvo.
Given that we didn't know how big a rebuild we might be heading into prior to transfers, we went conservatively with our team standings goal. Top 15 is hopefully achievable and we'll consider the season a success if we make it.
Our leaders' schedules will be discussed soon, otherwise this post will get way too long. Stay tuned!
I see, PCT really is a crowded division
Obviously lots of Stallaert vs. Theuns clashes incoming (I can see why you don't like the latter's arrival in PCT, but Stallaert should still be easily superior in most races ), unfortunately not in Franceville which should make quite a big scoring difference.
It's also a lot of TTT clashes, which I'm not as happy about as last year Will be interesting to see who you're sending to those races, but I guess my climbers will mostly be no match to Meintjes. Curious to find out if (or rather: how often) you use him in hilly races! I can't really imagine you using Izagirre as your main puncheur tbh...
Btw, KBK is C1, not HC as stated in the goals section
When speaking of goals, you obviously have the perfect rider to achieve them. All of them look pretty realistic, although especially the win goal obviously always requires some luck. Team standings might be too conservative with this team, but better take those points than narrowly miss out on a higher goal
Fabianski wrote:
I see, PCT really is a crowded division
Obviously lots of Stallaert vs. Theuns clashes incoming (I can see why you don't like the latter's arrival in PCT, but Stallaert should still be easily superior in most races ), unfortunately not in Franceville which should make quite a big scoring difference.
It's also a lot of TTT clashes, which I'm not as happy about as last year Will be interesting to see who you're sending to those races, but I guess my climbers will mostly be no match to Meintjes. Curious to find out if (or rather: how often) you use him in hilly races! I can't really imagine you using Izagirre as your main puncheur tbh...
Btw, KBK is C1, not HC as stated in the goals section
When speaking of goals, you obviously have the perfect rider to achieve them. All of them look pretty realistic, although especially the win goal obviously always requires some luck. Team standings might be too conservative with this team, but better take those points than narrowly miss out on a higher goal
I don't share your "optimism" with regards to Theuns and Stallaert Those five points in Res, not to mention the big uphill advantage, could well tip the balance in Theuns' favor. We should get some very entertaining battles out of it at the very least, though. Meintjes really was a tricky one (see below) and I'm not confident I got it 100% right. My big issue was that I wasn't sure how the AI would treat him in pure puncheur races. I hope it works out for the most part, and with Izagirre, too. Oh and thanks for the correction
redordead wrote:
I approve of those wildcards for the cobbled races. Go go Stallaert!!
I don't feel quite the same about Qatar, Paris-Nice and Liechtenstein
I doubt Pog will have much to fear from Meintjes at P-N with the TT, though some stages do indeed suit him well. Liechtenstein could be an interesting one for Louis as well. Not sure Silvestre is much of a thread in Qatar anymore
It's time to wrap up the off-season with one of the more anticipated posts: presenting the schedules of our leaders. We're going to take a look at four riders in particular: Our two returning leaders, Joeri Stallaert and Fabio Silvestre, and two of our new signing, Ion Izagirre and of course, most importantly, Louis Meintjes. But let's start with the former two, out of habit:
Joeri Stallaert
17-Jan
22-Jan
Tour of Qatar
PT
04-Feb
Omloop Het Nieuwsblad
HC
10-Feb
Le Samyn
HC
26-Feb
Kuurne - Bruxelles - Kuurne
C1
20-Mar
Strada Appia Antica
PT
23-Mar
Macskako Kerekparverseny
PT
27-Mar
E3 Prijs
PT
30-Mar
Lillestrom GP
C1
23-Apr
Roma Maxima
PTHC
28-Apr
Lisbon Classic
HC
19-May
1 Jour de Dunkerque
C1
01-Jun
02-Jun
Franceville Classique
PTHC
01-Jul
Torshavn GP
C1
09-Jul
11-Jul
Tour of Eritrea
C1
13-Jul
18-Jul
Benelux Challenge
HC
10-Aug
15-Aug
Tour du Maroc
C1
20-Aug
GP Kigali
C1
26-Sep
Rheden GP
PTHC
No big surprises for the most part here: Joeri takes on every cobbled race available, leaving only Battenkill and Cheshire on the table because of PTHC band choices. In addition, he's our sprinter at the Lisbon Classic, the Tour of Eritrea and the Tour du Maroc, while supporting Fabio Silvestre in our Wild Card race in Qatar and at the Torshavn GP.
