Going back to July, it was awesome to see you win stage one with Kalaba and seeing him shine so bright in that yellow jersey. Decent GC result as well by Cattaneo there, and hopefully you'll come back rather sooner than later to do even better (I doubt it'll be with Cattaneo then )
In general a shame to probably see you relegate, hope you can immediately bounce back to PT if relegation indeed becomes reality.
@Nemolito - The GTs this year have been the highlight in otherwise woeful performances. Hope to be back soon and not just in America
SEPTEMBER
We're just ticking off the season now. September takes us to three races all over Europe, where we're just looking to score some good results without the pressure of the relegation battle, because frankly, we already lost.
Balkans International
First we go to the Balkan peninsula for six days. Kinoshita is a GC contender with the hilly stages, and Kalaba enjoys the local support for the sprinter stages. The Japanese finished third on the first stage with an uphill finish, while the breakaway took a chance away from the Serbian on stage two. He would get a chance on stages four and five, but had good views of Amezawa's and Banaszek's bottoms celebrating. The final stage was deciding for the GC, and the final climb was just too tough for Kinoshita, finishing twelfth on the stage and ninth in the GC. Some good results but no trip to the podium.
Pos
Rider
Team
Time
1
Joseph Areruya
Xero Racing
27h12'32
9
Tomohiro Kinoshita
Minions
+ 2'33
43
Andris Vosekalns
Minions
+ 8'30
53
Dayer Quintana
Minions
+ 10'00
64
Tom Jelte Slagter
Minions
+ 11'49
80
Nathan Alexander
Minions
+ 14'18
109
Dusan Kalaba
Minions
+ 19'26
135
Yannis Voisard
Minions
+ 26'30
162
Leandro Marcos
Minions
+ 45'50
Rating:
Tour of Northern Europe
If you like everything but mountains, this race is for you. Hills, cobbles, flat stages, time trials, northern Europe has it all. We have no rider able to combine it for a GC result, so stage glory is all we can do. Perez finished 31st on the opening time trial, Kalaba 66th on the hilly stage and then thirteenth on the flat stage. Over to the cobbled fourth stage with the Muur and Bosberg where De Witte went into the breakaway and managed to score a sixth place out of it! Kalaba finished fifteenth on the next flat stage featuring a breakaway appearance from Perez. The Serbian sprinter was also our best finisher on the Mur de Huy but 91st is telling. He would close off with an eighth place in the final sprint. It was De Witte who finished highest overall, albeit in 103rd, seven seconds ahead of Perez.
Pos
Rider
Team
Time
1
Benoit Cosnefroy
ZARA - Irizar
27h27'48
103
Mathias De Witte
Minions
+ 16'21
105
Cristian Perez
Minions
+ 16'28
110
Dusan Kalaba
Minions
+ 17'02
125
Laurens Sweeck
Minions
+ 18'39
132
Isaac Bolivar
Minions
+ 20'41
143
Leandro Marcos
Minions
+ 24'27
153
Janis Dakteris
Minions
+ 29'10
175
Rudy Barbier
Minions
+ 41'11
Rating:
Rheden GP
We stay in the area for a cobblestone race around the Posbank in Rheden. By now you should know we have nothing to look for here so we're glad to have Bolivar take the spotlight for a while in an attack.
Pos
Rider
Team
Time
1
Lukasz Wisniowski
Aker - MOT
4h13'53
54
Janis Dakteris
Minions
+ 2'16
64
Leandro Marcos
Minions
s.t.
75
Isaac Bolivar
Minions
+ 3'23
83
Laurens Sweeck
Minions
s.t.
84
Cristian Perez
Minions
s.t.
85
Mathias De Witte
Minions
s.t.
131
Nathan Alexander
Minions
+ 6'27
170
Yannis Voisard
Minions
+ 10'21
Rating:
Rankings
The good thing is we scored more than Binance, so the chances of finishing last are getting lower. The bad thing is we scored less than the teams directly above us, so getting above the cut is growing ever more unlikely if not mathematically impossible by now. Luckily we've given up hope a long time ago so we're already in the final stage of grieve: acceptance. Sweeck has overtaken Brown for tenth spot in our rankings, but Kinoshita seems untouchable and might have a chance of the top thirty.
@redordead - Definitely one of the few contenders for the award and one of the even fewer who did not perform below expectations!
OCTOBER
Our final month as a PT team, unless we finish every remaining race in the top eight with all riders. We will spoil something: that won't happen. But we'll try our best anyway in the final three races of the season.
