Friday, April 26, 2024

Tour of Britain 2019 Rollout

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HomeRaceRace PreviewsTour of Britain 2019 Rollout

Glasgow, The Dear Green Place, George Square on a Saturday morning with the sun shining – not much more one could ask for. With the icing on the cake being some of the world’s best cyclists about to start the Tour of Britain 2019.

Dave and I went through for a meander around the busses and took a few snaps in the process…

Tour of Britain 2019
Photo©Ed Hood

Could Gregg’s sausage rolls be the secret of GB team man Jake Scott’s success, this year?

Riding for Equipe Continentale Groupama FDJ – check out that nice Lapierre – he’s had some strong results this season, not least third in the u23 Tour of Flanders and eighth in the u23 Paris-Roubaix.

Tour of Britain 2019
Photo©Ed Hood

Matteo Trentin [Mitchelton Scott & Italy] likes Glasgow, he won the European Road Race Championship in Glasgow Green, last year and this year won this very stage, which finished in Kirkcudbright.

One of the few to leave QuickStep and ride even better.

Tour of Britain 2019
Photo©Ed Hood

Julien Vermote (Dimension Data & Belgium] whilst still having the trendy haircut has done little since he left the ‘boys in blue’ at QuickStep.

Morale at Dimension Data can’t be good with wins few and far between and more than one of the squad close to or past ‘sell by.’

Tour of Britain 2019
Photo©Ed Hood

We were interested to read in ‘The Comic,’ aka ‘Cycling Weekly’ that Riwal-Readynez is a ‘relatively obscure team;’ as well as his Tour of Yorkshire stage win Dane, Alexander Kamp won the points classification in the Coppi e Bartali, the GC in the Circuit des Ardennes International and has been signed by Trek Segafredo for 2020.

Tour of Britain 2019
Photo©Ed Hood
Tour of Britain 2019
Photo©Ed Hood

And team mate, fellow Dane, Andreas Stokbro won the u23 Tour of Flanders 

Stokbro has also been very competitive these last few seasons in the Copenhagen Six Day.

Tour of Britain 2019
Photo©Ed Hood

Another ‘Man of the Sixes’ rides this Tour of Britain, Belgian sprinter, Jasper De Buyst [Lotto Soudal] a multiple Belgian and European Champion on the track across just about every discipline from ‘novice’ upwards, he’s won sixes in Grenoble, Ghent and Bremen [picture shows him in action with Iljo Keisse in Bremen].

He’s been around for what seems ages but is still only 25 years-old; he won a stage in the Tour of Denmark this year and over the last few seasons has had some nice wins in races like the Frank Vandenbroucke Memorial and Stad Zottegem.

Tour of Britain 2019
Photo©Ed Hood

A man who you perhaps wouldn’t associate with the Six Days is ever-aggressive EF Aussie, Simon Clark who was second this year in the Amstel Gold Race.

But Clarke, like so many of the top Australian riders, started off as a track man; he was in the Australian team which won the world junior team pursuit championship back in 2004.

And I first came across him at the Grenoble Six Day in 2006 where as a high performer on the u23 six day scene he was given a ride in the pro Six.

He’s covered a lot of ground since then, including king of the mountains and two stage wins in the Vuelta. 

Tour of Britain 2019
Photo©Ed Hood

Another man I remember from the ‘old days’ when Viktor and I used to hang over the kermis barriers, is AG2R’s former Lithuanian Road Race Champion and reigning national Time Trial Champion, Gediminas Bagdonas.

The big, tough man did it the hard way, riding the Belgian kermis circuit until he caught the eye of AN Post from where he moved up to World Tour AG2R.

Tour of Britain 2019
Photo©Ed Hood

Another man who came up through the kermises is big, handsome Kiwi, Jack Bauer who made a name in the kermises, was grabbed by Brian Smith for Endura then went to Garmin through the team’s various incarnations before joining QuickStep and is now a key part of the Mitchelton Scott machine

Photo©Ed Hood

It’s not been Stevie Cummings or Cav’s best year – not helped by Dimension Data’s lack of wins – and inevitably, morale.

Neither man has anything left to prove in this sport…

Photo©Ed Hood
Photo©Ed Hood

Last year’s National Champion Connor Swift – VeloVeritas was right there when the winning move was made –  riding for GB here but a team mate of the likes of Warren Barguil and Andre Greipel at Arkea Samsic. 

Photo©Ed Hood

David Cimolai [Israel Cycling Academy & Italy] hasn’t had a bad season, winner of two stages and the GC at the Vuelta a Castilla y Leon and a stage in the Tour of Wallonie – and at the time of writing; second, third, fourth and fifth places on four of the first five stage of this race.  

Photo©Ed Hood

With fifth in the 2015 Tour of Flanders as a neo-pro, we thought Tiesj Benoot [Lotto Soudal & Belgium] was destined for the very top – but apart from a brilliant win in the Strade Bianche, last year he’s reminded a ‘nearly man’ – always there but never quite grabbing the cigar.

Photo©Ed Hood

Looking more like an East European hard man than a chic Frenchman, Yoann Offredo isn’t a man who you’d attempt to shove off the wheel.

After a dozen years in the sport he rides now for cult Belgian team, Wanty Gobert as a ‘super domestique.’ 

Photo©Ed Hood

Roll out and whilst ‘Mickey’ Landa [Movistar & Basque Nation] has never quite scaled the heights expected of him – it’s four years since he made the Giro podium.

Damn!

He does look cool. 

Ed Hood
Ed Hood
Ed's been involved in cycling for over 50 years. In that time he's been a successful time triallist, a team manager and a sponsor of several teams and clubs. He's also a respected and successful coach and during the winter months was often working in the cabins at the Six Days for some of the world's top riders. Ed remains a massive fan of the sport and couples his extensive contacts with an inexhaustible enthusiasm for the minutiae and the history of our sport. In February 2023 however, our dear friend and beloved colleague Ed suffered a devastating stroke and faces an uncertain future; Ed has lost his ability to speak, to read, and has lost movement on the right side of his body. He's working with speech and physical therapists on rehabilitation, but all strokes are different and each patient responds differently, so unfortunately recovery is one day at a time. Ed ran his own business installing windows, and will probably not be able to work again. Please consider joining us to make a contribution to Ed's GoFundMe page to help stabilise and secure his future.

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