@cunego - Wow, looks like someone isn't as dedicated to Areruya as his fans (well, one fan in particular) would want to believe And yeah I'll bet you're curious
@redordead - See now I feel like you're one of the haters but doing it in a different way by trying to turn him into a meme - save that for Schleck! He's just going to be a cool niche rider and I don't know why people except me and Nemolito can't see that
jandal7 wrote: @cunego - Wow, looks like someone isn't as dedicated to Areruya as his fans (well, one fan in particular) would want to believe And yeah I'll bet you're curious
oh, quite on the contrary. I want him to reach his fullest potential, I just don't think mindless hype and flattery is necessary for that He'll earn his spot in the top echelon, I'm sure, and I'm unselfish enough to be happy to see him do it with you, but if he ever feels homesick, he knows where to turn to ...
Also, can someone please explain the Schombers lore to me?
@cunego - I agree, but AreruyaFanNo1 certainly has mindless hype covered so we're really covering both bases
And there's genuinely no Schomber lore It's just every other member of the "Conglomerate" (Abhi, Croatia, knockout and trek) hate him with an unprovoked passion and pile on him any chance they get.
@Ulrich - Thanks for the support
Will be posting award results in 24h, so that's the deadline for voting
jandal7 wrote:
And there's genuinely no Schomber lore It's just every other member of the "Conglomerate" (Abhi, Croatia, knockout and trek) hate him with an unprovoked passion and pile on him any chance they get.
And you know full well how wrong the Conglomerate can be
It is now time for our team awards winners to be announced - but first the results of our two fan categories. Voted by you all over the last few days, our Fan's Race of the Year with a solid margin was:
Spoiler
Tour of Japan
In his first ever GC win, and our first at the PCT level, George Bennett waited in the wings until the decisive Stage 5, where the team set him up to perfection and he chased down and then came around the late attacker Slagter for the stage win and GC lead, as well as the Points and KoM jersey. Xero legend Anthony Roux also won a stage for Netia and that made us very happy too!
And next up is our Octagon Fan's Rider of the Year award. The fans voted and there were a few contenders but in the end for the third year in a row this rider ran away with it by his biggest margin yet - clearly a fan favourite! The fan's rider of the year 2018 is:
Spoiler
George Bennett
2nd=: Hugo Houle
2nd=: Joseph Areruya
Now for the rider and staff-voted official team awards. First up is our Wheelworks Young Rider of the Year. Two main candidates for this award in last year's winner Areruya and the neo-pro Higuita, who did his best to mirror Areruya's winning season last year with enthusiasm, work on the front of the pack, and exactly 11 breakaways. In the end this award goes to...
Spoiler
Joseph Areruya
A new award this year (because nobody ever gave a reason to award it before): the Qhubeka Loan-Out of the year for the best-performing Xero rider out on loan. We had five this year but really this was a two-horse race between one man in the PT and one in the CT - Jamalidin Novardianto's stellar Podium Ambition gap year feauturing classic results, consistent points-scoring putting him in the top 120 in cycling's highest division, and of course that wonderful Giro d'Italia stage victory. Meanwhile Daniel Habtemichael with McCormick imitated Jams' neo-pro season in the CT with some of the most breakaway kilometres of any rider in any division, culminating in doing what Jams never could and winning the KoM in the Tour of Bulgaria. After a close vote it went to:
Spoiler
Jamalidin Novardianto
Moving on now to our Econet Ride of the Year. This is an award for the most impressive individual ride on any given day. We looked a lot more quietly competent for much of this year which was good for the manager's heart rate but didn't provide the kind of epic rollercoaster season which produces the heroic riders of last season such as Gilanipoor's 80km solo stage win or Velits' many never-say-die mountain raids. However there were still some worthy contenders, and the winner after a very tight staff vote was:
We now move on to the My Food Bag Breakaway Rider of the Year. With no Jamalidin Novardianto in the building (although it's tempting to say his Giro stage win transcends the "Xero rides only" rule) this season it came down to a battle of young Southern Hemisphere climbers, once again after Young Rider it's Joseph Areruya vs Sergio Higuita, quality vs quantity - a stage win and 2nd out of 6 breakaways vs 11 total breakaways. Could Higuita stop Areruya making it three team awards out of four?
Spoiler
Sergio Higuita
And now we move on to the final award of the evening: the Xero Rider of the Year. After all the riders and staff had submitted their vote, it came down to basically our "big four" - the major scorers: Bennett, Houle, Debesay, and Rowe. In the end one rider pulled away, though, with the others left fighting for second place. Who was it, and who did he leave trailing in his wake?