GP Moscow
A PT sprinter's classic, and the final race for Ahlstrand this season. The field in such races is quite strong so we see seventh as a perfectly acceptable result.
Pos
Rider
Team
Time
1
Max Kanter
Team Puma - SAP
4h19'27
7
Jonas Ahlstrand
Minions
s.t.
44
Janis Dakteris
Minions
s.t.
92
Rudy Barbier
Minions
s.t.
96
Nathan Alexander
Minions
s.t.
121
Alvaro Hodeg
Minions
+ 2'07
141
Cristian Perez
Minions
s.t.
148
Laurens Sweeck
Minions
s.t.
158
Yannis Voisard
Minions
s.t.
Rating:
Grand Prix Cycliste
Our final PTHC race of the season takes place in Quebec, Canada. Kinoshita is mentioned as a, if not the top favorite, but hasn't won anything this season. Attacks came left right and center but a group of five would battle for the win: Koretzky, Lutsenko, Mohoric, Valter and Kinoshita. On the last climb into the final kilometer the Japanese put the hammer down, completely dropping the Frenchman and Hungarian and also breaking the Kazakh and Slovene. The small gap he created there was enough to carry over the line and win his first race of the season, and our first classic win of the season!
Pos
Rider
Team
Time
1
Tomohiro Kinoshita
Minions
4h58'17
78
Laurens Sweeck
Minions
+ 6'01
85
Dayer Quintana
Minions
s.t.
88
Nathan Alexander
Minions
s.t.
93
Leandro Marcos
Minions
s.t.
95
Yannis Voisard
Minions
+ 6'53
112
Cristian Perez
Minions
+ 7'06
126
Tom Jelte Slagter
Minions
s.t.
Rating:
Giro di Lombardia
The season is closed with a monument, where once again Kinoshita is in the discussion regarding the favorites though riders with better climber abilities are rated ahead of him. The bookies were right there, as the Japanese dropped on the Sormana climb and finished twenty-first. And with that, our PT adventure is over.
Pos
Rider
Team
Time
1
Silvio Herklotz
Team Puma - SAP
6h05'16
21
Tomohiro Kinoshita
Minions
+ 2'32
42
Andris Vosekalns
Minions
+ 3'06
94
Nathan Alexander
Minions
+ 6'23
96
Einer Augusto Rubio
Minions
s.t.
102
Tom Jelte Slagter
Minions
s.t.
120
Dayer Quintana
Minions
+ 7'26
142
Yannis Voisard
Minions
+ 10'13
184
Cristian Perez
Minions
+ 24'21
Rating:
Rankings
Even though we bagged a win, and finished seventh in the October rankings, we have not gained a position let alone get out of the relegation zone. Twenty-first out of twenty-two teams, which means we are back in the Pro Continental Tour next season. Outside of the first month we have always been in the bottom two positions, and have been second-to-last ever since May. Our adjusted goal at the time has been to not finish last, so we won't leave fully embarrassed. Kinoshita's win brought him close to the individual top thirty, and solidified his position as our highest scoring rider. Cattaneo, Ahlstrand and Kalaba also made the top hundred. We'll probably go into the details of every rider later on so stay tuned for that.
A slog of a season for sure, but Perez pulled his weight on loan! Excited to see how you work the team going into next season, i expect a busy off-season for the Minions. And hey, it's not all doom and gloom as we get to race each other again!
@quadsas - We need fresh bananas more than ever.
@AbhishekLFC - One small highlight in an otherwise mediocre season.
@TheManxMissile - Perez and Alexander were great to have on board (and outscored a few riders as well!). Looking forward to sharing the road again.
CHAMPIONSHIPS
While we're wiping our tears from relegation, our riders participate in the traditional post-season activities: the National and World Championships. An overview of how they performed.
National Championships
All riders participated in their respective countries for the road race and time trial events. In the end we only won four jerseys, all expected given the profile. Marcos and Perez split the Cuban jerseys between them (RR and TT respectively), Kinoshita conquered the hills of Japan and Ahlstrand dominated the Swedish sprint.
