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Visma–Lease a Bike (men's team)

Visma–Lease a Bike is a Dutch professional bicycle racing team, successor of the former Rabobank. The team consists of four sections: ProTeam (the UCI WorldTeam team), Women's Team (the UCI Women's Team), Development Team (a UCI Continental team racing in the UCI Europe Tour), and cyclo-cross.

Visma–Lease a Bike
The team at the 2023 Paris–Nice
Team information
UCI codeTVL
RegisteredNetherlands
Founded1984 (1984)
Discipline(s)Road
StatusUCI WorldTeam
BicyclesColnago (1984–2008)
Giant (2009–2013)
Bianchi (2014–2020)
Cervélo (2021–)
ComponentsSRAM Corporation
WebsiteTeam home page
Key personnel
General managerRichard Plugge
Team name history
1984–1986 Kwantum–Decosol
1987–1989 Superconfex–Yoko
1990–1992 Buckler–Colnago
1993–1994 WordPerfect
1995 Novell
1996–2012 Rabobank
2013 Blanco
2013–2014 Belkin
2015–2018 LottoNL–Jumbo
2019–2023 Team Jumbo–Visma
2024– Visma–Lease a Bike
Current season

The cycling team was founded for the 1984 season under the name Kwantum–Decosol, anchored by Jan Raas, with mostly cyclists coming from the TI–Raleigh cycling team.[1] With Raas as directeur sportif from 1985 onwards, the head sponsor was succeeded by Superconfex, Buckler, WordPerfect and Novell, respectively, before Raas signed a contract with Rabobank, a Dutch association of credit unions, in 1996. After Rabobank sponsorship ended in 2012, it was known as Blanco, Belkin, Lotto-Jumbo, Jumbo–Visma and now Visma-Lease a Bike.

Since 1984, the team has entered every Tour de France[2] and since the introduction of divisions in 1998, the team has always been in the first division.[3] A 2012 investigation by Dutch newspaper de Volkskrant concluded that doping was at least tolerated, from the team's 1996 beginnings as Rabobank until at least 2007.[4]

Team Jumbo-Visma cyclist Jonas Vingegaard won the 2022 Tour de France, delivering the team its first Tour de France victory in the General Classification, as well as the King of the Mountains title[5] while his team-mate Wout van Aert won the Points Classification title.[6] In 2023, Vingegaard repeated his feat and Jumbo-Visma won the team classification for the very first time. That year, fellow Jumbo-Visma riders Primož Roglič and Sepp Kuss also won the Giro d'Italia and the Vuelta a España respectively, making the team the first to win all three Grand Tours in a single calendar year.[7]

History edit

In road bicycle racing, teams usually take their names from their main sponsors. The team has had the following sponsors, and thus names.

Kwantum–Decosol–Yoko (1984–1986) edit

After the season of 1983, the TI–Raleigh team split up because of tension between former world champion Jan Raas and team leader Peter Post,[8] with seven cyclists following Post to the new Panasonic-team and six cyclists joining Raas to the Kwantum team.[9] The team captains of the Kwantum team were Guillaume Driessens, Jan Gisbers and Walter Godefroot.[10] In their first year, the team managed to win the intermediate sprints classification and one stage in the 1984 Tour de France, the Amstel Gold Race and the Dutch national road championship.[10]

After the 1984 season, Jan Raas stopped as an active cyclist and became team manager. In 1985 the Kwantum team had a successful year. Victories included two Tour de France stages, the Tour of Luxembourg, Paris–Tours, Paris–Brussels, the Tirreno–Adriatico, the Tour of Belgium, again the Dutch national road championship, and the World cycling championship (Joop Zoetemelk).[11] 1986 was less successful; the most important victory was Tour of Belgium.[12]

Superconfex–Yoko–Colnago (1987–1989) edit

For the 1987 season, the main sponsor became Superconfex. In that year, the team was officially known as Superconfex – Kwantum – Yoko – Colnago. Jan Raas remained the team leader. After a victory in Kuurne–Brussels–Kuurne for Ludo Peeters, the new sprinter Jean-Paul van Poppel, coming from the Skala cycling team, gave the team a great year, with five stage wins in the Tour de France (of which two for van Poppel) and the victory in the points classification in the Tour de France for Jean-Paul van Poppel. Joop Zoetemelk ended his career with a victory in the Amstel Gold Race.[13]

From 1988 on, the team was known as Superconfex – Yoko – Opel – Colnago. 1988 was also a successful season for the team, with victories in Paris–Brussels, the Tour of Ireland, the Tour of Belgium, the Amstel Gold Race, and six stages in the Tour de France.[14] In the 1989 season, Jean-Paul van Poppel changed to the Panasonic team. In 1989 his sprinting capacities were missed, and the number of victories was reduced. Still, Paris–Brussels, the Tour of Flanders and Paris–Tours were won, together with two stages in the 1989 Tour de France.[15]

Buckler–Colnago–Decca (1990–1992) edit

 
A Buckler jersey

After the 1989 season, the main sponsoring was taken over by Buckler. The Tour of Belgium was won again, and the Ronde van Nederland was won as well. That year, the team had the winner of the Dutch national road race championships again, as Peter Winnen won the race.[16] In 1991, the team won the Amstel Gold Race, the Ronde van Nederland and Tour of Flanders. The team had taken over Steven Rooks from the Panasonic team, who immediately became the Dutch national road race champion.[17]

The worst year in the team's history was 1992. Only 26 races were won in the season, compared to 64 victories in the successful 1988 season.[18] 1992 also saw a young Erik Dekker entering the team. After that season, Buckler decided to stop sponsoring.

Wordperfect–Colnago–Decca (1993–1994) edit

 
Raúl Alcalá with Wordperfect in 1993

A new sponsor was found in WordPerfect. Steven Rooks left the team, Raúl Alcalá joined the team. Still, the 1993 season did not turn out a great season, with only 29 victories, the most important being Three Days of De Panne and the Tour DuPont.[19] In 1993 and 1994, Michael Boogerd and Léon van Bon started their professional career in the team, and Viatcheslav Ekimov also came. The Tour DuPont was won again, together with the Tour de Luxembourg. The year still was disappointing with only 25 victories.

Novell–Decca (1995) edit

In 1995, the team was joined by Djamolidine Abdoujaparov, the winner of the points classification in the 1994 Tour de France. Abdoujaparov won one stage in the Tour de France, but other than that, the year was still not what the sponsors had hoped, so a new sponsor had to be found. The title sponsor of the previous two years, WordPerfect, was a product of Novell Software, which carried the team's name this one season.

Rabobank (1996–2012) edit

 
Erik Dekker at the 2005 Tour de France

Raas became the team manager of the Rabobank team while Theo de Rooy, Adrie van Houwelingen and Zoetemelk were directeur sportifs.[20] As a Dutch cycling team, the team signed many of the prominent Dutch cyclists of the 1990s including Adri van der Poel, Richard Groenendaal and Erik Breukink as well as keeping the prominent Dutch cyclists from the Novell team that included Léon van Bon, Erik Dekker and Michael Boogerd. In addition, the team had many successful cyclists of other nationalities such as Edwig van Hooydonck, Rolf Sørensen, Johan Bruyneel and Robbie McEwen.[20]

The Rabobank team dominated the Dutch national championships over several disciplines, and had world champions in both cyclo-cross (Adri van der Poel in 1996, Richard Groenendaal in 2000 and Sven Nys in 2004) and road racing (Óscar Freire in 2004).

