| Cofidis, Le Crédit en Ligne | ||
| Team information | ||
|---|---|---|
| UCI code | COF | |
| Based | ||
| Founded | 1997 | |
| Discipline(s) | Road | |
| Status | ProTour | |
| Key personnel | ||
| General manager | Eric Boyer | |
| Team name history | ||
| 1997–present | Cofidis | |
|
|
||
Cofidis, Le Crédit en Ligne (UCI team code: COF) is a French professional road bicycle racing team sponsored by a money-lending company, Cofidis. It was started in 1996 by Cyrille Guimard the former manager of Bernard Hinault, Greg LeMond and Laurent Fignon of the Renault-Elf team of the 1980s. The team's sponsor, François Migraine, the chief executive of Cofidis has supported the team despite repeated problems such as doping scandals.
Contents |
History
Cyrille Guimard started the team in 1996 with backing from Migraine. An acquisition was Lance Armstrong, formerly of Motorola. Armstrong was dropped[1] because of his cancer and another American, Bobby Julich, became leader for stage races. Julich's place in the first three of the 1998 Tour de France brought the team to the spotlight, and Frank Vandenbroucke brought further results in classics
Years of drought followed as Julich and Vandenbroucke switched teams. Vandenbroucke's Belgian compatriots, Nico Mattan, Chris Peers, Peter Farazijn, and Jo Planckaert, stayed on but were criticised for inconsistent performance. Cofidis began payng riders by results, judged by the points they won in a season-long competition run by the Union Cycliste Internationale. Belgian riders criticised the policy, saying it would lead riders to compete unadventurously to be sure of good placings at the finish. They debated the issue publicly with the manager, Alain Bondue, and left.
David Millar raised the team's profile by winning the prologue of the 2000 Tour de France, taking leadership of the team. Millar criticized the points system and the team relented.
In 2004 Cofidis had three world champions - Igor Astarloa on the road, David Millar in the individual time trial and Laurent Gané on the track. However, a doping scandal involving Millar and other riders led the to stop racing until it was resolved. Astarloa left the team. The investigation showed doping was by individual riders and that the team was not involved. The team then returned to competition for the 2004 Tour de France, in which Stuart O'Grady and David Moncoutié won stages, Moncoutié's on Bastille Day .
Moncoutié won on Bastille day again in the 2005 Tour de France - the only French stage win - with O'Grady's help. However, a new signing, Sylvain Chavanel failed to win a stage or to make a strong impression .
O'Grady and Matthew White left in 2006. Cédric Vasseur - often the road captain - also left. Early victory in Classic Haribo by Arnaud Coyot showed the team still had firepower. Cofidis won the first stage of the 2006 Tour de France with Jimmy Casper, in a chaotic sprint.
For 2007 the team signed Belgians Nick Nuyens and Kevin De Weert from Quick Step-Innergetic.
On 25 July 2007 Cofidis rider Christian Moreni failed his doping test after the 11th stage of the Tour de France. His blood contained traces of testosterone. Moreni acknowledged doping. The team withdrew from the Tour.[2]
On 29 September 2009, the UCI ProTour decided not to renew the ProTour licenses of Cofidis and Bbox Bouygues Telecom, due to poor results. [3]
2009 team
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Major results
- 2007
- 1st, Prologue – Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré (Bradley Wiggins)
- 1st, Stage 3 – Étoile de Bessèges (Nick Nuyens)
- 2008
- 1st, Grand Prix d'Ouverture La Marseillaise (Hervé Duclos-Lassalle)
- 1st, Brabantse Pijl (Sylvain Chavanel)
- 1st, Stage 3 - Tour de France (Samuel Dumoulin)
See also
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Cofidis |
References
- ^ "Its Not About the Bike" by Lance Armstrong
- ^ With cycling in crisis, Tour de France organizers revamp race for 2008 - Cycling - Yahoo! Sports
- ^ [1]
- ^ "Cofidis, le Credit Par Telephone - Riders". uciprotour.com. http://www.uciprotour.com/Modules/SUCI/TEAMS/TeamDetails.asp?id=MTA&RefDate=01.01.2009&MenuId=MTU2MTU&BackLink=%2Ftemplates%2FUCI%2FUCI2%2Flayout.asp%3FMenuId%3DMTU2MTU. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
External links
|
||||||||
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)