Fabio Silvestre
09-Jan
Down Under Classic
HC
17-Jan
22-Jan
Tour of Qatar
PT
13-Feb
20-Feb
Paris - Nice
PT
17-Mar
20-Mar
Tour of Guadeloupe
C1
23-Mar
Macskako Kerekparverseny
PT
27-Mar
E3 Prijs
PT
28-Apr
Veenendaal - Veenendaal
PTHC
03-May
08-May
Tour de Romandie
C1
13-May
16-May
Tour of Lithuania
PTHC
27-May
31-May
Tour of Norway
HC
01-Jun
Hanko Classic
C1
09-Jun
13-Jun
La Tropicale Amissa Bongo
C1
01-Jul
Torshavn GP
C1
03-Jul
06-Jul
Arab Tour
HC
25-Jul
29-Jul
Tour of Slovenia
PTHC
02-Aug
06-Aug
Deutschland Tour
PTHC
02-Sep
Riga - Jurmala GP
PTHC
When Fabio was a focal point of our season planning in the past two years, we tried to attend as many sprinter-favored races as possible. After his first decline, our priorities shifted and it shows in his and our calendar. The number of sprint classics is down to 5 from last year's 9, similarly the Tour of Guadeloupe is the only pure sprinting stage race, compared to 3 of those last year.
More race days are now spent in stage races where he won't be able to go for the GC, but hopefully still perform well, even with the occasional chance for a yellow jersey on day one. This includes PTHC stage races in Lithuania, Slovenia and Germany, as well as in Romandie, Norway, Gabon and the UAE at HC/C1 level. Those combine for 17 sprint stages, so hopefully enough opportunities for Fabio to score valuable points.
Louis Meintjes
01-Feb
08-Feb
Volta a Portugal
PTHC
13-Feb
20-Feb
Paris - Nice
PT
12-Apr
18-Apr
Tour de Pologne
HC
20-Apr
GP Liechtenstein
PT
03-May
08-May
Tour de Romandie
C1
04-Jun
Pro Hallstatt Classic
HC
09-Jul
11-Jul
Tour of Eritrea
C1
10-Aug
15-Aug
Tour du Maroc
C1
01-Oct
06-Oct
Tour of Japan
HC
This wasn't an easy selection to make. With his strong puncheur qualities, Louis would have been a good fit for a whole bunch of races, but his race days, unfortunately, are limited. Ultimately, we tried to select races that gave him a chance to exploit his punch versus the other strong climbers in the division and avoided long, flat ITTs as much as possible. This excluded races like the Tour of Andorra or the Tour of California and lead to the schedule above.
The Tour de Pologne is the only pure puncheur race on it, as it's been kind to strong puncheur-climbers before. The Tour of South Africa as well as the Balkans International were certainly considerations, but ultimately we decided profiles such as Romandie (with our hopefully solid TTT setup) and Maroc (with actual mountains but punchy finishes) suit him the best. Japan might be the most questionable choice, but concerns about how the game treats him in a race where pure puncheurs are the favorites on paper ultimately played a role, too.
Ion Izagirre
25-Jan
27-Jan
Hong Kong Challenge
C1
05-Mar
10-Mar
Vuelta al Pais Vasco
C1
18-Mar
Strade Bianche
HC
22-Mar
27-Mar
Tour of South Africa
HC
25-Apr
GP Wallonie
HC
27-May
31-May
Tour of Norway
HC
25-Jul
29-Jul
Tour of Slovenia
PTHC
01-Sep
05-Sep
Tour of Britain
C1
08-Sep
13-Sep
Balkans International
PTHC
09-Oct
Grand Prix Cycliste de Québec
PTHC
18-Oct
Giro dell'Emilia
HC
Ion is the big unknown in our calculations of what to expect from this season. The scoring potential of puncheurs who can time trial well is huge in PCT, but his atrocious speed and mid backup stats call into question how good of a puncheur Ion actually is. That will determine if races like Hong Kong, Pais Vasco, South Africa, Norway, Slovenia and Britain can be as good as we think might be possible, or if they are just a string of disappointments.