In the 2000 cyclo-cross world championships there was a conflict between the commercial team interests and the national team interests. Groenendaal attacked during the first lap and was chased by defending cyclo-cross world champion Mario De Clercq who was followed by Groenendaal's Rabobank teammate Sven Nys. Team manager Jan Raas allegedly told Nys not to cooperate in the chase and De Clercq was unable to catch Groenendaal. Nys received much criticism from the Belgian team manager Erik De Vlaeminck as well as the Belgian public.[21]

 
The Rabobank team during the 2005 Rund um den Henninger Turm race

Jan Raas was the team manager for the first eight years of the team's existence. In 2003 Raas was removed rather abruptly which surprised the other members of staff including Theo De Rooy, Erik Dekker and Michael Boogerd.[22] De Rooy was promoted to team manager and a former Rabobank rider, who had been working as a PR man for Rabobank, Erik Breukink, was named as the new directeur sportif to replace De Rooy. In August 2007 in the aftermath of the affair in which Michael Rasmussen was removed during the 2007 Tour de France, De Rooy resigned from his position as team manager.[23]

Following the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) report on doping in professional cycling in October 2012, Rabobank announced it would end its sponsorship of professional cycling at the end of 2012. Rabobank said that doping was so rampant that it was "no longer convinced the international professional world of cycling can make this a clean and fair sport."[24]

Blanco then Belkin (2013–2014) edit

 
Mark Renshaw for Belkin in 2013

The team was able to continue, as Rabobank agreed to fund the team during 2013 until a new sponsor could be found. The deadline for finding new sponsorship was the end of the 2013 UCI World Tour.[25] Racing under the name Blanco to refer to its formally unsponsored status, Tom-Jelte Slagter of the team won its first stage race, the 2013 Tour Down Under.

Belkin was announced as the team's new sponsor in June 2013 with a 2+12-year deal. In June 2014 they announced that they were exercising a clause in their contract to end their sponsorship of the team at the end of the 2014 season, forcing the team to find a new backer for the second time in 18 months.[26] Subsequently, in July 2014 it was announced that the team had signed a formal declaration of intent with the Dutch lottery Lotto and marketing agency BrandLoyalty which would ensure their backing for two years, with an option for an additional two years. As part of the deal the cycling team would join forces with the BrandLoyalty speed skating team managed by Jac Orie and featuring Olympic and World Champions Sven Kramer and Stefan Groothuis.[27][28]

LottoNL–Jumbo (2015–2018) edit

 
Team LottoNL-Jumbo leading the Peloton on the 3rd stage of Tour of Slovenia 2018, which was won by Primož Roglič (Team LottoNL-Jumbo)
 
Robert Gesink for LottoNL at the 2015 Tour de Suisse

In June 2014 it was announced that Belkin would stop sponsoring the cycling team. On 20 July 2014, the team announced they had an agreement in place with the Brand Loyalty skating team. A day later, the team also released the news that the Dutch Lotto will also sponsor the team. On 29 September 2014, the contracts were signed between the two teams, meaning that the new name would be TEAMLottoNL, with the renaming taking effect from 1 January 2015.[29]

On 23 October 2014, the team was unveiled in Utrecht as Team LottoNL–Jumbo showing their new black and yellow team kit. Lotto had previously been confirmed as the team's title sponsor, supermarket chain, Jumbo, was presented as the second sponsor of the WorldTour team.[30] In September the team confirmed they would continue to ride on Bianchi bikes for the 2016 and 2017 seasons.[31] On the first rest day of the 2016 Tour de France, the team announced LottoNL had agreed to extend their sponsorship of the team through to the end of the 2018 season.[32]

Jumbo–Visma (2019–2023) edit

 
Team Jumbo-Visma 2022.

After signing a new sponsorship deal with Visma, a Norwegian software company, the team was renamed to Team Jumbo–Visma on 1 January 2019.[33] From the start of 2021, the team has a new bicycle sponsor, Cervélo, and the team is equipped with disc brakes instead of rim brakes.[34]

Visma-Lease A Bike (2024-) edit

Jumbo would pull out of professional sports with a new CEO by the end of 2024. [35]They would end their sponsorship one year earlier and become Visma-Lease A Bike with Lease A Bike becoming a main sponsor after being a minor one in 2023.[36]

Road racing team edit

The road racing team has won several Classics such as the Tour of Flanders in 1997, Championship of Hamburg in 1998, the Amstel Gold Race in 1999 and 2001, Paris–Tours in 1999, 2004 and 2010, Clásica de San Sebastián in 2000 and Milan–San Remo in 2004, 2007 and 2010. Erik Dekker won the UCI World Cup in 2001 due to his Classic win and high placings in many of the classics.

Rabobank becoming a Grand Tour team edit

 
Rabobank team, 2004 Tour de France

The team signed American Levi Leipheimer in 2002 as a rider for the Tour de France. Leipheimer finished eighth in his first Tour but crashed out of the race on the first stage of the 2003 Tour de France. Leipheimer finished ninth overall the following year. The team became more of a Grand Tour team as could be seen by Michael Rasmussen's win in the Mountains Classification of the 2005 Tour de France. When Denis Menchov took the lead in the 2005 Vuelta a España, he was not expecting to be competing for the overall classification[37]

The Rabobank team at that year's Vuelta were not seen as particularly strong or able to assist Menchov in the mountain stages.[38] Menchov finished second to Roberto Heras which was the highest placing of a Rabobank team rider at a grand tour after Michael Boogerd's fifth place in the 1998 Tour de France. Heras was later disqualified for doping and Menchov was made the winner.[39] In 1999 Menchov focused on the Tour de France where the team rode strongly with Menchov, Boogerd, and Rasmussen.

During the 2007 Tour de France, Rabobank fired Michael Rasmussen (2005 Tour de France, 2006 Tour de France K.O.M.) for code-violations while he was in the yellow jersey.[40] The remaining riders of the Rabobank team were given the choice to start the 17th stage without Michael Rasmussen, or to withdraw. That evening they decided to withdraw, but the team changed its mind and announced the following morning that the riders would be starting the 17th stage.[41] Although he started with the rest of the team, Denis Menchov (team leader on the road, who deferred to Rasmussen when the latter seemed to have a better chance at winning) abandoned the race in the middle of the stage.[42]

The Rabobank team was invited for the 2008 Tour de France.[43] Denis Menchov had decided to focus on the Tour de France. To do that, he did not defend his Vuelta a España-title, and rode the 2008 Giro d'Italia as preparation for the Tour de France.[44] Menchov finished 4th place in the 2008 Tour de France, and Óscar Freire won the points classification. The team had to wait until 2009 for the first successes in the Giro d'Italia, when Denis Menchov won two stages; a mountain finish and a time trial. This second win earned him the pink leader jersey, which the team defended to the end of the race, earning Menchov, and Rabobank, their third Grand Tour GC win.

