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Groupama–FDJ

Groupama–FDJ[2] (UCI team code: GFC) is a French cycling team at UCI WorldTeam level. The team is managed by Marc Madiot, a former road bicycle racer and winner of the Paris–Roubaix classic in 1985 and 1991. The team is predominantly French.

Groupama–FDJ
Team information
UCI codeGFC
RegisteredFrance
Founded1997 (1997)
Discipline(s)Road
StatusUCI WorldTeam
BicyclesLapierre
ComponentsShimano
WebsiteTeam home page
Key personnel
General managerMarc Madiot
Team name history
1997–2002 La Française des Jeux
2003–2004 FDJeux.com
2005–2010[N 1] La Française des Jeux
2010–2011[N 2] FDJ
2012 FDJ–BigMat
2013[N 3] FDJ
2013–2014[N 4] FDJ.fr
2015–2018 FDJ[1]
2018– Groupama–FDJ
Current season
Lövkvist signing in at Tarbes during the 2006 Tour de France

History

The team was founded on the initiative of Marc Madiot after he retired from racing in 1994 following a leg-breaking crash in that year's edition of Paris–Roubaix. After a period in the mid-1990s when the professional cycling scene in France was contracting – resulting in the 1996 French National Road Race Championships elite race being held on a pro–am basis due to the reduced number of professional riders – by the time of the team's launch in 1997 they faced competition for riders in France from fellow newcomers Cofidis as well as the expanding Casino team and the already established GAN outfit. The team's initial lineup included younger French riders such as teenagers Nicolas Vogondy and Damien Nazon as well as more experienced foreign racers like Davide Rebellin, Mauro Gianetti, Max Sciandri and Andrea Peron. The inaugural squad also included the reigning French national champions in road racing, time trialling and cyclo-cross – Stéphane Heulot, Eddy Seigneur and Christophe Mengin respectively.[3]

In their first season the team only took a total of 13 wins and won the UCI Road World Cup – however these included several high-profile victories such as Frédéric Guesdon's triumph at Paris–Roubaix, a stage win for Mengin at the Tour de France and victories for Rebellin at the Clásica de San Sebastián and Züri-Metzgete.[3]

In the 2003 edition of Tour de France, Australian individual time trial specialist Bradley McGee won the prologue stage to wear the yellow jersey for a few days. McGee was also able to win the prologue of the following year's Giro d'Italia, wore the pink jersey for three days and finished the race in the top ten (finishing eighth). Sprinter Baden Cooke won the green jersey for the points competition.

On 31 October 2012, it emerged that BigMat would no longer sponsor the team, with the team choosing to focus on finding another co-sponsor for the 2014 season.[4]

Sponsorship

The team has been sponsored by Française des Jeux – the operator of France's national lottery – since its founding in 1997. Française des Jeux owns a majority of shares in the team, and the team is based in a warehouse owned by Française des Jeux on the outskirts of Paris: according to Madiot the team and the sponsor have a close working relationship.[3] The team was named FDJeux.com in 2003 and 2004, then renamed Française des Jeux, supposedly to avoid bad luck, until July 2010, when the name was simplified to its initials. Prior to the 2012 season, French building merchants BigMat joined the team as co-sponsors, becoming FDJ–BigMat, contributing €2 million to the team.[5][6] Following the departure of BigMat, the team renamed itself FDJ.fr. At the end of 2017, the team announced that they secured a sponsorship deal with French insurance group Groupama for the 2018 season, becoming Groupama–FDJ, contributing investment that increased the team's budget from €16 million to €20 million for next season.[7]

Doping

In February 2019, Austrian newspaper Kronen Zeitung broke news that a number of professional cyclists had been implicated in the doping scandal uncovered at the 2019 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships. Georg Preidler confessed to having his blood extracted for a possible transfusion. On 3 March, Preidler confessed to Austrian police, whilst also terminating his contract with the team via email. Preidler was due to race during the previous weekend, later admitting to having his blood drawn on two occasions late in 2018. The team then contacted the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI), the French Anti-Doping Agency (French: Agence française de lutte contre le dopage) and the Mouvement pour un cyclisme crédible (MPCC; English: Movement for Credible Cycling).[8][9]