The same goes for the pure puncheur races, although our expectations are simply much lower there. In those, which include the classics plus Balkans International, we'll have Valens Ndayisenga and Natnael Tesaftsion as punchier options, too. Ion will ride a bunch more races, especially those with TTTs, but these are the ones he'll lead us in.
The Rest
10-Feb
GP Herning
C2
03-Mar
Isle of Man TTT
C1
01-Apr
03-Apr
Tour du Faso
C2
09-Jun
13-Jun
La Tropicale Amissa Bongo
C1
22-Jun
28-Jun
Tour of California
HC
23-Jun
Monterrey TTT
C2
03-Jul
06-Jul
Arab Tour
HC
25-Jul
29-Jul
Tour d'Andorra
C1
02-Aug
06-Aug
Deutschland Tour
PTHC
24-Sep
Chrono d'Arenberg
PTHC
These are the races where none of the above are our leaders. Those include first our C2 schedule. Matthew Teggart will lead us in the GP Herning and the Tour du Faso, the latter alongside Tesfom Okbamariam (we made a bit of an error in overlooking the clash of GP Herning with Le Samyn, so Tesfom will be helping Joeri for the latter), and we have 4 74-75 time trialists eligible for Monterrey, hopefully scoring us some points alongside our youngsters.
La Tropicale Amissa Bongo, the Arab Tour and the Deutschland Tour will be decided on time trials, which means our leaders will be Nils Politt and Carlos Verona. We can't expect any top results, but hopefully some depth points - same for the Isle of Man TTT. In Arenberg, Darren Young should be able to score a few points, too.
Finally, the Tour of California and the Tour d'Andorra are the two mountaineous stage races on our schedule without Louis. In Andorra, we hope for some aggressive KoM and stage hunting by Valens Ndayisenga and Mektel Eyob. Meanwhile, Bonaventure Uwizeyimana can hopefully compete for an okay GC rank in California thanks to his all-around decent skillset in mountains, hills and time trials.
Finally finally, we should note that Natnael Tesfatsion is a Top-10-ish young puncheur in CT and PCT. Depending on his rivals' schedules and a bit of luck, we're hoping for some U25 points in the Vuelta al Pais Vasco, the Tour of South Africa, the Tour de Pologne and potentially, though less likely, even in Eritrea or the Balkans International.
It looks like we clash a lot. At least with two of your leaders.
Stallaert was pretty obvious - there just aren't enough cobbled races to avoid the other cobblers of the division, unlike in mountains or hills. Whereas I guess Stallaert will mostly beat Theuns - and therefore clearly outscore him - I still hope we can be successful in a couple of races
Silvestre obviously is in many races we participate as well, but whereas he should easily defeat Page, I hope Bol can beat him from time to time. Silvestre doesn't look great energy-wise, but in all previous PCM versions I feel like this could be ignored, at least for sprinters. It has to be the same for him in PCM22 to still be successful, we'll see how that goes.
For Meintjes, the only race I'd have liked to avoid him is Romandie In all the others, we shouldn't have any podium chances anyway, but where there's a TTT, I'm a bit more hopeful. He will be a fun rider to watch anyway, though
And it looks like we'll have Izagirre in pretty much all of our hilly races, plus the TT ones - his OVL (and hence his numbers of RDs) is actually a joke for a 79 puncheur, especially given that backup stats really weren't that important in PCM20. If that's still the same, he could be a big scorer for you - but if energy stats or acceleration somewhat matter, that could also be 170k thrown away. And it might be the difference between promotion and "just" staying for you.
Looking forward to racing against you again, will hopefully be a fun season for both of us
Fabianski wrote:
It looks like we clash a lot. At least with two of your leaders.
Stallaert was pretty obvious - there just aren't enough cobbled races to avoid the other cobblers of the division, unlike in mountains or hills. Whereas I guess Stallaert will mostly beat Theuns - and therefore clearly outscore him - I still hope we can be successful in a couple of races
Theuns easily should have the upper hand in Kigali, Dunkerque, Benelux at the very least, while only being at a small disadvantage in the flat races (if at all), so I'm way less sure about Stallaert outscoring, but we'll see Wouldn't mind your prediction coming true, of course ...