Affiliated teams edit

Cyclo-cross team edit

The Rabobank cyclo-cross team has dominated the sport in the past with Sven Nys and Richard Groenendaal winning the General Classification competitions such as the Superprestige, the World Cup and the Gazet van Antwerpen trophy over the last eight years. Groenendaal dominated the Dutch cyclo-cross championships for many years. Groenendaal left the team after the 2006–2007 season. He was at that time one of the few remaining Rabobank riders from the 1996 team. Lars Boom joined the team in 2002 as a junior cyclo-cross rider and has already achieved success in the Elite cyclo-cross championships as well as showing promise riding in the UCI Europe Tour with the Rabobank Continental team.[citation needed]

Sponsorship edit

 
Team bus of LottoNL Jumbo during 2017 UCI Road World Championships in Bergen
 
Mercedes – support car in 2019

Rabobank announced in October 2012 that it would end its sponsorship of professional cycling at the end of the year, with the team announcing its intention to continue as a ‘white label’ under a new foundation yet to be established.[45] On 13 December 2012 it was announced the team would participate in 2013 under the Blanco name, with the intention to find a sponsor for 2014 or to stop the team otherwise.[46]

During the 2013 Giro d'Italia it emerged that the technology firm Belkin was a possible new sponsor.[47] The deal was confirmed towards the end of May 2013,[48] and the team's new identity was launched a week before the 2013 Tour de France.

The team formerly rode Colnago frames but as of 1 January 2009 began a two-year contract riding Giant frames equipped with Shimano components.[49] Starting in 2014, Bianchi supplies the team bicycles.[50] The team began a two-year contract (2014–2016) wearing Santini SMS clothing.[51]

A deal was subsequently struck for consumer electronics company Belkin to take on sponsorship from the 2013 Tour de France until the end of 2015.[52] In 2015 Lotto, a Dutch lottery, agreed to sponsor the Team for four years. Between 2015 and 2023, the team was sponsored by a Dutch supermarket chain, Jumbo. The "NL" was added to the team's name to differentiate it from Lotto–Soudal, a ProTeam that is sponsored by the national lottery of Belgium.[53]

In 2019, the team began a long-term contract with Norwegian business software provider Visma for at least five years, therefore becoming Team Jumbo–Visma.[54] From 2021 team will have new bicycle partnership with Cervélo, ending previous sponsorship with Bianchi lasting from 2014 to 2020.[55] In 2024, the team became Visma–Lease a Bike, following sponsorship by German company Lease a Bike.

Doping accusations edit

According to a 2012 investigation by de Volkskrant, doping was used by Rabobank riders since 1998 and condoned by the team, with team physicians actively monitoring the health of those riders. According to Stefan Matschiner, a key witness in the Humanplasma scandal, three (former) Rabobank riders were customers of the Swiss blood doping expert. Matschiner mentioned Michael Boogerd, the most successful Dutch Rabobank rider, and said one other team member was a customer. Theo de Rooij, Rabo's manager since 2003 and responsible for pulling Michael Rasmussen from the 2007 Tour de France, did not deny doping was used by team riders, but said that the use of doping was neither suggested nor paid for by the team.[4]

In the 2015 USADA report against Dr. Geert Leinders, it was found that he, and other team doctors, supported and organized a blood doping program within the team for much of the 2000s, which included EPO, blood transfusions, hGH, and cortisones. Riders included in the report that doped during their Rabobank tenure include Denis Menchov, Michael Boogerd, Michael Rasmussen, and Levi Leipheimer.

Team roster edit

As of 13 January 2024.[56]
Rider Date of birth
  Edoardo Affini (ITA) (1996-06-24) 24 June 1996 (age 27)
  Tiesj Benoot (BEL) (1994-03-11) 11 March 1994 (age 30)
  Koen Bouwman (NED) (1993-12-02) 2 December 1993 (age 30)
  Robert Gesink (NED) (1986-05-31) 31 May 1986 (age 37)
  Thomas Gloag (GBR) (2001-09-13) 13 September 2001 (age 22)
  Per Strand Hagenes (NOR) (2003-07-10) 10 July 2003 (age 20)
  Michel Hessmann (GER) (2001-04-06) 6 April 2001 (age 23)
  Matteo Jorgenson (USA) (1999-07-01) 1 July 1999 (age 24)
  Wilco Kelderman (NED) (1991-03-25) 25 March 1991 (age 33)
  Olav Kooij (NED) (2001-10-17) 17 October 2001 (age 22)
  Steven Kruijswijk (NED) (1987-06-07) 7 June 1987 (age 36)
  Sepp Kuss (USA) (1994-09-13) 13 September 1994 (age 29)
  Christophe Laporte (FRA) (1992-12-11) 11 December 1992 (age 31)
  Bart Lemmen (NED) (1995-10-14) 14 October 1995 (age 28)
Rider Date of birth
  Johannes Staune-Mittet (NOR) (2002-01-18) 18 January 2002 (age 22)
  Jan Tratnik (SLO) (1990-02-23) 23 February 1990 (age 34)
  Ben Tulett (GBR) (2001-08-26) 26 August 2001 (age 22)
  Cian Uijtdebroeks (BEL) (2003-02-28) 28 February 2003 (age 21)
  Milan Vader (NED) (1996-02-18) 18 February 1996 (age 28)
  Attila Valter (HUN) (1998-06-12) 12 June 1998 (age 25)
  Wout van Aert (BEL) (1994-09-15) 15 September 1994 (age 29)
  Dylan van Baarle (NED) (1992-05-21) 21 May 1992 (age 31)
  Loe van Belle (NED) (2002-01-24) 24 January 2002 (age 22)
  Tosh Van der Sande (BEL) (1990-11-28) 28 November 1990 (age 33)
  Mick van Dijke (NED) (2000-03-15) 15 March 2000 (age 24)
  Tim van Dijke (NED) (2000-03-15) 15 March 2000 (age 24)
  Julien Vermote (BEL) (1989-07-26) 26 July 1989 (age 34)
  Jonas Vingegaard (DEN) (1996-12-10) 10 December 1996 (age 27)