Team roster

As of 10 January 2023.[10]
Rider Date of birth
  Bruno Armirail (FRA) (1994-04-11) 11 April 1994 (age 29)
  Lewis Askey (GBR) (2001-05-04) 4 May 2001 (age 22)
  Clément Davy (FRA) (1998-07-17) 17 July 1998 (age 24)
  Arnaud Démare (FRA) (1991-08-26) 26 August 1991 (age 31)
  David Gaudu (FRA) (1996-10-10) 10 October 1996 (age 26)
  Kévin Geniets (LUX) (1997-01-09) 9 January 1997 (age 26)
  Lorenzo Germani (ITA) (2002-03-03) 3 March 2002 (age 21)
  Romain Grégoire (FRA) (2003-01-21) 21 January 2003 (age 20)
  Ignatas Konovalovas (LIT) (1985-12-08) 8 December 1985 (age 37)
  Stefan Küng (SUI) (1993-11-16) 16 November 1993 (age 29)
  Mathieu Ladagnous (FRA) (1984-12-12) 12 December 1984 (age 38)
  Olivier Le Gac (FRA) (1993-08-27) 27 August 1993 (age 29)
  Fabian Lienhard (SUI) (1993-09-03) 3 September 1993 (age 29)
  Valentin Madouas (FRA) (1996-07-12) 12 July 1996 (age 26)
Rider Date of birth
  Lenny Martinez (FRA) (2003-07-11) 11 July 2003 (age 19)
  Rudy Molard (FRA) (1989-09-17) 17 September 1989 (age 33)
  Quentin Pacher (FRA) (1992-01-06) 6 January 1992 (age 31)
  Enzo Paleni (FRA) (2002-05-30) 30 May 2002 (age 20)
  Paul Penhoët (FRA) (2001-12-28) 28 December 2001 (age 21)
  Thibaut Pinot (FRA) (1990-05-29) 29 May 1990 (age 32)
  Laurence Pithie (NZL) (2002-07-17) 17 July 2002 (age 20)
  Miles Scotson (AUS) (1994-01-18) 18 January 1994 (age 29)
  Jake Stewart (GBR) (1999-10-02) 2 October 1999 (age 23)
  Michael Storer (AUS) (1997-02-28) 28 February 1997 (age 26)
  Reuben Thompson (NZL) (2001-02-15) 15 February 2001 (age 22)
  Lars van den Berg (NED) (1998-07-07) 7 July 1998 (age 24)
  Samuel Watson (GBR) (2001-09-24) 24 September 2001 (age 21)
  Bram Welten (NED) (1997-03-29) 29 March 1997 (age 26)

Major wins

Continental & National champions

1998
  French Cyclo-cross Christophe Mengin
2002
  French Road Race Nicolas Vogondy
2004
  Australian Road Race Matthew Wilson
  Swedish Time Trial Thomas Löfkvist
  French Track (Individual pursuit) Nicolas Vogondy
2005
  French Cyclo-cross Francis Mourey
  Finnish Road Race Jussi Veikkanen
  French Track (Team pursuit) Nicolas Vogondy
2006
  Finnish Road Race Jussi Veikkanen
  Finnish Cyclo-cross Jussi Veikkanen
  Swedish Time Trial Gustav Larsson
  Swedish Road Race Thomas Löfkvist
  French Track (Team pursuit) Mathieu Ladagnous
  French Track (Team pursuit) Mickaël Delage
2007
  French Cyclo-cross Francis Mourey
  French Time Trial Benoît Vaugrenard
2008
  French Cyclo-cross Francis Mourey
  Belarusian Road Race Yauheni Hutarovich
  Finnish Road Race Jussi Veikkanen
2009
  Belarusian Road Race Yauheni Hutarovich
2010
  Finnish Road Race Jussi Veikkanen
2011
  French Cyclo-cross Francis Mourey
  French Track (Individual pursuit) Mathieu Ladagnous
  U23 World Road Race, Arnaud Démare
2012
  Belarusian Road Race Yauheni Hutarovich
  French Road Race Nacer Bouhanni
2013
  Finnish Road Race Jussi Veikkanen
  French Cyclo-cross Francis Mourey
  French Road Race Arthur Vichot
2014
  Finnish Road Race Jussi Veikkanen
  French Cyclo-cross Francis Mourey
  French Road Race Arnaud Démare
2016
  French Road Race Arthur Vichot
  French Time Trial Thibaut Pinot
  Lithuanian Time Trial Ignatas Konovalovas
2017
  Swedish Time Trial Tobias Ludvigsson
  Lithuanian Time Trial Ignatas Konovalovas
  French Road Race Arnaud Démare
  Lithuanian Road Race Ignatas Konovalovas
2018
  Swedish Time Trial Tobias Ludvigsson
  Canadian Road Race Antoine Duchesne
  Austrian Time Trial Georg Preidler
  Swiss Road Race Steve Morabito
  French Road Race Anthony Roux
  French U23 Time Trial Alexys Brunel
2019
  Swiss Time Trial Stefan Küng
  French Time Trial Benjamin Thomas
  Luxembourg U23 Time Trial Kevin Geniets
  Swiss Road Race Sébastien Reichenbach
  Swedish Time Trial Tobias Ludvigsson
  European Track (Omnium) Benjamin Thomas
2020
  Swiss Time Trial Stefan Küng
  French Road Race Arnaud Démare
  Luxembourg Road Race Kevin Geniets
  European Time Trial Stefan Küng
  Swiss Road Race Stefan Küng
2021
  Swiss Time Trial Stefan Küng
  French Time Trial Benjamin Thomas
  Luxembourg Time Trial Kevin Geniets
  Luxembourg Road Race Kevin Geniets
  Lithuanian Road Race Ignatas Konovalovas
  European Time Trial Stefan Küng
2022
  French Time Trial Bruno Armirail
  Hungarian Road Race Attila Valter