Rider
Country
RR
TT
Rohan Dennis
Australia
7
2
Mathias De Witte
Belgium
37
38
Laurens Sweeck
Belgium
26
16
Isaac Bolivar
Colombia
23
8
Alvaro Hodeg
Colombia
26
9
Dayer Quintana
Colombia
9
7
Einer Augusto Rubio
Colombia
12
19
Leandro Marcos
Cuba
1
2
Cristian Perez
Cuba
2
1
Mikkel Bjerg
Denmark
21
2
Rudy Barbier
France
95
50
Mattia Cattaneo
Italy
25
3
Tomohiro Kinoshita
Japan
1
4
Janis Dakteris
Latvia
2
11
Andris Vosekalns
Latvia
17
10
Tom Jelte Slagter
Netherlands
15
31
Dusan Kalaba
Serbia
2
3
Jonas Ahlstrand
Sweden
1
14
Yannis Voisard
Switzerland
8
24
Nathan Alexander
Trinidad and Tobago
3
3
Nathan Brown
USA
10
7
Kinoshita, Japanese RR Champion
Ahlstrand, Swedish RR Champion
World Championships
Nine riders across four events in the World Championships in Spain this year, with no participation in the U23 events this year. We start off with the B Road Race, where the team of the winning rider advances to the main race. That winner was Awezama of Japan, which means we see Kinoshita again in the main event. In the TTT we have four riders in the top five: Dennis fifth with Australia, Cattaneo fourth with Italy, Bjerg second with Denmark and Brown first with the USA! Two medals for the team. Good results followed in the individual time trial where Bjerg took fifth, 42 seconds behind winning compatriot Würtz. Finally the road race, where team Japan switched tactics and focused on a sprint for Kinoshita. Herklotz, Hirt and Kudus escaped, the German taking the rainbow jersey, and Phinney won the sprint of the group behind. But in fifth place was our very own Kinoshita!
Kinoshita seemed to find his form late in the year winning in Canada and the NC and being strong in both WC races. Pity it was a bit late. You do have an impressively international roster, doubt many teams got to participate in 15 different NCs (if I counted right).
@jt1109 - Welcome back! I hope it won't take another six years for us to get to PT again.
@Ulrich Ulriksen - One of the advantages (or disadvantages, more writing ) of having a team with no nationality focus.
SEASON REVIEW (PART 1)
As the summer break nears its end, we look back one final time at the 2023 season, in which we sadly relegated back to the PCT. The first part of our rider review contains the riders 21 - 15 in the individual standings. The helpers, the talents, the people whose points haul mostly contains points for just finishing.
Rudy Barbier
Rudy scored the least amount of points on the team, both in total and deducting the points you get for finishing a ProTour race (net points). Given he's just a leadout man not much more was expected, but even the points for finishing were a struggle at times. He failed to finish the Giro d'Italia and the Tour de Suisse, the only rider to abandon multiple races or a non-GT. Our success in sprints did not necessarily come from making trains, so we can probably do without the Frenchman next season, hence his release.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
42
2
Released
Janis Dakteris
Another sprint train element at the bottom, though Janis scored a bit more as he was also used in the cobblestone races. He appeared in the breakaway of the Ronde van Vlaanderen and East Midlands Cycle Classic, but he could never get far enough to use his sprinting ability for better results. Like the Frenchman, he did not finish the Giro and has not received a new contract.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
65
5
Released
Mathias De Witte
2023 would not be a year with cobblestones in focus, and not a year where we could use the riders in that capability in C2 races either. Mathias's only true opportunities were getting in a lucky break in one of the cobblestone races, which were hard to come by but managed a sixth place out of a Tour of Northern Europe stage. He was our best finisher in the Ronde van Vlaanderen in 39th. Those results were just enough to convince us to resign him, especially since we might have more focus on the tough roads next year.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
71
16
Renewed (50,000)
Einer Augusto Rubio
Of all the loanees we had expected the most from Einer Augusto, but he has actually scored the least from all loanees (unadjusted). In fairness, his schedule contained all three Grand Tours and just three other races, thus less free points for finishing. His net points tally is actually tenth amongst all riders, which is quite good. He was a frequent sight in breakaways, if we kept count correctly: twice in the Giro, twice in the Vuelta (including a seventh place stage finish and seventh in the U25 classification) and twice in the Tour. Hopefully it was a valuable learning experience and Euskotren - Pays Basque will be happy with his services next year.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
81
45
Returned to Euskotren
Isaac Bolivar
As far as our ambitions on the cobblestones goes, Isaac scored some good results such as 27th in the E3 Prijs, 34th in Paris - Roubaix and 16th in Roma - Maxima, making him the highest net scorer of that quartet. On the other hand, there were many races where he would finish as last of our cobblestone specialists. A very inconsistent performer, and not getting any younger, we decided not to renew his contract going into the transfer season but if we end up with a leader on this terrain and we need more support, we still have his number.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
85
35
Released
Yannis Voisard
Another loanee, so expectations are naturally lower for Yannis. His highlight of the season was his participation in the Vuelta, where he finished ninth on a breakaway stage. He was also part of the helper crew bringing Cattaneo to a Tour top ten. Not much else to say really, we have no complaints regarding his bottle carrying skills and we hope he has enjoyed his stay at the team. Sauber Petronas Racing have resigned him with his newfound experience.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
90
2
Returned to Sauber
Leandro Marcos
The road captain of the team, Leandro completed his eighth and final season on the team. The legendary Cuban rider was the worst net scoring cobblestone rider this season, and was mostly shy of the cameras except for some Vuelta breakaway attempts. But we can't be mad at the only rider part of both the 2016 CT and 2022 PCT promotion squad, at the rider with the most seasons on the team out of all 107 riders to have worn our overall. Upon departing we decide to honor him with the highest honor we can give him, the tenth inductee into the Minions Hall of Fame!
