what sponserhip did they give track cycling?Well he got British cycling to a level where he thought they could go pro and win tours.
It was his dream that he sold to sky to get them on board.
Wonder who will take over from sponsoring the team
what sponserhip did they give track cycling?Well he got British cycling to a level where he thought they could go pro and win tours.
It was his dream that he sold to sky to get them on board.
Wonder who will take over from sponsoring the team
Zero. They moved the track team to a pro team along with sky.what sponserhip did they give track cycling?
the timelines crossed over before brailsford followed the money to sky, but to suggest sky should take any credit at all for the success of british track cycling is untrue, which was the original pointZero. They moved the track team to a pro team along with sky.
Wouldn't surprise me at all to hear that sky were involved with Brailsford at British cycling tho as the media coverage of their success was immense
They could well have been sponsoring them behind the scenes.the timelines crossed over before brailsford followed the money to sky, but to suggest sky should take any credit at all for the success of british track cycling is untrue, which was the original point
its time to shut up again frankThey could well have been sponsoring them behind the scenes.
Where did the Brailsford - sky/murdoch link come from in the first instance I wonder??
Who knows??its time to shut up again frank
The issue is they hardly brought joy across the cycling world. I'm willing to accept that they somewhat made a difference for British cycling, but that doesn't translate globally.
Since they came on the scene, because of their style of racing, the viewer ratings are going down for the GT's where they are seriously involved.
It's not only less fun when all the strongest riders are in one team. They have an entire team full of potential GC winners; I was very displeased when it turned out that Bernal had signed a 5 year extension. It's all in the style; Quickstep last year was probably also dominant but that didn't bother people because they went about it in an attractive way.
I don't think you can tell me that the end of a sponsor of a team that leads to a 10/20 percent (on the core-markets) decrease in viewers compared to the five year average (I'm using the figures of Daam van Reeth and Wim Lagae; sports economists that work for the CUL...) , makes a sport more interesting to sponsor. Even in the U.K. there was a decrease of around 15 percent this year for the TdF (and that's only using the ITV numbers since Eurosport UK refuses to share their data, but it's not more than 200 000 ppl so wouldn't change the picture a whole lot) - and that's taking into account the WC effect.
That's a fair comment. With the GTs and classics, it's a bit apples and pears as classics have always been that much harder to control and therefore a lot more exciting as a result. I mean the 2016 Paris Roubaix is a good example. I think that's probably the most exciting classic I can remember for a very long time, and I think Sky had 4 guys in the lead group with like 50km to go, which you'd normally think would strangle the race, but all bar Stannard ended up crashing and it was great stuff. Quickstep have often been in a similar boat, yet because of the nature of the races it's been less of a factor, even though 'a' Quickstep rider is nearly always in the mix because of their weight of numbers.
GTs are different as there does tend to be a best way to race them. This is especially so in the Tour as it's probably the dullest parcours of the three, and it's perhaps no surprise that the Giro nearly always provides better racing than the Tour, and I'd argue the Vuelta has recently too. Whilst Sky have got a winning formula, the other teams have flattered to deceive. Movistar came to the Tour with their big three, yet all three underwhelmed. BMC spent massively on riders but spent badly. Astana have at times had very strong lineups but usually failed to utilize them properly. The strategy is largely the same though. People like Poels and Henao are never going to win a GT themselves, but are good enough to get in the top 10, so if a top team can pay them well enough to be a domestique then it's a good strategy. Movistar have done exactly the same, and could quite easily have added Carapaz or someone like that to Soler and had 5 world class climbers in their Tour roster. They have that strength with a relatively small budget though because they focus purely on GC and have hardly any classics or sprint riders. Where Sky perhaps have an edge is that they have the budget to also have guys like Kwia and Rowe who are also world class classics riders.
As with most sports though, those with the biggest budgets usually win. Such is life. Has there been any research into why the viewing numbers are down across Europe? Is this fall consistent across all events, or mainly for GTs versus the classics?
McLaren are entering into a joint-venture partnership with Bahrain-Merida, the team of 2014 Tour de France winner Vincenzo Nibali.
The partnership, which is being described as “open-ended”, will be with McLaren’s Applied Technologies and Marketing and Commercial divisions – which accounts for almost 700 staff – making Bahrain-Merida at a stroke one of the best funded, and certainly one of the best resourced, teams in the sport.
McLaren’s racing programme costs upwards of £200 million a year and while McLaren will be putting only a fraction of that amount into this project in terms of hard cash – the team would not discuss budgets beyond saying “there is no free ride” and their “commitment would match the team’s ambition to be the best” – even the use of its state-of-the-art facilities in Woking, including its windtunnel, plus access to Applied Technologies’ intellectual property, gives Bahrain-Merida the sort of backing of which other teams can only dream.
So while one financial monster is in danger of dying another is just possibly rising to become equally as unpopular as in time it bags all the GC prizes and monopolizes talent. Still it will give all the professional moaners and protesters a replacement target to scrutinise and vilify to their hearts content. Another dark enemy of the envious is just awakening.
As has been speculated in a previous post perhaps this new venture could include a takeover of sky and an amalgamation into an absolutely monster megateam, who knows?
Other than Everton and football, Cricket, Rugby Union and Golf were always the sports i most took an active interest in, having played rugby and cricket at school and golf too afterwards, but suddenly and largely thanks to Sky i properly discovered cycling and the interest grew.
Sky did almost unreal things for cycling in Britain. No Brit had won a GT until 2012. We had the odd stage win - Malcolm Elliott, David Millar, Robert Miller, Tom Simpson. A couple of monuments / WC's (Tom Simpson, maybe Barry Hoban ) and a few TT's / Hour records (Boardman, Obree). Boardman and Cav probably the only real household names away from the track.
Suddenly we won everything. Team Sky jerseys and branded bikes everywhere. People at work actually taking an interest in bike racing. Everyone had a bike. A strange minority sport in the UK became mainstream, and it was brilliant.
I love the way that Sky got everyone into cycling. I love the way that talented riders in the UK (and we've always had talent, just never the support to let it develop - read about Robert Millers experiences in the pro ranks if you have any doubts) got a chance to shine.
I have to confess that the style of riding never really stirred the soul. The Borg strung out on the front of the Peloton - echoes of The Disco Days / Posties. Superdomestiques (although in reality thats always happened - ref La Vie Clare, just not quite with the same brutal efficiency). Power meters and riding by the numbers. Cycling as science not art. Effective but little panache. But after all it is professional sport. Times have changed from the days of Coppi disappearing up the road and never being seen again, or Merckx attacking just because he could, even though he was winning the tour by 10 minutes already. These days, if you want to win you pretty much have to be like Sky. They took the template started by LeMond, carried on by Armstrong and took it to the next level (professionalism, not the other thing). They pushed things a bit too close to / over the edge sometimes, but in reality every other team pretty much does the same, or would do if they had the chance. They're not whiter than white, but they're not Festina either.
They've set up a good business model - riders have long contracts. Its a proper corporate entity run like a business. Suspect the team will largely stay together as long as someone steps in soon. If they have 3 or 5 year contracts in place then I suspect that Sky will have underwritten them so probably no real incentive for anyone to rush to jump ship.
Just as Reynolds became Banesto, Caisse d'Epargne and then Movistar, maybe Sky will become Barclays, Tesla, Sanofi, whatever.
Has been a great era for British cycling, and we owe Sky pretty much 100% for that. Hopefully the structures that success has allowed to be put in place and the renewed interest in cycling will mean that Britain remains a force in world cycling, although I doubt we'll ever see the like of the last 7 years again.