2010 Team Sky season
Team Sky | |
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2010 season | |
![]() The team at the 2010 Cancer Council Helpline Classic
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UCI code | SKY |
Status | UCI ProTeam |
World Ranking | 15th (435 points) |
Manager | Dave Brailsford |
Main sponsor(s) | BSkyB |
Based | United Kingdom |
Bicycles | Pinarello |
Groupset | Shimano |
Season victories | |
One-day races | 3 |
Stage race overall | 2 |
Stage race stages | 15 |
National Championships | 3 |
Most Wins | Greg Henderson (5 wins) |
Best ranked rider | Edvald Boasson Hagen (17th) |
The 2010 season for Team Sky, its first, began in January with the Tour Down Under. As a UCI ProTour team, they are automatically invited and obliged to attend every event in the ProTour. The team formed for the 2010 season as part of an initiative by British Cycling to produce the first ever British Tour de France winner within five years. Much of the team's ridership is British, most of it is anglophone, and the team competes under a British license. Its manager is Dave Brailsford, the former Performance Director of British Cycling. Senior Director Sportif is ex-professional road cyclist and Australian Scott Sunderland. Team Sky's other Sports Directors are former professional cyclists Marcus Ljungqvist from Sweden, the Briton Sean Yates, and Steven De Jongh from the Netherlands.
Contents
2010 roster
Ages as of January 1, 2010.
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- Riders' 2009 teams
One-day races
Before the spring season began, the team took a victory in its first-ever race. Henderson was the team's captain for the Cancer Council Helpline Classic, a 51 km (32 mi) criterium run two days before the Tour Down Under with the same peloton, but not counting toward its standings. Team Sky was largely responsible for bringing back a breakaway that included Lance Armstrong and Óscar Pereiro, with Downing and Sutton leading Henderson out to the sprint win. Sutton finished the race in second place just behind Henderson.[1]
National championships
At the British National Road Race Championships Team Sky controlled the men's race ending with riders in the top three positions. Geraint Thomas won the race, Peter Kennaugh came second and Ian Stannard came third. In the British National Time Trial Championships again claimed the top three with Bradley Wiggins retaining his title. In Norway Edvald Boasson Hagen won his National Time Trial Championships for the fourth time.
Stage races
Henderson finished third overall in the Tour Down Under, after taking second place on stages 2 and 6 of the six-stage race. His teammate Sutton was the rider to beat him on the final stage.[2] The team won the team time trial stage which opened the Tour of Qatar, giving Boasson Hagen the race lead.[3] He lost it the next day, when attacks from Quick-Step and Cervélo TestTeam caught the team unaware and then, when the team had almost paced him back into the leading group, he suffered a puncture.[4]
Later in February, at the inaugural Tour of Oman, Boasson Hagen again took race leadership, with third in a sprint to finish the race's second stage.[5] He extended his lead with a victory in stage 3,[6] but lost it the next day in a controversial stage 4. After Team Sky, who were pacing the peloton as the team of the race leader, let a morning breakaway get over seven minutes on a flat course, emotions ran high when no team seemed willing to help them bring the group back. Sky riders responded by pulling the peloton quickly through the stage's feed zone, something which is normally not done. Later, Cervélo TestTeam attacked 56 km (35 mi) from the end of the stage, while Boasson Hagen had stopped to urinate at the side of the road, also something which is normally not done. Boasson Hagen lost a minute and five seconds on the stage, and the race leader's red jersey.[7] Boasson Hagen went on to win the stage 6 time trial to close the event, winning the points and youth classifications in the race and finishing second overall.[8]
Grand Tours
Giro d'Italia
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Tour de France
The team were awarded a wild-card entry for the 2010 Tour de France.[9]
Vuelta a España
Team Sky received an invite to participate in the 2010 Vuelta a España.[10]
During the race, many of the team's riders and staff contracted an unknown virus. John Lee Augustyn, Juan Antonio Flecha, and Ben Swift were forced to retire from the race due to illness.[11] Soigneur Txema Gonzalez died five days after being admitted to hospital due to an unrelated bacterial infection, with the team withdrawing from the race before the start of stage eight.[12]
Season victories
Date | Race | Competition | Rider | Country | Location |
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January 17[1] | Cancer Council Helpline Classic | None | ![]() |
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Rymill Park, Adelaide |
January 24[2] | Tour Down Under, Stage 6 | UCI ProTour | ![]() |
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Adelaide |
February 7[3] | Tour of Qatar, Stage 1 | UCI Asia Tour | Team time trial[N 1] | ![]() |
West Bay Lagoon |
February 16[6] | Tour of Oman, Stage 3 | UCI Asia Tour | ![]() |
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Qurayyat |
February 19[8] | Tour of Oman, Stage 6 | UCI Asia Tour | ![]() |
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Muscat |
February 19[8] | Tour of Oman, Points classification | UCI Asia Tour | ![]() |
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February 19[8] | Tour of Oman, Young rider classification | UCI Asia Tour | ![]() |
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February 27[13] | Omloop Het Nieuwsblad | UCI Europe Tour | ![]() |
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Ghent |
March 8[14] | Paris–Nice, Stage 1 | UCI World Ranking | ![]() |
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Contres |
March 16[15] | Tirreno–Adriatico, Stage 7 | UCI World Ranking | ![]() |
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San Benedetto del Tronto |
March 28[16] | Critérium International, Stage 2 | UCI Europe Tour | ![]() |
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Porto-Vecchio |
May 8[17] | Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 | UCI World Ranking | ![]() |
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Amsterdam |
May 15[18] | Tour de Picardie, Stage 2 | UCI Europe Tour | ![]() |
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Cires-lès-Mello |
May 16[19] | Tour de Picardie, General classification | UCI Europe Tour | ![]() |
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May 16[19] | Tour de Picardie, Points classification | UCI Europe Tour | ![]() |
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May 16[19] | Tour de Picardie, Teams classification | UCI Europe Tour | [N 2] | ![]() |
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May 16[19] | Tour de Picardie, Young rider classification | UCI Europe Tour | ![]() |
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June 13[20] | Critérium du Dauphiné, Stage 7 | UCI ProTour | ![]() |
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Sallanches |
June 18[21] | Ster Elektrotoer, Stage 3 | UCI Europe Tour | ![]() |
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Schimmert |
June 24[22] | Norwegian National Time Trial Championships | National Championship | ![]() |
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Orkanger |
June 27[23] | British National Road Race Championships | National Championship | ![]() |
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Pendle |
July 23[24] | Brixia Tour, Stage 3 | UCI Europe Tour | ![]() |
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Pisogne |
July 28[25] | Tour de Wallonie, Stage 5 | UCI Europe Tour | ![]() |
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Welkenraedt |
July 28[25] | Tour de Wallonie, General classification | UCI Europe Tour | ![]() |
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August 13[25] | Dutch Food Valley Classic | UCI Europe Tour | ![]() |
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Veenendaal |
August 21[25] | Eneco Tour, Stage 4 | UCI ProTour | ![]() |
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Roermond |
August 24 | Eneco Tour, Points classification | UCI ProTour | ![]() |
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September 5 | British National Time Trial Championships | National Championship | ![]() |
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Llandeilo |
September 12 | Tour of Britain, Stage 2 | UCI Europe Tour | ![]() |
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Stoke-on-Trent |
September 18 | Tour of Britain, Points classification | UCI Europe Tour | ![]() |
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Footnotes
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External links
Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons
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