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Victim of a fall, Primoz Roglic retires

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Victim of a fall, Primoz Roglic retires

PHOTO ANDER GILLENEA, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ARCHIVES

Primoz Roglic fell heavily some 75 yards from the finish line as he tried to win the 16e stage.

(Madrid) Primoz Roglic’s unprecedented quest to win a fourth Tour of Spain came to an end on Wednesday when he retired from competition following a crash he was involved in the day before.

The Jumbo-Visma team announced that the Slovenian would not start the 17e stage on Wednesday, in the south of the country.

Roglic fell heavily some 75 yards from the finish line as he tried to win the 16e stage. When he finally crossed the wire, it was covered in bruises and bleeding from his leg, shoulder and right arm.

The injuries didn’t seem serious, but the team and the rider decided it was best not to continue the competition.

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Roglic had slowly but surely narrowed the gap separating him from the leader in the general classification, Remco Evenepoel, who now has the path wide open to victory, which would be his first in the Grand Tours.

The 22-year-old Belgian from the Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl team had a lead of one minute, 26 seconds (1:26) ahead of Roglic. He is more than two minutes ahead of the Spaniard Enric Mas (Movistar), his closest pursuer.

The three-week race will end on Sunday, at the conclusion of the 21e stage in Madrid. The cyclists will face another difficult stage on Wednesday, including an uphill finish at the monastery of Tentudia.

Aged 32, Roglic was trying to join Spaniard Roberto Heras, the only cyclist with four Vuelta titles. Heras won the race in 2000, then from 2003 to 2005. Tony Rominger and Alberto Contador are the only other cyclists with three crowns in Spain.

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Source: lapresse

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Cycling

Chris Froome back in training after serious accident

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Chris Froome back in training after serious accident

(Paris) Four-time Tour de France winner Chris Froome is back in the saddle.

Less than three months after undergoing surgery following a serious accident, the 40-year-old British cyclist posted a selfie on Instagram showing himself on a road on the French Riviera. Dressed in his workout gear and smiling, he posed with the sunrise in the background.

Froome suffered fractures to a vertebra, five ribs and a collapsed lung in a training accident in France.

“It’s been a tough road after my last accident, but it feels so good to finally be back here, pedaling and riding on the road,” Froome wrote. Every setback teaches you something…this one reminded me to slow down, heal, and enjoy the simple things in life. »

Froome’s contract with Israel-Premier Tech – which will change its name to NSN Cycling Team in 2026 – will expire this year. He has not yet announced his plans for next season.

Froome won the Tour de France in 2013, then three times in a row between 2015 and 2017.

His career was cut short in 2019 when he fell in training during the Critérium du Dauphiné, a preparatory event ahead of his quest for a fifth Grande Boucle title, which would have tied the record. He fractured his right femur, elbow and several ribs, preventing him from participating in the Tour de France.

After returning to competition, Froome never returned to the level that allowed him to win the Spanish Vuelta (in 2011 and 2017) and the Giro d’Italia (2018), in addition to his four victories at the Tour de France.


Source: lapresse

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Israel Premier Tech becomes NSN Cycling Team

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Israel Premier Tech becomes NSN Cycling Team

(Paris) The Israel Premier Tech cycling team, whose presence was denounced during several races this season by pro-Palestinian demonstrators, is changing its name and structure and becoming “NSN Cycling Team”, the latter said on Thursday.

“International sports and entertainment company NSN (Never Say Never) and Stoneweg, a global investment platform based in Geneva, Switzerland, have entered into a joint venture in professional road cycling to take over the structure of the WorldTour and Development teams (from Israel Premier Tech, Editor’s note) for the 2026 season,” it is indicated in a press release.

“As a result, the name of the new World Tour team is “NSN Cycling Team”. »

The text further emphasizes that the new team is of “Swiss” nationality and that its structure will be “Spanish”, based in Barcelona and Girona, in Catalonia. Among the co-founders of the NSN company is one of the legends of FC Barcelona, ​​and former Spanish international, Andres Iniesta.

This formation replaces Israel PT, whose presence in the peloton has been contested on several occasions this season by pro-Palestinian demonstrators, in particular during the Tour of Spain, against a backdrop of conflict in the Gaza Strip.

At the beginning of the month, the Canadian group Premier Tech announced that it was withdrawing from the team with immediate effect, deeming it “unsustainable” to continue to sponsor it.

“Although we have noted the team’s decision to continue under a new name for the 2026 season, the very reason for our commitment to it has been eclipsed to such an extent that it is now unsustainable for Premier Tech to continue in its role as sponsor,” Premier Tech argued.

A month earlier, the Israel PT team had actually announced that it would change its name and move away from “its current Israeli identity”. She added that its owner, Israeli-Canadian billionaire Sylvan Adams, would step back and would “no longer speak on behalf of the team”.

“We are proud to welcome NSN and Stoneweg to the team and to announce our new name and our new identity,” reacted Thursday the general director of NSN Cycling Team, Kjell Carlström, quoted in the press release.

According to the text, a training camp is planned for next week, while the team’s new colors and program will be revealed “in the coming weeks”.