Spoiler
George Bennett
2nd: Hugo Houle 3rd: Mekseb Debesay
And that's a wrap! Thanks to you all for tuning in for a wonderful second Pro Continental season for Xero Racing, it's been a pleasure to share this season with you, and thanks so much for your support of this team. See you all next season, as Xero sign Sam Bewley and Louis Meintjes, and we find out which senior rider is Sergio Higuita's real father.
@redordead - Interesting choices - Rowe with a weaker season than last year but that Veenendaal win was a perfect day for him showing his talents in flat classics and a solid choice for Race of the Year, even if Japan was always the winner there.
@Ulrich - He did well but Jams had a stellar season outside of the Giro stage with some great other results and consistent scoring getting him over 300 points so he managed to outdo the breakaway machine Habtemichael, who would have won it by a landslide any other year. And try as you might but I suspect that would be nearly as fruitless an endeavour as AreruyaFanNo1's
Ulrich Ulriksen wrote:
Disappointment for Habtemicheal just because he didn't win a Giro stage - maybe I need to start a campaign on the Bralirwa website to get him a move.
Finally in this season's HQ, we'd like to present the updated Xero All-Time Leaderboards, a collection of various statistics of the team since our inception in 2016, a project inspired by our friends at Evonik.
Loyalty
Years
Loan In
Loan Out
Stag.
Tenure
Tom Davison
4
0
0
0
2016-
Jamalidin Novardianto
4
0
1
0
2016-
Nils Schomber
4
0
1
1
2016-
Jordan Schleck
4
0
2
0
2016-
Marvain Kossohorou
3
0
0
0
2016-18
George Bennett
3
0
0
0
2017-
Carl Ngamoki-Cameron
3
0
0
0
2017-
Dylan Kennett
3
0
0
0
2017-
Geremie Nzeke
3
0
1
0
2016-18
Hamish Schreurs
3
0
1
0
2017-
Spoiler
Jonathan Salinas
2
0
0
0
2016-17
Simon Clarke
2
0
0
0
2016-17
Tom Diggle
2
0
0
0
2016-17
Matthew Lloyd
2
0
0
0
2016-17
Anthony Roux
2
0
0
0
2017-18
Luke Rowe
2
0
0
0
2018-
Mekseb Debesay
2
0
0
0
2018-
Stanislau Bazhkou
2
0
0
0
2018-
Jaco Venter
2
0
0
0
2018-
Joseph Areruya
2
0
0
0
2018-
Daniel Afoa
2
0
1
1
2017-18
Tom Scully
1
0
0
0
2016
Ole Hirschlein
1
0
0
0
2016
Aleksandr Efimkin
1
0
0
0
2016
Timothy Gudsell
1
0
0
0
2016
Igor Antón
1
0
0
0
2017
Stijn Vandenbergh
1
0
0
0
2017
Egidijus Juodvalkis
1
0
0
0
2017
Peter Velits
1
0
0
0
2018
Tosh van der Sande
1
0
0
0
2018
Abolfazl Gilanipoor
1
0
0
0
2018
Hugo Houle
1
0
0
0
2019-
Arvid de Kleijn
1
0
0
0
2019-
Sergio Higuita
1
0
0
0
2019-
Morne Van Niekerk
1
0
0
0
2019-
Shaun Nick Bester
1
0
0
0
2019-
Kristian Dyrnes
1
0
0
0
2019-
Tsgabu Grmay
1
0
0
0
2019-
Mikiel Habtom
1
0
0
0
2019-
Kim Ok Cheol
1
0
0
1
2016
Scott Ambrose
1
0
0
1
2017
Joseph Kimathi
1
0
0
1
2018
Hernan Ricardo Aguirre
1
0
0
1
2018
Mingrun Chen
1
0
0
1
2019-
Akramjon Sunnatov
1
0
0
1
2019-
Than Tung Huynh
1
0
0
1
2019-
Miguel Florez
1
0
0
1
2019-
James Fouche
1
0
1
0
2019-
Daniel Habtemichael
1
0
1
0
2019-
Jean Helwani
1
1
0
0
2016
Rei Onodera
1
1
0
0
2017
Gregory Daniel
1
1
0
0
2018
Callum Scotson
1
1
0
0
2018
Six riders from our original squad last season is down to four now, and with the loan-out of Novardianto this season only Tom Davison has completed four full seasons of Xero Racing. 2017 recruitments Bennett, Ngamoki-Cameron, Kennett and Schreurs all hit three this year and have moved into the Top 10 where, aside from the veteran Fijian, they will hope to stay forever.