Fabianski wrote:
Silvestre obviously is in many races we participate as well, but whereas he should easily defeat Page, I hope Bol can beat him from time to time. Silvestre doesn't look great energy-wise, but in all previous PCM versions I feel like this could be ignored, at least for sprinters. It has to be the same for him in PCM22 to still be successful, we'll see how that goes.
Honestly, I think Page has a decent shot at beating Silvestre regularly, too. But all three are somewhat close, so it might be a classic sprint coin flip most of the time Overall, you're obviously in a nice position with those two sprinters, being able to divide the schedule nicely between them.
Fabianski wrote:
For Meintjes, the only race I'd have liked to avoid him is Romandie In all the others, we shouldn't have any podium chances anyway, but where there's a TTT, I'm a bit more hopeful. He will be a fun rider to watch anyway, though
And it looks like we'll have Izagirre in pretty much all of our hilly races, plus the TT ones - his OVL (and hence his numbers of RDs) is actually a joke for a 79 puncheur, especially given that backup stats really weren't that important in PCM20. If that's still the same, he could be a big scorer for you - but if energy stats or acceleration somewhat matter, that could also be 170k thrown away. And it might be the difference between promotion and "just" staying for you.
Looking forward to racing against you again, will hopefully be a fun season for both of us
I think in addition to Romandie, Japan is the obvious race where Stüssi should have the upper hand over Meintjes with his TT skills. Which really only leaves Hallstatt (and Paris-Nice) as head-to-heads, so I wouldn't be surprised at all if Stüssi comes out ahead in those That also indicates to me that I did a decent job of avoiding the ITT-heavy stage races
I think at 170k, Izagirre is an okay bet from a value standpoint. That amount typically shouldn't sink a season on its own. Then again, as I've said before, in my estimation Izagirre working or not is more the difference between staying comfortably and fighting relegation, which I could well see us do if those 170k are indeed thrown away. But Izagirre, like Madrazo last year, is simply a rider the likes of which we haven't had on the team before and that'll ideally make us competitive in races we weren't able to really target before. So yeah, hopefully a fun season is ahead
cunego59 wrote:
Theuns easily should have the upper hand in Kigali, Dunkerque, Benelux at the very least, while only being at a small disadvantage in the flat races (if at all), so I'm way less sure about Stallaert outscoring, but we'll see Wouldn't mind your prediction coming true, of course ...
Good news for you, I'm not in Benelux
But yeah, I hope the hill stat makes some difference in a couple of races. It didn't seem to matter in Kigali, though, and Stallaert won in Dunkerque in 2021, so I guess it might be more a matter of daily form. We'll see
cunego59 wrote:
Honestly, I think Page has a decent shot at beating Silvestre regularly, too. But all three are somewhat close, so it might be a classic sprint coin flip most of the time Overall, you're obviously in a nice position with those two sprinters, being able to divide the schedule nicely between them.
