Vincenzo Nibali, one of only six riders ever to have won all three of cycling’s Grand Tours, has, as expected, signed as team leader for the new Bahrain Merida Pro Cycling Team.
The Sicilian is the first rider to be confirmed by the team, which was officially launched earlier this week when it announced its sponsorship by the Taiwan-based bike manufacturer.
> Merida to sponsor new Bahrain Merida Pro Cycling Team
He said: “I was immediately fascinated by the idea of a strong project plan built around me. I have believed in the team from day one, because it has a clear vision and is to be carried out by some of the best professionals in the sport.
“This trust and confidence in me made me take the final decision for this new exciting adventure of my career. I can’t wait to meet their expectations at the most important races in the world wearing the jersey of Bahrain-Merida.”
Nibali won his second Giro d’Italia title in May this year following a storming victory on Stage 19, when he pulled back almost 4 minutes on race leader Esteban Chavez of Orica-GreenEdge, before taking the race lead from the Colombian the following day.
His previous Giro d’Italia victory came in 2013, three years after he won his first Grand Tour, the 2010 Vuelta a Espana. He completed his hat-trick with victory in the 2014 Tour de France, joining Alberto Contador as the only current rider to have won all three races.
Italian national road champion in 2014 and 2015, Nibali also won last year’s edition of Il Lombardia. He joined Astana in 2013 after seven seasons with Liquigas.
The 31-year-old’s new team is aiming to secure a UCI WorldTour licence for next year.
However, human rights campaigners have called on the governing body not to award one due to the involvement in it of Prince Nasser bin Hamad Al Khalifa, son of King Fahd, who has had allegations of torture made against him.
The Cycling Independent Reform Commission established by the UCI said in its report published almost 18 months ago that cycling should have a “fit and proper person” test for people involved in team management
UCI president Brian Cookson said in March last year that the organisation would “Work to enshrine a fit-and-proper-persons requirement in the team licensing process, focused on the key roles in the staff, such as sports directors and doctors.”
Other than some changes with respect to people with doping-related convictions, no changes have been made, nor is it clear whether measures contemplated by the UCI would ultimately apply to those not directly involved in team management or what evidence might be needed for an individual to fail such a test.
I was pee'd off with Eurosport (Discovery) as I had the player before GCN+ was a thing. I also subscribed to GCN+ as I got into watching some...
That title is so apt
That doesn't just cut the mustard, it positively purees it.
This. Because otherwise I would be struggling to not break my rule about responding politely. Interesting how a poster who, iirc, is usually...
This sort of parking is so common that surely an enforcement officer would swiftly raise enough in fines to pay their own wages.
Only enough coffee for a single espresso though - they know people who ride bikes like drinking coffee, right?
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It's burning my eyyyees!
I had a look and couldn't see the actual wheel size in the pictures nor on their website. What we need is a close up pic of where it's written on...
Yes they do but this was almost certainly a stolen vehicle, there are some pretty dumb criminals out there but even they know about the other...