Major wins edit

National, continental, world, and Olympic champions edit

1984
  Netherlands Road Race, Jan Raas
1985
  Netherlands Road Race, Jacques Hanegraaf
  World Road Race, Joop Zoetemelk
1989
  Netherlands Road Race, Frans Maassen
1990
  Netherlands Road Race, Peter Winnen
1991
  Netherlands Road Race, Steven Rooks
1996
  World Cyclo-cross, Adri van der Poel
  Netherlands Time Trial, Erik Dekker
1997
  Netherlands Road Race, Michael Boogerd
  Netherlands Time Trial, Erik Breukink
1998
  U23 World Cyclo-cross, Sven Nys
  Netherlands Road Race, Michael Boogerd
  Netherlands Time Trial, Patrick Jonker
  Switzerland Time Trial, Beat Zberg
  Austria Time Trial, Peter Luttenberger
1999
  Netherlands Road Race, Maarten den Bakker
2000
  Belgium Cyclo-cross, Sven Nys
  World Cyclo-cross, Richard Groenendaal
  Netherlands Road Race, Léon van Bon
  Switzerland Road Race, Markus Zberg
  Netherlands Time Trial, Erik Dekker
2002
  U23 World Cyclo-cross, Thijs Verhagen
  Netherlands Time Trial, Erik Dekker
  Belgium Time Trial, Marc Wauters
2003
  Belgium Cyclo-cross, Sven Nys
  Netherlands Time Trial, Maarten den Bakker
  Belgium Time Trial, Marc Wauters
2004
  Netherlands Road Race, Erik Dekker
  Netherlands Time Trial, Thomas Dekker
  Finland Time Trial, Jukka Vastaranta
  World Road Race, Óscar Freire
2005
  Belgium Cyclo-cross, Sven Nys
  World Cyclo-cross, Sven Nys
  Netherlands Time Trial, Thomas Dekker
  Belgium Time Trial, Marc Wauters
2006
  Belgium Cyclo-cross, Sven Nys
  U23 World Cyclo-cross, Lars Boom
  Netherlands Road Race, Michael Boogerd
2007
  U23 World Time Trial, Lars Boom
  Netherlands Road Race, Koos Moerenhout
2008
  Belgium Cyclo-cross, Sven Nys
  World Cyclo-cross, Lars Boom
  Netherlands Road Race, Lars Boom
2009
  Netherlands Cyclo-cross, Lars Boom
  Netherlands Road Race, Koos Moerenhout
  Netherlands Time Trial, Stef Clement
2010
  Netherlands Cyclo-cross, Lars Boom
  Netherlands Time Trial, Jos van Emden
2011
  Netherlands Cyclo-cross, Lars Boom
  Netherlands Time Trial, Stef Clement
  Spain Time Trial, Luis León Sánchez
2012
  Netherlands Cyclo-cross, Lars Boom
  Spain Time Trial, Luis León Sánchez
2013
  Norway Cyclo-cross, Lars Petter Nordhaug
2015
  Netherlands Time Trial, Wilco Kelderman
2016
  Slovenia Time Trial, Primož Roglič
  Belgium Time Trial, Victor Campenaerts
  Netherlands Road Race, Dylan Groenewegen
2017
  European Time Trial, Victor Campenaerts
2019
  Netherlands Time Trial, Jos van Emden
  Belgium Time Trial, Wout van Aert
  Germany Time Trial, Tony Martin
  Norway Road Race, Amund Grøndahl Jansen
2020
  Slovenia Road Race, Primož Roglič
  Belgium Time Trial, Wout van Aert
2021
  Belgium Cyclo-cross, Wout van Aert
  New Zealand Road Race, George Bennett
  Netherlands Time Trial, Tom Dumoulin
  Norway Time Trial, Tobias Foss
  Germany Time Trial, Tony Martin
  Netherlands Road Race, Timo Roosen
  Norway Road Race, Tobias Foss
  Belgium Road Race, Wout van Aert
  Olympic Time Trial, Primož Roglič
2022
  Belgium Cyclo-cross, Wout van Aert
  Australia Time Trial, Rohan Dennis
  Norway Time Trial, Tobias Foss
  Netherlands Road Race, Pascal Eenkhoorn
  World Time Trial, Tobias Foss
2023
  Netherlands Time Trial, Jos van Emden
  Hungary Time Trial, Attila Valter
  Belgium Time Trial, Wout van Aert
  Netherlands Road Race, Dylan van Baarle
  Hungary Road Race, Attila Valter
  European Road Race, Christophe Laporte

References edit

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  36. ^ "Team Jumbo-Visma to become Team Visma | Lease a Bike from 1 January". Team Jumbo-Visma. Retrieved 25 November 2023.
  37. ^ "Menchov first in gold". Cyclingnews.com. from the original on 14 October 2012. Retrieved 1 January 2008.
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  39. ^ "Quiet celebration for Menchov and Rabobank". Cyclingnews.com. from the original on 14 October 2012. Retrieved 1 January 2008.
  40. ^ Rasmussen out of Tour de France [dead link]
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  43. ^ . ASO. 20 March 2008. Archived from the original on 16 March 2008. Retrieved 2 April 2008.
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  46. ^ "Raboteam continues as Blanco Pro Cycling". volkskrant.nl. from the original on 24 April 2013. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
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  49. ^ "Rabobank team to ride Giant bicycles for the 2009 season". Velonews.com. from the original on 13 September 2008. Retrieved 11 January 2009.
  50. ^ . Bianchi.com. Archived from the original on 27 July 2014. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
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  54. ^ "Team Jumbo add Visma as title sponsor – News shorts". cyclingnews.com. from the original on 16 March 2019. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
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  56. ^ "Team Visma–Lease a Bike". UCI. Retrieved 5 January 2024.