Indeed, except for the races where we didn't consider it to be useful enough (Hong Kong, Pais Vasco, South Africa, Slovenia, Britain), we have a sprinter in every stage race. So I sure hope they'll use their opportunities for some good stage results. But as you say, none of Silvestre, Page or Bol are PCT heavy-hitters, so it'll come down to some lucky dice rolls
cunego59 wrote:
I think in addition to Romandie, Japan is the obvious race where Stüssi should have the upper hand over Meintjes with his TT skills. Which really only leaves Hallstatt (and Paris-Nice) as head-to-heads, so I wouldn't be surprised at all if Stüssi comes out ahead in those That also indicates to me that I did a decent job of avoiding the ITT-heavy stage races
I don't think Stüssi will have any kind of TT advantage in MTTs, where it seems to be pure climbing speed that counts. Especially in Japan, I expect Meintjes to do really well, given the hilly stages. And the modified Romandie profile with an additional MTF should suit him, too. But I clearly won't refuse Stüssi beating him
cunego59 wrote:
I think at 170k, Izagirre is an okay bet from a value standpoint. That amount typically shouldn't sink a season on its own. Then again, as I've said before, in my estimation Izagirre working or not is more the difference between staying comfortably and fighting relegation, which I could well see us do if those 170k are indeed thrown away. But Izagirre, like Madrazo last year, is simply a rider the likes of which we haven't had on the team before and that'll ideally make us competitive in races we weren't able to really target before. So yeah, hopefully a fun season is ahead
If Stallaert has a normal season, and Meintjes (who I think is pretty well planned), I don't think you should be in relegation danger. With your Rwandan and Eritrean climers, you have some uphill depth I can just dream of. Silvestre will get his points, and so will Politt. I think a lot has to go wrong for you to relegate - and I sure hope you'll rather be leaving the division in the other direction
Well, in every post-Portugal PCT race we have some sort of Meintjes clash as is to be expected. Him vs Bennett hasn't happened for a while but historically was always a good battle. Pologne is a very good pick for him I think considering how Bennett did there in 2020 dominating the road stages then failing in the ITT which is now just a prologue. Makes me glad I got the Areruya training done
As you say Izagirre is a very interesting proposition, the calendar is there but who knows if he still has the legs. I think he was definitely worth a flyer.
Haven't taken much of a deep look at all the teams yet but as said in my HQ I think we both could hope to move up by staying still a bit due to the weaker top half of the division - like Fabianski says I think you're far more likely to exit through the top than the bottom if that's any concern to you
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Guess the most interesting (or well, least predictable) calendar was Meintjes' one. Most of the time he's meeting Aular, and most of the time I'd give Meintjes a bigger chance to finish above the other Looking forward towards the Higuita-Meintjes duels in Pologne and Japan.
The season is about to start and the plan for our HQ presence is to preview and recap each month as the year progresses. There have been issues with consistency here, that's undeniable, so let's cautiously start and see how it goes.
Anyway, it's going to be a simple look at the race profiles, the teams we're sending there and our expectations. In January, Bralirwa participates in three races, though one of them is a wild card race with no points on the line. The other two could well provide some good insights into the team's strength going forward.
Down Under Classic | HC
FL
MO
HI
TT
ST
RS
RC
CO
SP
AC
FI
DH
PR
F. Silvestre
77
60
66
72
68
69
72
55
79
79
69
62
76
M. Teggart
73
62
69
58
76
73
71
76
72
70
55
64
65
T. Okbamariam
73
66
65
59
70
73
67
76
72
68
65
78
59
M. Mugisha
67
71
75
62
64
74
71
60
63
73
80
64
61
J. Habimana
69
65
70
62
69
70
63
70
66
71
71
67
66
L. Van Eetvelt
67
70
69
61
73
71
65
57
66
68
63
64
59
J. Willems
68
57
63
62
71
73
60
55
72
72
66
66
65
W. Berhe
67
68
67
66
69
66
68
60
61
66
67
64
64
The Down Under Classic will always have a special place in our team's history. Two years ago, Fabio Silvestre started off our first PCT season with a win, setting us on a path that would eventually lead us to very solid Top 10 finish in the team standings. Fabio followed that up with a decent sixth place last year, but now aged 33, the expectations are more limited.
That said, with many of the top PCT sprinters present, we might get a decent picture of how competitive Fabio still is. He has the tools to still crack the Top 10 on a good day, but the variance and negative outliers will increase. We will be happy with a Top 10 result here, anything outside of the Top 15 still has to be considered a disappointment even with Fabio's decline.
Unsurprisingly, we don't bring a leadout, but Tesfom Okbamariam and new signing Matthew Teggart should provide enough support to keep Fabio in a decent position and well supported throughout the race. Speaking of new signings, all four of our neo-pros make their debut here.
Tour of Qatar | PT
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
F. Silvestre
77
60
66
72
68
69
72
55
79
79
69
62
76
N. Tesfatsion
67
75
76
61
66
71
73
60
68
76
72
63
62
N. Politt
73
63
66
78
70
73
72
60
59
65
69
66
76
C. Verona
71
54
62
77
72
75
67
59
62
63
60
66
77
J. Habimana
69
65
70
62
69
70
63
70
66
71
71
67
66
L. Van Eetvelt
67
70
69
61
73
71
65
57
66
68
63
64
59
W. Berhe
67
68
67
66
69
66
68
60
61
66
67
64
64
For the second year in a row, we enter the Tour of Qatar as a wild card team. It's a fairly straightforward setup: Joeri Stallaert joins Fabio Silvestre as they try to get a result or two from the sprints, while all three of Fabio, Nils Politt and Carlos Verona try their luck in the prologue lottery on the concluding day. Everyone else is just along for the ride (and the XP).