Source: lapresse

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Cycling

Premier Tech engages with a French women’s team

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Premier Tech engages with a French women’s team

Having been convalescing for a few weeks following an operation, Clara Émond was returning to training in the French Pyrenees in August, when Simone Boilard came to join her with important information to pass on to her: Premier Tech was ready to invest in women’s cycling.

The project came to fruition and was made official on Tuesday: the Rivière-du-Loup multinational will be a “partner” for two years of the French team St Michel-Preference Home-Auber93. Premier Tech will not be integrated into the name, but its logo will be displayed on the uniform of the team which holds a ProTeam license (second division).

“This opportunity fully aligns with the reasons why Premier Tech has been involved in cycling for more than 30 years, namely to create bridges at all levels of the sport and to contribute to the development of Quebec and Canadian cyclists,” said President and CEO, Jean Bélanger, in a press release.

Thus, the billionaire company, which recently announced its withdrawal from the Israel-Premier Tech men’s team, “facilitated” the arrival of Boilard and Émond, both from the Quebec region, and of Albertan Alison Jackson, Canadian champion who made herself known by winning Paris-Roubaix in 2023.

The three cyclists signed two-year contracts.

St Michel-Preference Home-Auber93, a structure founded in 1994, has been a mixed team since 2012. Its women’s section, in which Premier Tech will be the most involved, took on a professional dimension in 2021.

Both for Émond, winner of a stage at the Giro, and for Boilard, bronze medalist at the 2018 Junior World Championships, this commitment from Premier Tech is an opportunity to relaunch their careers.

“It will be a lot of changes, but after a difficult year like this, I think it will just be positive,” commented Clara Émond, reached in Spain a few hours after the announcement.

PHOTO ANOUK FLESCH, PROVIDED BY EF EDUCATION–OATLY

Quebecer Clara Émond during her stage victory at the Tour of Italy in July 2024

Émond, 28, has raced very little since her historic victory in Italy in July 2024. After suffering a knee injury, the representative of the EF Education-Oatly team (WorldTour) fractured her collarbone, shoulder blade and ribs during an accident in training in June. Upon her return to competition in September, she competed in only three races before suffering a concussion in a crash at the Wallonie Grand Prix.

His arrival at St Michel-Preference Home-Auber93 is “a new beginning”. “We’re going to get back into it in an environment with a little less pressure,” judged Émond. I will have many more opportunities to race for myself, to have more interesting roles and to do more races. »

The last season with EF, where she ran with Jackson, was sometimes difficult for the law school graduate. “It was a frustrating year, both for me, because it was out of my control, and for the team, because I couldn’t race. In the medium term, this sometimes makes relationships more difficult with the team. I didn’t always feel supported either. My first contact with [St Michel] was really very good. They trust me. It’s a new beginning. »

The athlete from Saint-Ferréol-les-Neiges expects to compete in the Ardennes classics, the Vuelta and the Tour de France under his new colors. The Giro, which changes dates, represents a question mark for St Michel. Émond will also have the opportunity to compete in smaller events where victory will be more within reach.

For her part, Simone Boilard returns to the fold after a more difficult final season in the Norwegian WorldTour team Uno-X Mobility, among other things due to health concerns. The 25-year-old cyclist experienced her greatest professional successes with St Michel in 2022 and 2023, including a victory at the GP Oetingen.


PHOTO PROVIDED BY UNO-X MOBILITY

Quebecer Simone Boilard

“This return to basics seems essential to me,” she stressed on her social networks last month. “Being able to find a familiar environment, and above all sharing it with other Canadian women, represents an important step in rediscovering the joy of cycling. »

A bridge to Europe

Clara Émond applauds the arrival of Premier Tech in the booming women’s sport: “It has grown. We see this for example with women’s soccer. It deserves the attention of big companies. A developing team like that is a very good opportunity for Premier Tech to get a foothold in women’s cycling and hope to grow with this team. »


PHOTO ROBERT SKINNER, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Albertan Alison Jackson

The presence of Premier Tech should also serve as a springboard for Canadian women’s cycling, added Émond. She herself made the jump to Europe in 2022 thanks to the Franco-Canadian training Emotional.fr-Tornatech-GSC Blagnac VS31, largely supported by Quebec sports director Gérard Penarroya. This first experience allowed him to compete in a first Tour de France (23e) with Arkéa and then found himself at EF.


PHOTO STUART FRANKLIN, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ARCHIVES

A stage of the women’s Tour de France

The same Penarroya is also relaunching a new project with Quebecers Laury Millette, Jazmine Lavergne and Mathilde Huot. These will be able to continue to evolve in Europe next season with the help of local companies such as Macogep, Magnan Design, the microbrewery Siboire and the chocolatier Jeff de Bruges.

“It’s still very difficult to bridge the gap,” emphasized Émond. In the long term, a Canadian team could bring a lot of talent from here to Europe. Despite our small number [dans le peloton professionnel]we have very, very good cyclists in Canada. It can only get bigger. »

The spectacular victory of her now ex-teammate Magdeleine Vallières Mill at the World Championships in Kigali and the holding of the competition in Montreal in September 2026 will be two other accelerators. “The timing couldn’t be better,” concluded Émond.

Source: lapresse

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