External links edit

  • Official website

visma, lease, bike, team, visma, lease, bike, dutch, professional, bicycle, racing, team, successor, former, rabobank, team, consists, four, sections, proteam, worldteam, team, women, team, women, team, development, team, continental, team, racing, europe, tou. Visma Lease a Bike is a Dutch professional bicycle racing team successor of the former Rabobank The team consists of four sections ProTeam the UCI WorldTeam team Women s Team the UCI Women s Team Development Team a UCI Continental team racing in the UCI Europe Tour and cyclo cross Visma Lease a BikeThe team at the 2023 Paris NiceTeam informationUCI codeTVLRegisteredNetherlandsFounded1984 1984 Discipline s RoadStatusUCI WorldTeamBicyclesColnago 1984 2008 Giant 2009 2013 Bianchi 2014 2020 Cervelo 2021 ComponentsSRAM CorporationWebsiteTeam home pageKey personnelGeneral managerRichard PluggeTeam name history1984 1986Kwantum Decosol1987 1989Superconfex Yoko1990 1992Buckler Colnago1993 1994WordPerfect1995Novell1996 2012Rabobank2013Blanco2013 2014Belkin2015 2018LottoNL Jumbo2019 2023Team Jumbo Visma2024 Visma Lease a BikeCurrent seasonThe cycling team was founded for the 1984 season under the name Kwantum Decosol anchored by Jan Raas with mostly cyclists coming from the TI Raleigh cycling team 1 With Raas as directeur sportif from 1985 onwards the head sponsor was succeeded by Superconfex Buckler WordPerfect and Novell respectively before Raas signed a contract with Rabobank a Dutch association of credit unions in 1996 After Rabobank sponsorship ended in 2012 it was known as Blanco Belkin Lotto Jumbo Jumbo Visma and now Visma Lease a Bike Since 1984 the team has entered every Tour de France 2 and since the introduction of divisions in 1998 the team has always been in the first division 3 A 2012 investigation by Dutch newspaper de Volkskrant concluded that doping was at least tolerated from the team s 1996 beginnings as Rabobank until at least 2007 4 Team Jumbo Visma cyclist Jonas Vingegaard won the 2022 Tour de France delivering the team its first Tour de France victory in the General Classification as well as the King of the Mountains title 5 while his team mate Wout van Aert won the Points Classification title 6 In 2023 Vingegaard repeated his feat and Jumbo Visma won the team classification for the very first time That year fellow Jumbo Visma riders Primoz Roglic and Sepp Kuss also won the Giro d Italia and the Vuelta a Espana respectively making the team the first to win all three Grand Tours in a single calendar year 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 Kwantum Decosol Yoko 1984 1986 1 2 Superconfex Yoko Colnago 1987 1989 1 3 Buckler Colnago Decca 1990 1992 1 4 Wordperfect Colnago Decca 1993 1994 1 5 Novell Decca 1995 1 6 Rabobank 1996 2012 1 7 Blanco then Belkin 2013 2014 1 8 LottoNL Jumbo 2015 2018 1 9 Jumbo Visma 2019 2023 1 10 Visma Lease A Bike 2024 2 Road racing team 2 1 Rabobank becoming a Grand Tour team 3 Affiliated teams 3 1 Cyclo cross team 4 Sponsorship 5 Doping accusations 6 Team roster 7 Major wins 8 National continental world and Olympic champions 9 References 10 External linksHistory editIn road bicycle racing teams usually take their names from their main sponsors The team has had the following sponsors and thus names Kwantum Decosol Yoko 1984 1986 edit After the season of 1983 the TI Raleigh team split up because of tension between former world champion Jan Raas and team leader Peter Post 8 with seven cyclists following Post to the new Panasonic team and six cyclists joining Raas to the Kwantum team 9 The team captains of the Kwantum team were Guillaume Driessens Jan Gisbers and Walter Godefroot 10 In their first year the team managed to win the intermediate sprints classification and one stage in the 1984 Tour de France the Amstel Gold Race and the Dutch national road championship 10 After the 1984 season Jan Raas stopped as an active cyclist and became team manager In 1985 the Kwantum team had a successful year Victories included two Tour de France stages the Tour of Luxembourg Paris Tours Paris Brussels the Tirreno Adriatico the Tour of Belgium again the Dutch national road championship and the World cycling championship Joop Zoetemelk 11 1986 was less successful the most important victory was Tour of Belgium 12 Superconfex Yoko Colnago 1987 1989 edit For the 1987 season the main sponsor became Superconfex In that year the team was officially known as Superconfex Kwantum Yoko Colnago Jan Raas remained the team leader After a victory in Kuurne Brussels Kuurne for Ludo Peeters the new sprinter Jean Paul van Poppel coming from the Skala cycling team gave the team a great year with five stage wins in the Tour de France of which two for van Poppel and the victory in the points classification in the Tour de France for Jean Paul van Poppel Joop Zoetemelk ended his career with a victory in the Amstel Gold Race 13 From 1988 on the team was known as Superconfex Yoko Opel Colnago 1988 was also a successful season for the team with victories in Paris Brussels the Tour of Ireland the Tour of Belgium the Amstel Gold Race and six stages in the Tour de France 14 In the 1989 season Jean Paul van Poppel changed to the Panasonic team In 1989 his sprinting capacities were missed and the number of victories was reduced Still Paris Brussels the Tour of Flanders and Paris Tours were won together with two stages in the 1989 Tour de France 15 Buckler Colnago Decca 1990 1992 edit nbsp A Buckler jerseyAfter the 1989 season the main sponsoring was taken over by Buckler The Tour of Belgium was won again and the Ronde van Nederland was won as well That year the team had the winner of the Dutch national road race championships again as Peter Winnen won the race 16 In 1991 the team won the Amstel Gold Race the Ronde van Nederland and Tour of Flanders The team had taken over Steven Rooks from the Panasonic team who immediately became the Dutch national road race champion 17 The worst year in the team s history was 1992 Only 26 races were won in the season compared to 64 victories in the successful 1988 season 18 1992 also saw a young Erik Dekker entering the team After that season Buckler decided to stop sponsoring Wordperfect Colnago Decca 1993 1994 edit nbsp Raul Alcala with Wordperfect in 1993A new sponsor was found in WordPerfect Steven Rooks left the team Raul Alcala joined the team Still the 1993 season did not turn out a great season with only 29 victories the most important being Three Days of De Panne and the Tour DuPont 19 In 1993 and 1994 Michael Boogerd and Leon van Bon started their professional career in the team and Viatcheslav Ekimov also came The Tour DuPont was won again together with the Tour de Luxembourg The year still was disappointing with only 25 victories Novell Decca 1995 edit In 1995 the team was joined by Djamolidine Abdoujaparov the winner of the points classification in the 1994 Tour de France Abdoujaparov won one stage in the Tour de France but other than that the year was still not what the sponsors had hoped so a new sponsor had to be found The title sponsor of the previous two years WordPerfect was a product of Novell Software which carried the team s name this one season Rabobank 1996 2012 edit nbsp Erik Dekker at the 2005 Tour de FranceRaas became the team manager of the Rabobank team while Theo de Rooy Adrie van Houwelingen and Zoetemelk were directeur sportifs 20 As a Dutch cycling team the team signed many of the prominent Dutch cyclists of the 1990s including Adri van der Poel Richard Groenendaal