Hong Kong Challenge | C1
FL
MO
HI
TT
ST
RS
RC
CO
SP
AC
FI
DH
PR
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
I. Izagirre
69
72
79
75
70
69
64
52
58
61
67
68
75
N. Politt
73
63
66
78
70
73
72
60
59
65
69
66
76
M. Mugisha
67
71
75
62
64
74
71
60
63
73
80
64
61
J. Hadi
68
74
72
74
73
70
71
61
74
71
68
69
74
C. Verona
71
54
62
77
72
75
67
59
62
63
60
66
77
S. Mugisha
76
64
70
74
70
74
71
63
62
68
74
64
68
While the Down Under Classic might be a decent measuring stick for Fabio Silvestre going forward, the same is certainly true for the Hong Kong Challenge and Ion Izagirre. On paper, this is a great race for him: two hilly stages and a decently long time trial. If he performs here, that might be a good sign for similar races over the course of the rest of the season. If he doesn't, we might have a problem. Although, to be fair, stage 3 is almost more of a mountain finish.
With that in mind, Ion is not our only potential scorer here. Bonaventure Uwizeyimana finished 4th here last year with his good climbing/TT combination. With Mektel Eyob and Moise Mugisha, we have two riders suited to go on the hunt for the mountain classification. And both Nils Politt and Carlos Verona could do decently well in the ITT. Our best case scenario is a repeat of last year's Top 5 finish with another rider in the Top 15, and anything that comes close to that will be a solid result that we'd be happy with.
Three races, one of which was a wild card race. Of the two we could score some points in, one was a major disappointment, but the second turned out quite well:
Down Under Classic
Fabio Silvestre finished first and sixth here to start the season in the last two years. We didn't expect a repeat given his first regression, but we expected at least something. Instead, Fabio finished 29th. No points on the first day, not a great start.
1
Dylan Groenewegen
Fastned
1h40'20
2
Alberto Dainese
Assa Abloy
s.t.
3
Leigh Howard
Spark-BNZ Racing
s.t.
4
Elias Afewerki
Colombini Cycling
s.t.
5
Matti Manninen
Los Pollos Hermanos
s.t.
...
29
Fabio Silvestre
Bralirwa - Stevens Bikes
s.t.
30
Moise Mugisha
Bralirwa - Stevens Bikes
s.t.
46
Welay Hagos Berhe
Bralirwa - Stevens Bikes
s.t.
67
Tesfom Okbamariam
Bralirwa - Stevens Bikes
s.t.
79
Jago Willems
Bralirwa - Stevens Bikes
s.t.
82
Matthew Teggart
Bralirwa - Stevens Bikes
s.t.
87
Jean Eric Habimana
Bralirwa - Stevens Bikes
s.t.
93
Lennert Van Eetvelt
Bralirwa - Stevens Bikes
s.t.
Tour of Qatar
Fabio Silvestre beats his competitors to the line for fourth place on stage 4.
After the disappointment in Australia, Fabio Silvestre had the opportunity to redeem himself in Qatar, an early season sprinters' festival. Against mostly PT competition though, we didn't expect too much. And it didn't start very promising, either: 17th and 16th places on stages one and two weren't spreading much optimism.
But then, things started to improve. 9th on stage three was followed by 4th and 6th places, and making use of his decent TT skills in the epilogue, Fabio even ended up in 9th overall! While no points came of it, this was an important confidence booster going forward.
1
Jasper Philipsen
Polar
15h14'31
2
Salem Kemboi
Lidl Cycling
+ 7
3
Fernando Gaviria
Moser - Sygic
+ 11
4
Fabio Jakobsen
ZARA - Irizar
+ 17
5
Eduard Grosu
Rabobank
+ 26
...