As the summer break nears its end, we look back one final time at the 2023 season, in which we sadly relegated back to the PCT. The first part of our rider review contains the riders 14 - 8 in the individual standings. The overperformers, the underperformers, the people who quietly achieved their points haul.
Dayer Quintana
The tireless mountain helper, Dayer often found himself around fiftieth in the GC of mountainous races, which brought a few valuable points. Thirty-first in the Tour de Suisse was his highest finishing position. We looked through every picture by every amateur photographer but could not find a single one identifying him, so we have to settle for this TTT pic in Slovenia where he is one of the eighth. Despite that, the performances were enough to see his contract renewed for a third year, but by now we hope he can outshine his brother.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
99
41
Renewed (60,000)
Cristian Perez
The Cuban time trial champion on loan from Podium Ambition, Cristian proved to be a valuable asset in team time trials. He finished his first ever Grand Tour, the Giro, and had a promising Tour of Northern Europe where he took a good thirty-first in the opening time trial, had a breakaway and showing and almost became our highest finisher. Obviously Podium Ambition sees his ambition.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
101
13
Returned to Podium Ambition
Tom Jelte Slagter
Our last signing after a rival pulled out at the last minute, Tom Jelte was effectively the only helper Kinoshita had this year. For all his efforts, we realized we might have needed more support. Anyway, his best result was thirty-ninth in the very though Liechtenstein GP and thirty-sixth in La Fleche Wallone. Also, he played the helper part perfectly in the Cattaneo TDF breakaway parade. Unfortunately, no place for him in next year's squad though.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
104
41
Released
Nathan Brown
Nathan scored well last year on the hill-TT combos's, of which there are plenty in PCT but not so much in PT. His best result was 26th in the Tour de Suisse, and was important wherever there was a team time trial. Back in the PCT we hope he can regain his point scoring ability.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
107
67
Renewed (75,000)
Nathan Alexander
From all the loanees, the other Nathan scoring the most points was not on our bingo card. He could be found in breakaways in cobblestone races, but that was just to make sure he'd reach the finish line. Forty-fourth in La Fleche Wallone was a great result, but his most stellar performance came in the Tour de France, where a breakaway ride allowed him to climb to fourth in the polka dot competition, and hang around the top ten for a while. That surely pleased Podium Ambition's manager.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
111
21
Returned to Podium Ambition
Laurens Sweeck
Another year without an appointed cobblestone leader, so Laurens once again took charge ad interim. The highest scoring of the cobblestone quartet, he scored not greatly in the two big cobblestone races. Twentieth in (CTRL+C, CTRL+V) Macskako Kerekparverseny was his best finishing position, the extra points probably coming from the fact he raced more races than the others in his discipline. Nevertheless, next season he can become acting leader again, or will we finally sign a leader in that position again?
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
114
26
Renewed (60,000)
Rohan D.
Too busy allegedly running over his wife. Might be heading to Prison Cycling Team next season.
Spoiler
Review not influenced by IRL events:
Rohan Dennis
Instrumental to our promotion last season, Rohan could not quite replicate that performance this year. Granted, a year older and a tougher field, but good results were hard to come by. Vey short races were good, a ninth place in the Qatar epilogue and a seventh place in the Giro prologue. In longer time trials, or those including hills, his times simply weren't up to standards anymore. Sadly, we did not feel like there was adequate reason for us to continue with the Australian for another year.