and Erik Breukink as well as keeping the prominent Dutch cyclists from the Novell team that included Leon van Bon Erik Dekker and Michael Boogerd In addition the team had many successful cyclists of other nationalities such as Edwig van Hooydonck Rolf Sorensen Johan Bruyneel and Robbie McEwen 20 The Rabobank team dominated the Dutch national championships over several disciplines and had world champions in both cyclo cross Adri van der Poel in 1996 Richard Groenendaal in 2000 and Sven Nys in 2004 and road racing oscar Freire in 2004 In the 2000 cyclo cross world championships there was a conflict between the commercial team interests and the national team interests Groenendaal attacked during the first lap and was chased by defending cyclo cross world champion Mario De Clercq who was followed by Groenendaal s Rabobank teammate Sven Nys Team manager Jan Raas allegedly told Nys not to cooperate in the chase and De Clercq was unable to catch Groenendaal Nys received much criticism from the Belgian team manager Erik De Vlaeminck as well as the Belgian public 21 nbsp The Rabobank team during the 2005 Rund um den Henninger Turm raceJan Raas was the team manager for the first eight years of the team s existence In 2003 Raas was removed rather abruptly which surprised the other members of staff including Theo De Rooy Erik Dekker and Michael Boogerd 22 De Rooy was promoted to team manager and a former Rabobank rider who had been working as a PR man for Rabobank Erik Breukink was named as the new directeur sportif to replace De Rooy In August 2007 in the aftermath of the affair in which Michael Rasmussen was removed during the 2007 Tour de France De Rooy resigned from his position as team manager 23 Following the United States Anti Doping Agency USADA report on doping in professional cycling in October 2012 Rabobank announced it would end its sponsorship of professional cycling at the end of 2012 Rabobank said that doping was so rampant that it was no longer convinced the international professional world of cycling can make this a clean and fair sport 24 Blanco then Belkin 2013 2014 edit nbsp Mark Renshaw for Belkin in 2013The team was able to continue as Rabobank agreed to fund the team during 2013 until a new sponsor could be found The deadline for finding new sponsorship was the end of the 2013 UCI World Tour 25 Racing under the name Blanco to refer to its formally unsponsored status Tom Jelte Slagter of the team won its first stage race the 2013 Tour Down Under Belkin was announced as the team s new sponsor in June 2013 with a 2 1 2 year deal In June 2014 they announced that they were exercising a clause in their contract to end their sponsorship of the team at the end of the 2014 season forcing the team to find a new backer for the second time in 18 months 26 Subsequently in July 2014 it was announced that the team had signed a formal declaration of intent with the Dutch lottery Lotto and marketing agency BrandLoyalty which would ensure their backing for two years with an option for an additional two years As part of the deal the cycling team would join forces with the BrandLoyalty speed skating team managed by Jac Orie and featuring Olympic and World Champions Sven Kramer and Stefan Groothuis 27 28 LottoNL Jumbo 2015 2018 edit nbsp Team LottoNL Jumbo leading the Peloton on the 3rd stage of Tour of Slovenia 2018 which was won by Primoz Roglic Team LottoNL Jumbo nbsp Robert Gesink for LottoNL at the 2015 Tour de SuisseIn June 2014 it was announced that Belkin would stop sponsoring the cycling team On 20 July 2014 the team announced they had an agreement in place with the Brand Loyalty skating team A day later the team also released the news that the Dutch Lotto will also sponsor the team On 29 September 2014 the contracts were signed between the two teams meaning that the new name would be TEAMLottoNL with the renaming taking effect from 1 January 2015 29 On 23 October 2014 the team was unveiled in Utrecht as Team LottoNL Jumbo showing their new black and yellow team kit Lotto had previously been confirmed as the team s title sponsor supermarket chain Jumbo was presented as the second sponsor of the WorldTour team 30 In September the team confirmed they would continue to ride on Bianchi bikes for the 2016 and 2017 seasons 31 On the first rest day of the 2016 Tour de France the team announced LottoNL had agreed to extend their sponsorship of the team through to the end of the 2018 season 32 Jumbo Visma 2019 2023 edit nbsp Team Jumbo Visma 2022 After signing a new sponsorship deal with Visma a Norwegian software company the team was renamed to Team Jumbo Visma on 1 January 2019 33 From the start of 2021 the team has a new bicycle sponsor Cervelo and the team is equipped with disc brakes instead of rim brakes 34 Visma Lease A Bike 2024 edit Jumbo would pull out of professional sports with a new CEO by the end of 2024 35 They would end their sponsorship one year earlier and become Visma Lease A Bike with Lease A Bike becoming a main sponsor after being a minor one in 2023 36 Road racing team editThe road racing team has won several Classics such as the Tour of Flanders in 1997 Championship of Hamburg in 1998 the Amstel Gold Race in 1999 and 2001 Paris Tours in 1999 2004 and 2010 Clasica de San Sebastian in 2000 and Milan San Remo in 2004 2007 and 2010 Erik Dekker won the UCI World Cup in 2001 due to his Classic win and high placings in many of the classics Rabobank becoming a Grand Tour team edit nbsp Rabobank team 2004 Tour de FranceThe team signed American Levi Leipheimer in 2002 as a rider for the Tour de France Leipheimer finished eighth in his first Tour but crashed out of the race on the first stage of the 2003 Tour de France Leipheimer finished ninth overall the following year The team became more of a Grand Tour team as could be seen by Michael Rasmussen s win in the Mountains Classification of the 2005 Tour de France When Denis Menchov took the lead in the 2005 Vuelta a Espana he was not expecting to be competing for the overall classification 37 The Rabobank team at that year s Vuelta were not seen as particularly strong or able to assist Menchov in the mountain stages 38 Menchov finished second to Roberto Heras which was the highest placing of a Rabobank team rider at a grand tour after Michael Boogerd s fifth place in the 1998 Tour de France Heras was later disqualified for doping and Menchov was made the winner 39 In 1999 Menchov focused on the Tour de France where the team rode strongly with Menchov Boogerd and Rasmussen During the 2007 Tour de France Rabobank fired Michael Rasmussen 2005 Tour de France 2006 Tour de France K O M for code violations while he was in the yellow jersey 40 The remaining riders of the Rabobank team were given the choice to start the 17th stage without Michael Rasmussen or to withdraw That evening they decided to withdraw but the team changed its mind and announced the following morning that the riders would be starting the 17th stage 41 Although he started with the rest of the team Denis Menchov team leader on the road who deferred to Rasmussen when the latter seemed to have a better chance at winning abandoned the race in the middle of the stage 42 The Rabobank team was invited for the 2008 Tour de France 43 Denis Menchov had decided to focus on the Tour de France To do that he did not defend his Vuelta a Espana title and rode the 2008 Giro d Italia as preparation for the Tour de France 44 Menchov finished 4th place in the 2008 Tour de France and oscar Freire won the points classification The team had