Breadwinners
Points
Biggest Year
George Bennett
1233
670
Luke Rowe
921
518
Anthony Roux
841
631
Mekseb Debesay
732
478
Peter Velits
572
572
Hugo Houle
457
457
Stanislau Bazhkou
389
278
Jonathan Salinas
370
263
Tom Diggle
276
218
Simon Clarke
244
134
Spoiler
Joseph Areruya
206
168
Tsgabu Grmay
165
165
Jamalidin Novardianto
156
138
Kristian Dyrnes
138
138
Tom Davison
130
57
Tosh van der Sande
128
128
Abolfazl Gilanipoor
106
106
Geremie Nzeke
90
63
Shaun Nick Bester
75
75
Ole Hirschlein
66
66
Igor Antón
66
66
Jaco Venter
63
40
Tom Scully
52
52
Morne Van Niekerk
50
50
Stijn Vandenbergh
50
50
Matthew Lloyd
37
36
Marvain Tognama Kossohorou
28
13
Hamish Schreurs
24
19
Timothy Gudsell
21
21
Dylan Kennett
18
9
Sergio Higuita
17
17
Carl Ngamoki-Cameron
10
9
Jordan Schleck
9
9
Aleksandr Efimkin
4
4
Rei Onodera
4
4
Nils Schomber
4
4
Arvid de Kleijn
2
2
Egidijus Juodvalkis
2
2
Daniel Afoa
1
1
Jean Helwani
1
1
Hernan Ricardo Aguirre
1
1
Gregory Daniel
0
0
Scott Ambrose
0
0
Kim Ok Cheol
0
0
Joseph Kimathi
0
0
Callum Scotson
0
0
Mikiel Habtom
0
0
George Bennett finally knocks the dearly departed Anthony Roux off his perch in total points but also finally beats Roux's amazing CT 2017 points haul. Rowe also moves above the Frenchman into 2nd with the benefit of an extra PCT season, while Houle darts straight into the Top 10 joining Velits by being in the top 6 with a single season's work. Podium-bottom-step specialist Simon Clarke's 38-point lead is all that stops Joseph Areruya featuring in the top 10 already.
Roux still reigns supreme, though, in terms of race wins, Bennett now hopefully within a season of matching though it could take two! Houle matches his predecessor van der Sande's three stage wins in a season to join him on the podium as Roux and Debesay can only add one more to their previous total. Two more non-stage wins but still a huge majority of our victories come from there given our (outside of Roux) predeliction towards subtop scorers (that's code for we never signed anyone good enough).
Single-Season Record: 7 (Anthony Roux, 2017)
Including Plant-Based Chicken Dinners
Clas.
GCs
Stages
Real
U23
Pro NC
Total
Anthony Roux
1
1
6
8
0
0
8
George Bennett
1
1
3
5
0
2
7
Hugo Houle
0
0
3
3
0
0
3
Peter Velits
0
0
2
2
0
1
3
Mekseb Debesay
0
0
2
2
0
1
3
Tosh van der Sande
0
0
3
3
0
0
3
Joseph Areruya
0
0
1
1
1
1
3
Stanislau Bazhkou
0
0
0
0
0
3
3
Luke Rowe
1
0
1
2
0
0
2
Carl Ngamoki-Cameron
0
0
0
0
0
2
2
Spoiler
Kristian Dyrnes
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
Jonathan Salinas
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
Igor Antón
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
Abolfazl Gilanipoor
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
Geremie Nzeke
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
Jordan Schleck
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
Daniel Afoa
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
Tsgabu Grmay
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
Akramjon Sunnatov
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
Dylan Kennett
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
Morne Van Niekerk
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
If we include wussy ways to count victories we can see Bennett's two New Zealand national road race titles get him to within touching distance of Roux's total and we get a lot more winners! Interestingly this loose definition also allows us one victory which happened when a rider was not on our books, back when Morne Van Niekerk rode with us at the 2018 Tour de l'Avenir and won the prologue, a year before he actually signed with us!