As the summer break nears its end, we look back one final time at the 2023 season, in which we sadly relegated back to the PCT. The first part of our rider review contains the riders 7 - 1 in the individual standings. The leaders, the breakthroughs, the people whose brought in a lot of dough but not enough to survive.
Alvaro Hodeg
Few leadership opportunities this year for Alvaro, being mostly used as Ahlstrand's leadout, and the only stage the Swede won this year came when the Colombian failed to make the time limit the day before, make of that what you will. He got sprint leadership in the Vuelta, where he took two second and a fourth place. We will have to re-evaluate the three sprinter setup for next season, but as an academy product, his place seems safe.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
130
102
Renewed (90,000)
Andris Vosekalns
The Latvian stage hunter extraordinaire, Andris almost exclusively targeted the Grand Tours without GC ambitions, that being the Giro and Vuelta. In the Giro he went into some early race breakaways, taking two top ten finishes and the mountains jersey. Too much energy wasted in the early stages meant he wasn't a factor for the win in the end though. In the Vuelta he also appeared in a few breakaways, including stage nine where he finished second and also took the mountains jersey. Again he would lose the lead, but held on to fifth overall. Even though Grand Tour participation is unlikely next year, he will defend our colors again.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
244
218
Renewed (125,000)
Mikkel Bjerg
Touted as a talent for a long time, this was the season where Mikkel has to break through, and was also eligible for U25 classifications for the final time. A sixth place in the first race of the season down in Tasmania together with the overall win in said classification proved to be a good omen. A third place in the Tour de France time trial put his name definitively on the map. A stage win in the Tour de Suisse topped it all off. We're curious to find out what else he has in store next seasons.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
301
271
Renewed (125,000)
Dusan Kalaba
Secondary sprinter is not often a wanted role as the opportunities are often a few stages in stage races, but Dusan has made it his specialty. Almost outscoring his lead sprinter, he only won one stage but what a stage it was. The first stage of the Tour de France, which also meant he could wear the yellow jersey for the next stage. He lost it the day after sure, but at least we have an iconic picture of the Minions in the most iconic jersey ever. You can't take that, or him, away from us.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
413
388
Renewed (175,000)
Jonas Ahlstrand
Transfer controversy aside, Jonas will go into the history book of the team as our best finisher ever in Veenendaal - Veenendaal (fifth), and as the first rider to win a Grand Tour stage. When he crossed the line first in Venice for the final stage, he also took enough points to win the purple jersey for the points classification. Other results that season were mixed, sometimes he came close to winning and sometimes he did not bother. As this is his second relegation in a row he might be cursed, so he is transfer listed.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
569
531
Renewed (300,000), transfer listed
Mattia Cattaneo
Our best rider coming out of the previous season, we had lesser hope for Mattia to repeat his performances. Seventh places in the tours of Switzerland and Slovenia were his highest finishing positions, but his best performance came in the Tour de France where he finished in eighth place, with an iconic breakaway performance taking him this high. For next season we hope he can still pull the performances that got us promoted in the first place.
Points
Net points
2024 status
Rating
574
554
Renewed (300,000)
Tomohiro Kinoshita
Towards the end of the season, Tomohiro's performances picked up with a win in the Grand Prix Cycliste, and had some decent results here and there to make him our highest scoring rider. When we needed him the most however he did not performed well enough. Eleventh in Amstel Gold Race, twelfth in La Fleche Wallone and sixth in Liege - Bastogne - Liege. If he had performed better there, we might have had more hope in survival. He has been renewed for a less exorbitant wage but one of our first actions on the transfer market will be his sale.
All but 3 riders are 30+ years old. Sure, most are pretty serviceable even when they're declining, but what's your plans going to be - try to find young replacements, or try to make good use of them for one more season?
On a more positive note, you have enough roster space and cap space to fill out your roster and will be interesting how you'll use it.
Your sprinters definitely did quite alright in the GT's I'd say, wouldn't have minded some 'more' availability on Hodeg of course. I hope you can get a nice price for Kinoshita, he should still be able to score decent in PCT and PT
@ivaneurope - Every year I want to go for younger leaders but I always end up with older ones. Perhaps time to change this year
@knockout - Surely one of my favorite riders of the season as well.
@Nemolito - If every stage was flat we might have stood a chance of survival