to wait until 2009 for the first successes in the Giro d Italia when Denis Menchov won two stages a mountain finish and a time trial This second win earned him the pink leader jersey which the team defended to the end of the race earning Menchov and Rabobank their third Grand Tour GC win Affiliated teams editWomen s road team Team Visma Lease a Bike current Rabo Liv Women Cycling Team former Men s development team Team Visma Lease a Bike Development current Rabobank Development Team former Cyclo cross team edit The Rabobank cyclo cross team has dominated the sport in the past with Sven Nys and Richard Groenendaal winning the General Classification competitions such as the Superprestige the World Cup and the Gazet van Antwerpen trophy over the last eight years Groenendaal dominated the Dutch cyclo cross championships for many years Groenendaal left the team after the 2006 2007 season He was at that time one of the few remaining Rabobank riders from the 1996 team Lars Boom joined the team in 2002 as a junior cyclo cross rider and has already achieved success in the Elite cyclo cross championships as well as showing promise riding in the UCI Europe Tour with the Rabobank Continental team citation needed Sponsorship edit nbsp Team bus of LottoNL Jumbo during 2017 UCI Road World Championships in Bergen nbsp Mercedes support car in 2019Rabobank announced in October 2012 that it would end its sponsorship of professional cycling at the end of the year with the team announcing its intention to continue as a white label under a new foundation yet to be established 45 On 13 December 2012 it was announced the team would participate in 2013 under the Blanco name with the intention to find a sponsor for 2014 or to stop the team otherwise 46 During the 2013 Giro d Italia it emerged that the technology firm Belkin was a possible new sponsor 47 The deal was confirmed towards the end of May 2013 48 and the team s new identity was launched a week before the 2013 Tour de France The team formerly rode Colnago frames but as of 1 January 2009 began a two year contract riding Giant frames equipped with Shimano components 49 Starting in 2014 Bianchi supplies the team bicycles 50 The team began a two year contract 2014 2016 wearing Santini SMS clothing 51 A deal was subsequently struck for consumer electronics company Belkin to take on sponsorship from the 2013 Tour de France until the end of 2015 52 In 2015 Lotto a Dutch lottery agreed to sponsor the Team for four years Between 2015 and 2023 the team was sponsored by a Dutch supermarket chain Jumbo The NL was added to the team s name to differentiate it from Lotto Soudal a ProTeam that is sponsored by the national lottery of Belgium 53 In 2019 the team began a long term contract with Norwegian business software provider Visma for at least five years therefore becoming Team Jumbo Visma 54 From 2021 team will have new bicycle partnership with Cervelo ending previous sponsorship with Bianchi lasting from 2014 to 2020 55 In 2024 the team became Visma Lease a Bike following sponsorship by German company Lease a Bike Doping accusations editAccording to a 2012 investigation by de Volkskrant doping was used by Rabobank riders since 1998 and condoned by the team with team physicians actively monitoring the health of those riders According to Stefan Matschiner a key witness in the Humanplasma scandal three former Rabobank riders were customers of the Swiss blood doping expert Matschiner mentioned Michael Boogerd the most successful Dutch Rabobank rider and said one other team member was a customer Theo de Rooij Rabo s manager since 2003 and responsible for pulling Michael Rasmussen from the 2007 Tour de France did not deny doping was used by team riders but said that the use of doping was neither suggested nor paid for by the team 4 In the 2015 USADA report against Dr Geert Leinders it was found that he and other team doctors supported and organized a blood doping program within the team for much of the 2000s which included EPO blood transfusions hGH and cortisones Riders included in the report that doped during their Rabobank tenure include Denis Menchov Michael Boogerd Michael Rasmussen and Levi Leipheimer Team roster editAs of 13 January 2024 56 Rider Date of birth nbsp Edoardo Affini ITA 1996 06 24 24 June 1996 age 27 nbsp Tiesj Benoot BEL 1994 03 11 11 March 1994 age 30 nbsp Koen Bouwman NED 1993 12 02 2 December 1993 age 30 nbsp Robert Gesink NED 1986 05 31 31 May 1986 age 37 nbsp Thomas Gloag GBR 2001 09 13 13 September 2001 age 22 nbsp Per Strand Hagenes NOR 2003 07 10 10 July 2003 age 20 nbsp Michel Hessmann GER 2001 04 06 6 April 2001 age 23 nbsp Matteo Jorgenson USA 1999 07 01 1 July 1999 age 24 nbsp Wilco Kelderman NED 1991 03 25 25 March 1991 age 33 nbsp Olav Kooij NED 2001 10 17 17 October 2001 age 22 nbsp Steven Kruijswijk NED 1987 06 07 7 June 1987 age 36 nbsp Sepp Kuss USA 1994 09 13 13 September 1994 age 29 nbsp Christophe Laporte FRA 1992 12 11 11 December 1992 age 31 nbsp Bart Lemmen NED 1995 10 14 14 October 1995 age 28 Rider Date of birth nbsp Johannes Staune Mittet NOR 2002 01 18 18 January 2002 age 22 nbsp Jan Tratnik SLO 1990 02 23 23 February 1990 age 34 nbsp Ben Tulett GBR 2001 08 26 26 August 2001 age 22 nbsp Cian Uijtdebroeks BEL 2003 02 28 28 February 2003 age 21 nbsp Milan Vader NED 1996 02 18 18 February 1996 age 28 nbsp Attila Valter HUN 1998 06 12 12 June 1998 age 25 nbsp Wout van Aert BEL 1994 09 15 15 September 1994 age 29 nbsp Dylan van Baarle NED 1992 05 21 21 May 1992 age 31 nbsp Loe van Belle NED 2002 01 24 24 January 2002 age 22 nbsp Tosh Van der Sande BEL 1990 11 28 28 November 1990 age 33 nbsp Mick van Dijke NED 2000 03 15 15 March 2000 age 24 nbsp Tim van Dijke NED 2000 03 15 15 March 2000 age 24 nbsp Julien Vermote BEL 1989 07 26 26 July 1989 age 34 nbsp Jonas Vingegaard DEN 1996 12 10 10 December 1996 age 27 Major wins editMain article List of wins by Kwantum Decosol Yoko and its successorsNational continental world and Olympic champions edit1984 nbsp Netherlands Road Race Jan Raas 1985 nbsp Netherlands Road Race Jacques Hanegraaf nbsp World Road Race Joop Zoetemelk 1989 nbsp Netherlands Road Race Frans Maassen 1990 nbsp Netherlands Road Race Peter Winnen 1991 nbsp Netherlands Road Race Steven Rooks 1996 nbsp World Cyclo cross Adri van der Poel nbsp Netherlands Time Trial Erik Dekker 1997 nbsp Netherlands Road Race Michael Boogerd nbsp Netherlands Time Trial Erik Breukink 1998 nbsp U23 World Cyclo cross Sven Nys nbsp Netherlands Road Race Michael Boogerd nbsp Netherlands Time Trial Patrick Jonker nbsp Switzerland Time Trial Beat Zberg nbsp Austria Time Trial Peter Luttenberger 1999 nbsp Netherlands Road Race Maarten den Bakker 2000 nbsp Belgium Cyclo cross Sven Nys nbsp World Cyclo cross Richard Groenendaal nbsp Netherlands Road Race Leon van Bon nbsp Switzerland Road Race Markus Zberg nbsp Netherlands Time Trial Erik Dekker 2002 nbsp U23 World Cyclo cross Thijs Verhagen nbsp Netherlands Time Trial Erik Dekker nbsp Belgium Time Trial Marc Wauters 2003 nbsp Belgium Cyclo cross Sven Nys nbsp Netherlands Time Trial Maarten den Bakker nbsp Belgium Time Trial Marc Wauters 2004 nbsp Netherlands Road Race Erik Dekker nbsp Netherlands Time Trial Thomas Dekker nbsp Finland Time Trial Jukka Vastaranta nbsp World Road Race oscar Freire 2005 nbsp Belgium Cyclo cross Sven Nys nbsp World Cyclo cross Sven Nys nbsp Netherlands Time Trial Thomas Dekker nbsp Belgium Time Trial Marc Wauters 2006 nbsp Belgium Cyclo cross Sven Nys nbsp U23 World Cyclo cross Lars Boom nbsp Netherlands Road Race