Notes

  1. ^ 2005–June 2010
  2. ^ July 2010–2011
  3. ^ Jan–June 2013
  4. ^ June 2013–2014

References

  1. ^ Stephen Farrand (21 November 2014). "FDJ reveal new 2015 team colours". Cyclingnews.com.
  2. ^ [Press communication]. FDJ.fr (in French). Société de Gestion de L'Echappée. 24 June 2013. Archived from the original on 27 June 2013. Retrieved 1 July 2013.
  3. ^ a b c Quénet, Jean-François (2 March 2017). "20 years of FDJ: Marc Madiot looks back on the 'fairy tale'". cyclingnews.com. Retrieved 2 March 2017.
  4. ^ "BigMat pulls out of FDJ as co-sponsor". Cycling News. 1 November 2012. Retrieved 1 November 2012.
  5. ^ Atkins, Ben (23 November 2011). "BigMat joins FDJ as name sponsor in 2012". VeloNation. VeloNation LLC. Retrieved 2 January 2012.
  6. ^ "BigMat joins FDJ as co-sponsor in 2012". Cycling News. 24 November 2011. Retrieved 2 January 2012.
  7. ^ Robertshaw, Henry (6 December 2017). "FDJ team to become Groupama-FDJ in 2018 season, with big budget increase". Cycling Weekly. Retrieved 6 September 2019.
  8. ^ "Preidler admits to blood extraction as doping investigation widens". Cyclingnews.com. 4 March 2019. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
  9. ^ "Madiot expresses 'surprise' and 'enormous disappointment' at Preidler doping confession". Cyclingnews.com. 4 March 2019. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
  10. ^ "Groupama – FDJ". UCI.org. Union Cycliste Internationale. Retrieved 9 January 2023.