9
Fabio Silvestre
Bralirwa - Stevens Bikes
+ 31
42
Carlos Verona
Bralirwa - Stevens Bikes
+ 46
75
Nils Politt
Bralirwa - Stevens Bikes
+ 51
148
Jean Eric Habimana
Bralirwa - Stevens Bikes
+ 1'06
163
Welay Hagos Berhe
Bralirwa - Stevens Bikes
+ 1'09
164
Natnael Tesfatsion
Bralirwa - Stevens Bikes
+ 1'10
176
Lennert Van Eetvelt
Bralirwa - Stevens Bikes
+ 1'15
182
Joeri Stallaert
Bralirwa - Stevens Bikes
+ 1'20
Hong Kong Challenge
Bonaventure Uwizeyimana finishes 6th on the final stage to secure a good GC result.
We came to Hong Kong with mixed expectations. Bonaventure Uwizeyimana returned after a 4th place last year, and on paper, a time trial and two hill stages are perfect for new signing Ion Izagirre. At the same time, the competition was fierce and we weren't sure how Ion would do on a longer climb like on the final day.
The race started okay with both Ion and Uwi, as well as Mektel Eyob placing in the main group on stage one, while Moise Mugisha joined the breakaway and placed third in the mountain classification - a position he would hold until the end of the race. The time trial wasn't ideal, though: Nils Politt scored a single point in 8th place, while Ion and Uwi weren't on their greatest legs. Still, they entered stage three in 9th and 11th in the GC, respectively.
The decisive final stage then turned out about as good as could reasonably expected. Uwizeyimana finished 6th in the first group behind stage (and GC) winner Brandon McNulty, moving up to 8th in the GC, while Izagirre hung on in the second group, ending up 19th and defending his 9th place overall. Mektel Eyob also somehow found his way into the scoring positions, and the team finished third in the team classification, rounding out a nice race with a total of 80 points.
The season really kicks into gear in February as we enter six races and both of our main leaders have their first days on the road.
Volta a Portugal | PTHC
FL
MO
HI
TT
ST
RS
RC
CO
SP
AC
FI
DH
PR
L. Meintjes
71
80
78
71
77
76
78
57
61
69
71
74
71
V. Ndayisenga
66
78
75
65
69
68
73
52
63
73
72
69
65
N. Tesfatsion
67
75
76
61
66
71
73
60
68
76
72
63
62
B. Uwizeyimana
71
76
72
74
76
75
77
50
56
68
69
58
74
N. Politt
73
63
66
78
70
73
72
60
59
65
69
66
76
M. Mugisha
67
71
75
62
64
74
71
60
63
73
80
64
61
J. Hadi
68
74
72
74
73
70
71
61
74
71
68
69
74
C. Verona
71
54
62
77
72
75
67
59
62
63
60
66
77
As mentioned above, this is the first showing of Louis Meintjes in Bralirwa colors. He's targeting at least the Top 5 in the GC, hoping to capitalize on three hill stages with his great puncheur skillset. He has an excellent supporting cast with Ndayisenga, Tesfatsion and Uwizeyima, while Nils Politt and Carlos Verona target the two time trials. It's only the two sprint stages that we don't have any rider for, but perhaps we can get someone in the breakaway there.
Omloop Het Nieuwsblad | HC
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
M. Teggart
73
62
69
58
76
73
71
76
72
70
55
64
65
T. Okbamariam
73
66
65
59
70
73
67
76
72
68
65
78
59
J. Habimana
69
65
70
62
69
70
63
70
66
71
71
67
66
L. Van Eetvelt
67
70
69
61
73
71
65
57
66
68
63
64
59
D. Young
71
56
61
74
67
72
71
71
72
72
65
70
74
J. Willems
68
57
63
62
71
73
60
55
72
72
66
66
65
W. Berhe
67
68
67
66
69
66
68
60
61
66
67
64
64
This is really rather straightforward. Joeri Stallaert won this race twice in a row and we're going for the threepeat. It's a win goal, too. Edward Theuns' arrival in the division might complicate things, but at least Joeri gets all the support we can give him. New signing Matthew Teggart has his first major test here, and it's also Jean Eric Habimana's debut on cobbles.