Jerseys
Points
KOM
U25
Total
George Bennett
1
1
0
2
Luke Rowe
2
0
0
2
Peter Velits
0
1
0
1
Tom Davison
0
1
0
1
Timothy Gudsell
0
1
0
1
Anthony Roux
1
0
0
1
Mekseb Debesay
1
0
0
1
Hugo Houle
1
0
0
1
Jamalidin Novardianto
0
0
1
1
Classification wins have never been a forte of ours given our lack of great fighting climbers, young GC men or sprinters, however this year we do finally have riders who have won more than one jersey - Luke Rowe doubles up on Cheshire Cycling Tour points jerseys, whilst George Bennett won both the points and the KOM at the Tour of Japan to add to his yellow!
Greedy Bastards
Total Wage
Highest Year
Mekseb Debesay
€645,000
€365,000
Luke Rowe
€495,000
€265,000
George Bennett
€425,000
€160,000
Joseph Areruya
€410,000
€260,000
Hugo Houle
€409,000
€409,000
Peter Velits
€350,000
€350,000
Tosh van der Sande
€275,000
€275,000
Sergio Higuita
€250,000
€250,000
Tom Diggle
€230,000
€130,000
Tom Davison
€225,000
€75,000
Spoiler
Anthony Roux
€220,000
€130,000
Tom Scully
€210,000
€210,000
Kristian Dyrnes
€180,000
€180,000
Jamalidin Novardianto
€180,000
€55,000
Hamish Schreurs
€160,000
€85,000
Jonathan Salinas
€155,000
€80,000
Tsgabu Grmay
€150,000
€150,000
Dylan Kennett
€150,000
€50,000
Carl Ngamoki-Cameron
€150,000
€50,000
Marvain Tognama Kossohorou
€150,000
€50,000
Stanislau Bazhkou
€145,000
€75,000
Jordan Schleck
€145,000
€70,000
Ole Hirschlein
€140,000
€140,000
Jaco Venter
€135,000
€70,000
Geremie Nzeke
€120,000
€105,000
Nils Schomber
€110,000
€50,000
Simon Clarke
€105,000
€55,000
Matthew Lloyd
€105,000
€55,000
Igor Antón
€100,000
€100,000
Abolfazl Gilanipoor
€81,500
€81,500
Shaun Nick Bester
€81,000
€81,000
Mikiel Habtom
€70,000
€70,000
Morne Van Niekerk
€60,000
€60,000
Stijn Vandenbergh
€55,000
€55,000
Aleksandr Efimkin
€50,000
€50,000
Timothy Gudsell
€50,000
€50,000
Arvid de Kleijn
€50,000
€50,000
Egidijus Juodvalkis
€50,000
€50,000
Rei Onodera
€50,000
€50,000
Gregory Daniel
€37,500
€37,500
Joseph Kimathi
€15,000
€15,000
Daniel Afoa
€10,000
€10,000
Than Tung Huynh
€10,000
€10,000
Akramjon Sunnatov
€10,000
€10,000
Scott Ambrose
€10,000
€10,000
Kim Ok Cheol
€10,000
€10,000
Miguel Florez
€10,000
€10,000
Hernan Ricardo Aguirre
€10,000
€10,000
Mingrun Chen
€10,000
€10,000
Daniel Habtemichael
€5,000
€5,000
James Fouche
€0
€0
Jean Helwani
€0
€0
Callum Scotson
€0
€0
Still an unbalanced table with many just here for one year at the top due to our one year of higher wages in PCT. Debesay leading the way due to his huge contract in the FA in 2017 and then unlike Velits or Houle (yet) also having a second season. Higuita and Houle straight into the top 10 with their FA wages this year, whilst Tom Davison stays in the top 10 despite being paid 50,000 every year since his first renewals.