External links

  • Official website

groupama, team, code, french, cycling, team, worldteam, level, team, managed, marc, madiot, former, road, bicycle, racer, winner, paris, roubaix, classic, 1985, 1991, team, predominantly, french, team, informationuci, codegfcregisteredfrancefounded1997, 1997, . Groupama FDJ 2 UCI team code GFC is a French cycling team at UCI WorldTeam level The team is managed by Marc Madiot a former road bicycle racer and winner of the Paris Roubaix classic in 1985 and 1991 The team is predominantly French Groupama FDJTeam informationUCI codeGFCRegisteredFranceFounded1997 1997 Discipline s RoadStatusUCI WorldTeamBicyclesLapierreComponentsShimanoWebsiteTeam home pageKey personnelGeneral managerMarc MadiotTeam name history1997 2002La Francaise des Jeux2003 2004FDJeux com2005 2010 N 1 La Francaise des Jeux2010 2011 N 2 FDJ2012FDJ BigMat2013 N 3 FDJ2013 2014 N 4 FDJ fr2015 2018FDJ 1 2018 Groupama FDJCurrent seasonLovkvist signing in at Tarbes during the 2006 Tour de France Contents 1 History 2 Sponsorship 3 Doping 4 Team roster 5 Major wins 6 Continental amp National champions 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditThe team was founded on the initiative of Marc Madiot after he retired from racing in 1994 following a leg breaking crash in that year s edition of Paris Roubaix After a period in the mid 1990s when the professional cycling scene in France was contracting resulting in the 1996 French National Road Race Championships elite race being held on a pro am basis due to the reduced number of professional riders by the time of the team s launch in 1997 they faced competition for riders in France from fellow newcomers Cofidis as well as the expanding Casino team and the already established GAN outfit The team s initial lineup included younger French riders such as teenagers Nicolas Vogondy and Damien Nazon as well as more experienced foreign racers like Davide Rebellin Mauro Gianetti Max Sciandri and Andrea Peron The inaugural squad also included the reigning French national champions in road racing time trialling and cyclo cross Stephane Heulot Eddy Seigneur and Christophe Mengin respectively 3 In their first season the team only took a total of 13 wins and won the UCI Road World Cup however these included several high profile victories such as Frederic Guesdon s triumph at Paris Roubaix a stage win for Mengin at the Tour de France and victories for Rebellin at the Clasica de San Sebastian and Zuri Metzgete 3 In the 2003 edition of Tour de France Australian individual time trial specialist Bradley McGee won the prologue stage to wear the yellow jersey for a few days McGee was also able to win the prologue of the following year s Giro d Italia wore the pink jersey for three days and finished the race in the top ten finishing eighth Sprinter Baden Cooke won the green jersey for the points competition On 31 October 2012 it emerged that BigMat would no longer sponsor the team with the team choosing to focus on finding another co sponsor for the 2014 season 4 Sponsorship EditThe team has been sponsored by Francaise des Jeux the operator of France s national lottery since its founding in 1997 Francaise des Jeux owns a majority of shares in the team and the team is based in a warehouse owned by Francaise des Jeux on the outskirts of Paris according to Madiot the team and the sponsor have a close working relationship 3 The team was named FDJeux com in 2003 and 2004 then renamed Francaise des Jeux supposedly to avoid bad luck until July 2010 when the name was simplified to its initials Prior to the 2012 season French building merchants BigMat joined the team as co sponsors becoming FDJ BigMat contributing 2 million to the team 5 6 Following the departure of BigMat the team renamed itself FDJ fr At the end of 2017 the team announced that they secured a sponsorship deal with French insurance group Groupama for the 2018 season becoming Groupama FDJ contributing investment that increased the team s budget from 16 million to 20 million for next season 7 Doping EditIn February 2019 Austrian newspaper Kronen Zeitung broke news that a number of professional cyclists had been implicated in the doping scandal uncovered at the 2019 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships Georg Preidler confessed to having his blood extracted for a possible transfusion On 3 March Preidler confessed to Austrian police whilst also terminating his contract with the team via email Preidler was due to race during the previous weekend later admitting to having his blood drawn on two occasions late in 2018 The team then contacted the Union Cycliste Internationale UCI the French Anti Doping Agency French Agence francaise de lutte contre le dopage and the Mouvement pour un cyclisme credible MPCC English Movement for Credible Cycling 8 9 Team roster EditAs of 10 January 2023 10 Rider Date of birth Bruno Armirail FRA 1994 04 11 11 April 1994 age 29 Lewis Askey GBR 2001 05 04 4 May 2001 age 22 Clement Davy FRA 1998 07 17 17 July 1998 age 24 Arnaud Demare FRA 1991 08 26 26 August 1991 age 31 David Gaudu FRA 1996 10 10 10 October 1996 age 26 Kevin Geniets LUX 1997 01 09 9 January 1997 