Bangkok Post

Hot Pogacar gets familiar support cast

No place for two big stars in Quick-Step

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Tadej Pogacar will begin his bid for a third straight Tour de France title later this week alongside four of the same teammates who helped him to last year’s yellow jersey.

The Slovenian was unsurprisi­ngly on Monday named in the UAE Team Emirates line-up for the race, which gets underway in Copenhagen on Friday.

Switzerlan­d’s Marc Hirschi was a notable omission, but Polish climber Rafal Majka, Mikkel Bjerg, Brandon McNulty and Vegard Stake Laengen all made the cut.

New Zealander George Bennett and Spain’s Marc Soler, both signed in the off-season, are included, as is Italian sprinter Matteo Trentin.

“We’ve worked very hard all year as a team to prepare for this,” said the 23-year-old Pogacar. “So far this year has been positive for the team and we hope to continue this momentum.”

Pogacar is a strong favourite for the Tour after another impressive season which has seen him win the one-day Strade Bianche and two stage races.

Meanwhile, Britain’s Mark Cavendish and France’s Julian Alaphilipp­e have both missed out on a place in the

Quick-Step team.

Double world road cycling champion Alaphilipp­e only returned to competitio­n on Sunday, two months after suffering multiple fractures in a heavy fall on the Liege-Bastogne-Liege race in Belgium.

Cavendish, 37, last year equalled Eddy Merckx’s Tour de France record of 34 stage wins, and had stormed to a second British road race title on Sunday. “I am disappoint­ed,” said Alaphilipp­e, 30, who has worn the race leader’s yellow jersey in the last three editions.

But the Belgian team have opted for Dutch sprint specialist Fabio Jakobsen, who has 10 wins in 2022.

“I have a natural affection for the race, from my days in the yellow jersey over the past three seasons, my stage victories and many other great memories with my teammates,” continued Alaphilipp­e.

“To miss another opportunit­y to wear my beautiful rainbow jersey in my home country is very sad for me.

“At the same time, I completely understand this, because I too don’t want to be at the start if I can’t be at my best level.”

Colombian Nairo Quintana, a twotime Tour runner-up and winner of the 2014 Giro d’Italia and Vuelta a Espana in 2016, spearheads Arkea-Samsic’s assault on the 2022 title.

Kazakh Alexey Lutsenko, who

finished seventh last year, will be the main man for Astana, who will also have four Italian riders on the start line in Denmark.

Experience­d Slovakian sprinter Peter Sagan, a seven-time green jersey winner, leads the TotalEnerg­ies team after recovering from Covid-19.

The 32-year-old Sagan will be joined on his 11th Tour by long-time allies Maciej Bodnar of Poland and Italy’s Daniel Oss.

Russian Aleksandr Vlasov headlines Bora-Hansgrohe with Alpecin counting on Dutch star Mathieu van der Poel who wore the yellow jersey for six days last year.

POLICE RAIDS

Team Bahrain-Victorious on Monday

accused authoritie­s of “intentiona­lly damaging the team’s reputation” following a series of police searches on homes of staff members and riders in the lead-up to the Tour de France.

A statement released by the team did not specify the location of the raids although specialist website VeloNews say they were conducted by the European Union Agency for Police Cooperatio­n (Europol) across several countries, including Slovenia, Poland, and Spain.

During last year’s race Bahrain’s hotel and bus were subject to an antidoping raid by French authoritie­s.

“The investigat­ion into the members of the team, which started almost a year ago and did not yield any results, continues just before the start of the

most important cycling race, the Tour de France, and damages the reputation of individual­s and Team Bahrain Victorious,” the team said in the statement.

“The team feels the timing of this investigat­ion is aimed at intentiona­lly damaging the team’s reputation.

“The house searches experience­d today... represent a continuati­on of the investigat­ion process that began during the team’s successful performanc­es at last year’s Tour de France.”

Bahrain said they had repeatedly requested informatio­n on the investigat­ion “without success”.

“At no time, and so far, have the team been informed of the progress, results or received any feedback about the investigat­ion from the Marseille Prosecutor’s Office,” the team said.

 ?? AFP ?? The UAE Team Emirates’ Tadej Pogacar, centre, and teammates pose during the last stage of the 2021 Tour de France.
AFP The UAE Team Emirates’ Tadej Pogacar, centre, and teammates pose during the last stage of the 2021 Tour de France.

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