GP Herning | C2
FL
MO
HI
TT
ST
RS
RC
CO
SP
AC
FI
DH
PR
M. Teggart
73
62
69
58
76
73
71
76
72
70
55
64
65
M. Mugisha
67
71
75
62
64
74
71
60
63
73
80
64
61
J. Habimana
69
65
70
62
69
70
63
70
66
71
71
67
66
L. Van Eetvelt
67
70
69
61
73
71
65
57
66
68
63
64
59
J. Willems
68
57
63
62
71
73
60
55
72
72
66
66
65
W. Berhe
67
68
67
66
69
66
68
60
61
66
67
64
64
Matthew Teggart gets his second chance to shine in Denmark, leading a young team onto the cobbles of Herning. He should have a decent chance at a good result, too. Unfortunately, he can't be joined by Tesfom Okbamariam because of an error in planning ...
Le Samyn | HC
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
M. Eyob
68
76
76
66
74
69
73
55
62
66
72
73
66
T. Okbamariam
73
66
65
59
70
73
67
76
72
68
65
78
59
J. Hadi
68
74
72
74
73
70
71
61
74
71
68
69
74
S. Mugisha
76
64
70
74
70
74
71
63
62
68
74
64
68
D. Young
71
56
61
74
67
72
71
71
72
72
65
70
74
... as we overlooked the clash of the GP Herning and Le Samyn, so Tesfom is needed here in support of Joeri Stallaert. Joeri had one of his few disappointments last year when he finished "only" 9th, something we want to improve on. Okbamariam and Darren Young hopefully still provide him with all the help he might need.
Paris - Nice | PT
FL
MO
HI
TT
ST
RS
RC
CO
SP
AC
FI
DH
PR
L. Meintjes
71
80
78
71
77
76
78
57
61
69
71
74
71
F. Silvestre
77
60
66
72
68
69
72
55
79
79
69
62
76
N. Tesfatsion
67
75
76
61
66
71
73
60
68
76
72
63
62
I. Izagirre
69
72
79
75
70
69
64
52
58
61
67
68
75
J. Habimana
69
65
70
62
69
70
63
70
66
71
71
67
66
L. Van Eetvelt
67
70
69
61
73
71
65
57
66
68
63
64
59
J. Willems
68
57
63
62
71
73
60
55
72
72
66
66
65
W. Berhe
67
68
67
66
69
66
68
60
61
66
67
64
64
Our second wild card race of the year takes us to beautiful France for Paris - Nice. Louis Meintjes leads us to bug the PT teams. It'll be interesting to see if all those hilly stages will be selective enough to overcome the time trialing limitations that Louis likely has compared to the top PT stage racers, but if they are, he could do some real damage here. And if not, maybe Ion Izagirre can become a secondary GC option. Fabio Silvestre joins them to compete in the three sprint stages, we'll see how that goes.
Kuurne - Bruxelles - Kuurne | C1
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
M. Teggart
73
62
69
58
76
73
71
76
72
70
55
64
65
T. Okbamariam
73
66
65
59
70
73
67
76
72
68
65
78
59
J. Habimana
69
65
70
62
69
70
63
70
66
71
71
67
66
L. Van Eetvelt
67
70
69
61
73
71
65
57
66
68
63
64
59
D. Young
71
56
61
74
67
72
71
71
72
72
65
70
74
J. Willems
68
57
63
62
71
73
60
55
72
72
66
66
65
W. Berhe
67
68
67
66
69
66
68
60
61
66
67
64
64
To conclude the month, Joeri has his third chance at a great result. Like OHN, Joeri has won this race twice in a row, and again this is a win goal for that reason. We bring our usual cobbles setup and hope for the best!
As expected, I don't like Joeri's schedule
He should be the big favorite in any HC/C1 race he enters, so his chances for three-peats in Omloop and KBK are definitely not small. Although I do hope that Theuns will stop his streak in at least one of them
Portugal could be another really good race for you, with the startlist being maybe the weakest ever, and Meintjes liking all those hills (and few TT kilometers). And joining you in Paris - Nice for a PT wildcard race will hopefully be a cool experience as well, even though Meintjes will probably leave Stüssi in the dust