Michael Boogerd 2007 nbsp U23 World Time Trial Lars Boom nbsp Netherlands Road Race Koos Moerenhout 2008 nbsp Belgium Cyclo cross Sven Nys nbsp World Cyclo cross Lars Boom nbsp Netherlands Road Race Lars Boom 2009 nbsp Netherlands Cyclo cross Lars Boom nbsp Netherlands Road Race Koos Moerenhout nbsp Netherlands Time Trial Stef Clement 2010 nbsp Netherlands Cyclo cross Lars Boom nbsp Netherlands Time Trial Jos van Emden 2011 nbsp Netherlands Cyclo cross Lars Boom nbsp Netherlands Time Trial Stef Clement nbsp Spain Time Trial Luis Leon Sanchez 2012 nbsp Netherlands Cyclo cross Lars Boom nbsp Spain Time Trial Luis Leon Sanchez 2013 nbsp Norway Cyclo cross Lars Petter Nordhaug 2015 nbsp Netherlands Time Trial Wilco Kelderman 2016 nbsp Slovenia Time Trial Primoz Roglic nbsp Belgium Time Trial Victor Campenaerts nbsp Netherlands Road Race Dylan Groenewegen 2017 nbsp European Time Trial Victor Campenaerts 2019 nbsp Netherlands Time Trial Jos van Emden nbsp Belgium Time Trial Wout van Aert nbsp Germany Time Trial Tony Martin nbsp Norway Road Race Amund Grondahl Jansen 2020 nbsp Slovenia Road Race Primoz Roglic nbsp Belgium Time Trial Wout van Aert 2021 nbsp Belgium Cyclo cross Wout van Aert nbsp New Zealand Road Race George Bennett nbsp Netherlands Time Trial Tom Dumoulin nbsp Norway Time Trial Tobias Foss nbsp Germany Time Trial Tony Martin nbsp Netherlands Road Race Timo Roosen nbsp Norway Road Race Tobias Foss nbsp Belgium Road Race Wout van Aert nbsp Olympic Time Trial Primoz Roglic 2022 nbsp Belgium Cyclo cross Wout van Aert nbsp Australia Time Trial Rohan Dennis nbsp Norway Time Trial Tobias Foss nbsp Netherlands Road Race Pascal Eenkhoorn nbsp World Time Trial Tobias Foss 2023 nbsp Netherlands Time Trial Jos van Emden nbsp Hungary Time Trial Attila Valter nbsp Belgium Time Trial Wout van Aert nbsp Netherlands Road Race Dylan van Baarle nbsp Hungary Road Race Attila Valter nbsp European Road Race Christophe LaporteReferences edit Kwantum decosol yoko in Dutch Cyclebase Archived from the original on 30 September 2018 Retrieved 20 March 2008 71eme Tour de France 1984 in French Memoire du cyclisme 2008 Archived from the original on 31 January 2009 Retrieved 20 March 2008 Acces equipes Rabobank in French Memoire du cyclisme Archived from the original on 22 March 2012 Retrieved 29 September 2009 a b Miserus Mark 5 May 2012 Doping werd getolereerd in Raboploeg de Volkskrant Archived from the original on 7 May 2012 Retrieved 5 May 2012 Jonas Vingegaard Wins Tour de France Completing His Sudden Ascent to Top New York Times Archived from the original on 24 July 2022 Retrieved 24 July 2022 Tour de France Jonas Vingegaard crowned champion as Jasper Philipsen wins in Paris BBC News Archived from the original on 24 July 2022 Retrieved 27 July 2022 Kuss crowned Vuelta champion as Jumbo Visma make history france24 com 17 September 2023 Archived from the original on 18 September 2023 Retrieved 17 September 2023 Holthausen Joop 2005 Het geheim van Raleigh Amsterdam Arbeiderspers ISBN 90 809676 3 7 New teams of the TI Raleigh cyclists in Dutch Archived from the original on 8 April 2008 Retrieved 20 March 2008 a b Kwantum Hallen Yoko 1984 in Dutch dewielersite Archived from the original on 14 April 2009 Retrieved 20 March 2008 Kwantum Hallen Yoko 1985 in Dutch dewielersite Archived from the original on 14 April 2009 Retrieved 20 March 2008 Kwantum Hallen Yoko 1986 in Dutch dewielersite Archived from the original on 13 April 2009 Retrieved 20 March 2008 Superconfex Yoko 1987 in Dutch dewielersite Archived from 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Retrieved 7 January 2008 De Rooy steps down from Rabobank Cyclingnews com Archived from the original on 14 October 2012 Retrieved 7 January 2008 BBC Sport Rabobank ends sponsorship of professional cycling team BBC Archived from the original on 19 October 2012 Retrieved 19 October 2012 Blanco rebrands as Belkin Pro Cycling unveils new kit in time for Tour de France Road cc Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 24 June 2013 Benson Daniel 17 June 2014 Belkin riders look to secure futures after sponsor pulls out cyclingnews com Archived from the original on 19 June 2014 Retrieved 18 June 2014 Belkin team secures future with Lotto BrandLoyalty sponsorships cyclingnews com 30 July 2014 Archived from the original on 2 August 2014 Retrieved 3 August 2014 Been Jose 21 July 2014 Report Belkin s future guaranteed cyclingnews com Archived from the original on 24 July 2014 Retrieved 3 August 2014 Gallery Team LottoNL Jumbo unveiled in Utrecht Cyclingnews com Archived from the 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from 1 January Team Jumbo Visma Retrieved 25 November 2023 Menchov first in gold Cyclingnews com Archived from the original on 14 October 2012 Retrieved 1 January 2008 Menchov gives Rabobank its best Grand Tour result Cyclingnews com Archived from the original on 14 October 2012 Retrieved 1 January 2008 Quiet celebration for Menchov and Rabobank Cyclingnews com Archived from the original on 14 October 2012 Retrieved 1 January 2008 Rasmussen out of Tour de France dead link Het plezier is weg bij Boogerd in Dutch NOS 26 July 2007 Archived from the original on 14 April 2009 Retrieved 27 July 2007 Menchov houdt Tour voor gezien in Dutch Nieuws nl 26 July 2007 Archived from the original on 11 April 2009 Retrieved 27 July 2007 The 2008 Tour twenty teams invited ASO 20 March 2008 Archived from the original on 16 March 2008 Retrieved 2 April 2008 Rabobank with 6 new riders Menchov will not defend Vuelta title Cyclingheroes 7 January 2008 Archived from the original on 10 January 2008 Retrieved 2 April 2008 Cycling team s reaction to new start Rabosport com Rabosport com Archived from the original on 22 October 2012 Retrieved 19 October 2012 Raboteam continues as Blanco Pro Cycling volkskrant nl Archived from the original on 24 April 2013 Retrieved 19 October 2012 Wilson Bill Blanco Pro Cycling team to be sponsored by Belkin BBC News Archived from the original on 25 June 2013 Retrieved 24 June 2013 Belkin New sponsor for Team Blanco Podium Cafe Archived from the original on 16 June 2013 Retrieved 24 June 2013 Rabobank team to ride Giant bicycles for the 2009 season Velonews com Archived from the original on 13 September 2008 Retrieved 11 January 2009 Bianchi technical sponsor of Belkin Pro Cycling Team Bianchi com Archived from the original on 27 July 2014 Retrieved 17 July 2014 Santini to sponsor Belkin pro cycling team bicycleretailer com 17 October 2013 Archived from the original on 25 October 2013 Retrieved 26 October 2013 Belkin signs sponsorship deal with Blanco Cycling News Future Publishing Archived from the original on 7 June 2013 Retrieved 1 June 2013 Team Jumbo add Visma as title sponsor News shorts cyclingnews com Archived from the original on 16 March 2019 Retrieved 20 March 2019 Team Jumbo add Visma as title sponsor News shorts cyclingnews com Archived from the original on 16 March 2019 Retrieved 20 March 2019 Jumbo Visma Mitchelton Scott and Team Sunweb all swap bikes for 2021 cyclingnews com Archived from the original on 23 October 2020 Retrieved 20 October 2020 Team Visma Lease a Bike UCI Retrieved 5 January 2024 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to wbr Rabo ProTeam and wbr Team Jumbo Visma Official website Rabobank results since 1996 in Dutch Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Visma Lease a Bike men 27s team amp oldid 1217196183, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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