age 26 Lorenzo Germani ITA 2002 03 03 3 March 2002 age 21 Romain Gregoire FRA 2003 01 21 21 January 2003 age 20 Ignatas Konovalovas LIT 1985 12 08 8 December 1985 age 37 Stefan Kung SUI 1993 11 16 16 November 1993 age 29 Mathieu Ladagnous FRA 1984 12 12 12 December 1984 age 38 Olivier Le Gac FRA 1993 08 27 27 August 1993 age 29 Fabian Lienhard SUI 1993 09 03 3 September 1993 age 29 Valentin Madouas FRA 1996 07 12 12 July 1996 age 26 Rider Date of birth Lenny Martinez FRA 2003 07 11 11 July 2003 age 19 Rudy Molard FRA 1989 09 17 17 September 1989 age 33 Quentin Pacher FRA 1992 01 06 6 January 1992 age 31 Enzo Paleni FRA 2002 05 30 30 May 2002 age 20 Paul Penhoet FRA 2001 12 28 28 December 2001 age 21 Thibaut Pinot FRA 1990 05 29 29 May 1990 age 32 Laurence Pithie NZL 2002 07 17 17 July 2002 age 20 Miles Scotson AUS 1994 01 18 18 January 1994 age 29 Jake Stewart GBR 1999 10 02 2 October 1999 age 23 Michael Storer AUS 1997 02 28 28 February 1997 age 26 Reuben Thompson NZL 2001 02 15 15 February 2001 age 22 Lars van den Berg NED 1998 07 07 7 July 1998 age 24 Samuel Watson GBR 2001 09 24 24 September 2001 age 21 Bram Welten NED 1997 03 29 29 March 1997 age 26 Major wins EditMain article List of wins by La Francaise des Jeux and its successorsContinental amp National champions Edit1998 French Cyclo cross Christophe Mengin 2002 French Road Race Nicolas Vogondy 2004 Australian Road Race Matthew Wilson Swedish Time Trial Thomas Lofkvist French Track Individual pursuit Nicolas Vogondy 2005 French Cyclo cross Francis Mourey Finnish Road Race Jussi Veikkanen French Track Team pursuit Nicolas Vogondy 2006 Finnish Road Race Jussi Veikkanen Finnish Cyclo cross Jussi Veikkanen Swedish Time Trial Gustav Larsson Swedish Road Race Thomas Lofkvist French Track Team pursuit Mathieu Ladagnous French Track Team pursuit Mickael Delage 2007 French Cyclo cross Francis Mourey French Time Trial Benoit Vaugrenard 2008 French Cyclo cross Francis Mourey Belarusian Road Race Yauheni Hutarovich Finnish Road Race Jussi Veikkanen 2009 Belarusian Road Race Yauheni Hutarovich 2010 Finnish Road Race Jussi Veikkanen 2011 French Cyclo cross Francis Mourey French Track Individual pursuit Mathieu Ladagnous U23 World Road Race Arnaud Demare 2012 Belarusian Road Race Yauheni Hutarovich French Road Race Nacer Bouhanni 2013 Finnish Road Race Jussi Veikkanen French Cyclo cross Francis Mourey French Road Race Arthur Vichot 2014 Finnish Road Race Jussi Veikkanen French Cyclo cross Francis Mourey French Road Race Arnaud Demare 2016 French Road Race Arthur Vichot French Time Trial Thibaut Pinot Lithuanian Time Trial Ignatas Konovalovas 2017 Swedish Time Trial Tobias Ludvigsson Lithuanian Time Trial Ignatas Konovalovas French Road Race Arnaud Demare Lithuanian Road Race Ignatas Konovalovas 2018 Swedish Time Trial Tobias Ludvigsson Canadian Road Race Antoine Duchesne Austrian Time Trial Georg Preidler Swiss Road Race Steve Morabito French Road Race Anthony Roux French U23 Time Trial Alexys Brunel 2019 Swiss Time Trial Stefan Kung French Time Trial Benjamin Thomas Luxembourg U23 Time Trial Kevin Geniets Swiss Road Race Sebastien Reichenbach Swedish Time Trial Tobias Ludvigsson European Track Omnium Benjamin Thomas 2020 Swiss Time Trial Stefan Kung French Road Race Arnaud Demare Luxembourg Road Race Kevin Geniets European Time Trial Stefan Kung Swiss Road Race Stefan Kung 2021 Swiss Time Trial Stefan Kung French Time Trial Benjamin Thomas Luxembourg Time Trial Kevin Geniets Luxembourg Road Race Kevin Geniets Lithuanian Road Race Ignatas Konovalovas European Time Trial Stefan Kung 2022 French Time Trial Bruno Armirail Hungarian Road Race Attila ValterNotes Edit 2005 June 2010 July 2010 2011 Jan June 2013 June 2013 2014References Edit Stephen Farrand 21 November 2014 FDJ reveal new 2015 team colours Cyclingnews com Communique de Presse Press communication FDJ fr in French Societe de Gestion de L Echappee 24 June 2013 Archived from the original on 27 June 2013 Retrieved 1 July 2013 a b c Quenet Jean Francois 2 March 2017 20 years of FDJ Marc Madiot looks back on the fairy tale cyclingnews com Retrieved 2 March 2017 BigMat pulls out of FDJ as co sponsor Cycling News 1 November 2012 Retrieved 1 November 2012 Atkins Ben 23 November 2011 BigMat joins FDJ as name sponsor in 2012 VeloNation VeloNation LLC Retrieved 2 January 2012 BigMat joins FDJ as co sponsor in 2012 Cycling News 24 November 2011 Retrieved 2 January 2012 Robertshaw Henry 6 December 2017 FDJ team to become Groupama FDJ in 2018 season with big budget increase Cycling Weekly Retrieved 6 September 2019 Preidler admits to blood extraction as doping investigation widens Cyclingnews com 4 March 2019 Retrieved 5 March 2019 Madiot expresses surprise and enormous disappointment at Preidler doping confession Cyclingnews com 4 March 2019 Retrieved 5 March 2019 Groupama FDJ UCI org Union Cycliste Internationale Retrieved 9 January 2023 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to FDJ cycling team Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Groupama FDJ amp oldid 1139371423, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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