Single Season Record: €365,000 (Mekseb Debesay, 2018)
Value for Money
€/point
Jean Helwani
Infinite
Anthony Roux
€262
George Bennett
€345
Stanislau Bazhkou
€373
Jonathan Salinas
€419
Simon Clarke
€430
Luke Rowe
€537
Peter Velits
€612
Abolfazl Gilanipoor
€769
Tom Diggle
€833
Spoiler
Mekseb Debesay
€881
Hugo Houle
€895
Tsgabu Grmay
€909
Shaun Nick Bester
€1,080
Stijn Vandenbergh
€1,100
Jamalidin Novardianto
€1,154
Morne Van Niekerk
€1,200
Kristian Dyrnes
€1,304
Geremie Nzeke
€1,333
Igor Antón
€1,515
Tom Davison
€1,731
Joseph Areruya
€1,990
Ole Hirschlein
€2,121
Jaco Venter
€2,143
Tosh van der Sande
€2,148
Timothy Gudsell
€2,381
Matthew Lloyd
€2,838
Tom Scully
€4,038
Marvain Tognama Kossohorou
€5,357
Hamish Schreurs
€6,667
Dylan Kennett
€8,333
Daniel Afoa
€10,000
Hernan Ricardo Aguirre
€10,000
Aleksandr Efimkin
€12,500
Rei Onodera
€12,500
Sergio Higuita
€14,706
Carl Ngamoki-Cameron
€15,000
Jordan Schleck
€16,111
Arvid de Kleijn
€25,000
Egidijus Juodvalkis
€25,000
Nils Schomber
€27,500
Than Tung Huynh
N/A
Akramjon Sunnatov
N/A
Gregory Daniel
N/A
Scott Ambrose
N/A
James Fouche
N/A
Kim Ok Cheol
N/A
Joseph Kimathi
N/A
Daniel Habtemichael
N/A
Miguel Florez
N/A
Mingrun Chen
N/A
Callum Scotson
N/A
Mikiel Habtom
N/A
Jean Helwani being on top here will never not be funny, which is good because he's never coming down. Anthony Roux in second place is a safe bet to do the same. Bazhkou should have third place quite easily sewn up but had a shocking season this year compared to his debut, whilst our two founding stars, Salinas and Clarke, on a CT wage are still beating out their more illustrious PCT successors with the exception of George Bennett.
Men of Steel
RDs
Tom Davison
285
Dylan Kennett
229
Jamalidin Novardianto
225
Marvain Tognama Kossohorou
201
Nils Schomber
175
Carl Ngamoki-Cameron
174
Joseph Areruya
161
George Bennett
151
Jordan Schleck
145
Jaco Venter
131
With Jamalidin Novardianto's gap year this season Davison and Kennett leap at the opportunity to overtake him into the top two spots, whilst Schomber, Venter, Areruya and Bennett (as the only leader in the top 10 after this year. Jams and Kennett, currently separated by just four, will surely have quite a rivalry moving forwards in this ranking, with the former having made it his mission to top this ranking by the end of his career (as well as the next one). Nils Schomber has some ground to make up, but will no doubt have a larger RD allowance than the other two going forward
Single Season Record: 100 (Nils Schomber, 2019) CT: 76 (Jamalidin Novardianto, 2016; Rei Onodera and Dylan Kennett, 2017)
Shut Up Legs
Breakaways
Wins
KOM
Jamalidin Novardianto
21
0
0
Joseph Areruya
16
1
0
Tom Davison
12
0
1
Sergio Higuita
11
0
0
Carl Ngamoki-Cameron
7
0
0
Kristian Dyrnes
5
0
1
Geremie Nzeke
5
0
0
Marvain Tognama Kossohorou
5
0
0
Hamish Schreurs
5
0
0
Timothy Gudsell
4
0
1
Spoiler
Dylan Kennett
4
0
0
Morne Van Niekerk
4
0
0
Shaun Nick Bester
4
0
0
Peter Velits
3
0
1
Anthony Roux
3
0
0
Rei Onodera
3
0
0
Gregory Daniel
3
0
0
Nils Schomber
3
0
0
Mekseb Debesay
2
1
0
Matthew Lloyd
2
0
0
Jordan Schleck
2
0
0
Jean Helwani
2
0
0
Igor Antón
2
0
0
Daniel Afoa
2
0
0
Stanislau Bazhkou
2
0
0
Jaco Venter
2
0
0
Mikiel Habtom
2
0
0
Abolfazl Gilanipoor
1
1
0
Tom Diggle
1
0
0
Aleksandr Efimkin
1
0
0
Stijn Vandenbergh
1
0
0
Callum Scotson
1
0
0
Hernan Ricardo Aguirre
1
0
0
Luke Rowe
1
0
0
Than Tung Huynh
1
0
0
Miguel Florez
1
0
0
Despite the year off, Jams still reigns supreme here despite Areruya halving the gap in his absence. Davison just manages to stay ahead of Higuita who comes hard towards the podium with 11 this year. We have also collected totals this year of all breakaway victories and breakaway-earned KoM victories to include in this list. This also made us take another look at Jams' legendary 2016 season, where we figured he average a breakaway better than every 4.8 days, earning points along the way to put him in the Top 50 of the rankings that year!
Finally it's a ranking of our own making - the winners of the HQ Rider of the Month Awards. George Bennett taking home three this season finally passes the mercurial Roux. As you can see, it's been very spread out over the years, and the pedants among you will notice we've missed four months of our existence! These are the months where we either failed to give the award or, more likely, declined to out of apathy towards the team's performances.