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tour of britain jumbo team

Sixteen of the world’s leading pro cycling teams, including Tour de France champions Jumbo–Visma and British home fan favourites INEOS Grenadiers, will compete in this year’s Tour of Britain .

They are two of the five UCI WorldTeams who will take the start in the 19th edition of the UK’s most prestigious cycling race, which begins in Greater Manchester on September 3, and culminates with a finale in South Wales eight stages later.

BORA–hansgrohe, Movistar Team, and Team dsm – firmenich, all of whom won stages in last year’s abridged event, and the Uno-X Pro Cycling Team will also be in action just six weeks on from competing at the Tour de France.

The 16 teams competing in the Tour of Britain 2023 are:

Bingoal WB (Belgium) Bolton Equities Black Spoke (New Zealand) BORA–hansgrohe (Germany) Equipo Kern Pharma (Spain) Global 6 Cycling (New Zealand) Great Britain Cycling Team (Great Britain) INEOS Grenadiers (Great Britain) Jumbo–Visma (Netherlands) Movistar Team (Spain) Q36.5 Pro Cycling Team (Switzerland) Saint Piran (Great Britain) TDT – Unibet Cycling Team (Netherlands) Team dsm – firmenich (Netherlands) Team Flanders – Baloise (Belgium) TRINITY Racing (Great Britain) Uno-X Pro Cycling Team (Norway)

A predicted 1.5 million spectators are expected to watch these teams in action at this year’s race, capitalising on the free-to-attend nature of the event.

INEOS Grenadiers, the second most successful team in modern race history, will look to go one better than the previous two editions of the British Tour, in which British stars Ethan Hayter (2021) and Olympic champion Tom Pidcock (2022) finished as runners-up.

The return of Jumbo–Visma to the race will further whet the appetite, given the Dutch team have won the Tour of Britain on three occasions – twice with Lars Boom (2011, 2017) and once with Belgian star Wout Van Aert (2021). The team also sits fourth in the all-time list of stage wins, having had their riders cross the line first on 14 occasions.

Mick Bennett, Tour of Britain race director, said “We’ve assembled a really exciting and eclectic mix of teams for this year’s Tour of Britain.

“From Movistar, the team of defending champion Gonzalo Serrano, and the world’s number two and three-ranked squads to some of the sport’s most promising up-and-coming outfits, we’re counting down the days until they begin racing on British roads.”

The 2023 race starts in Greater Manchester and finishes eight days later in South Wales. Along the way, riders will race through North Wales, East Yorkshire, Nottinghamshire, Suffolk, Essex, and Gloucestershire.

ITV4 will continue to broadcast live flag-to-flag coverage of every stage and a nightly highlights show. The race will also be shown in over 150 countries worldwide, thanks to the event’s partnerships with Eurosport and Global Cycling Network (GCN).

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Wout van Aert of Jumbo-Visma (right) on the podium after winning the Tour of Britain.

Wout van Aert wins Tour of Britain title as Carlos Rodríguez takes final stage

  • Van Aert’s second-place finish enough to secure second title
  • ‘I had a really hard time. I didn’t think it was possible’

Second place on the climbing stage into Caerphilly secured Wout van Aert his second overall title in the Tour of Britain. Compared with his 2021 victory , however, this was far from straightforward although his fine form had been clear from day one.

Through the hills of south Wales, Ineos’s Spanish starlet Carlos Rodríguez, the eventual stage winner, formed an impromptu alliance with local rider Steve Williams to push Van Aert to the edge, in the first of the eight stages where the Belgian’s Jumbo-Visma team were unable to exert any real grip on proceedings.

After Williams – who was guesting for Great Britain here – and Rodríguez had sprung clear on the climb of Bryn Du, high above Aberdare in the heart of the Rhondda, Van Aert’s teammates had been scattered to the four winds on the high moorland and the two strongest climbers in the race were rapidly forging a healthy advantage ahead of a small chase group, Van Aert faced the prospect of losing the race lead he had taken in winning Thursday’s stage into Felixstowe . “I had a really hard time, I didn’t think it was possible to take the general classification.”

The 28-year-old’s only option was to remain calm and hope that enough of his teammates could battle their way up to him, and that they and other squads would take the strain before the race arrived at the final brace of climbs over Caerphilly Mountain in the last eight miles. “I tried to stay calm, as I knew there were two climbers in front, and they would spend a lot of energy getting to the finish circuit.”

In the hiatus while he waited for Steven Kruijswijk and Nathan Van Hooydonck to catch up, Williams and Rodríguez raced into a lead that briefly exceeded 90 seconds.

With several other teams assisting Jumbo-Visma, the duo’s lead evaporated like the puddles from the rain showers that had greeted the race when it entered the hills, and on reaching Caerphilly they were only a handful of seconds ahead.

The first climb of the mountain broke Williams, a 27-year-old from Aberystwyth who has quietly forged a good career racing for the Bahrain-Merida and Israel-Premier Tech team, and who this year had won the Arctic Race of Norway. Rodríguez forged ahead on his own, but although he has had an outstanding year with a stage win and fifth overall in the Tour de France, he was less of a threat to Van Aert, having lost time in a crash in the Cotswolds on Saturday’s stage into Gloucester.

The Spaniard needed to finish 40sec ahead of Van Aert and his 20sec advantage with one 7km lap of the finish circuit put the race in the balance. With no teammates left at his side, the Belgian had to control the Spaniard’s lead while simultaneously ensuring that he did not crack, and that he did not lose ground to three threats for the overall title: Rodríguez’s Ineos teammate Magnus Sheffield, the Norwegian Tobias Johannessen and the Australian Damien Howson, all of whom were a slender 3sec behind him overall.

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While Rodríguez did give the Ineos team a consolatory stage win after the withdrawal of their marquee rider Tom Pidcock on Saturday, he was only 11sec ahead of Van Aert on the line, giving the Belgian his third road race win of 2023. He has had a frustrating mid-season, and it was about time he got the rub of the green.

This was a fine crescendo to a slow-burning week marked by six mass finishes in the first six stages, with 52 riders level on time 3sec behind Van Aert after Friday’s stage into Harlow , but it was far from plain sailing, with this most important climbing stage in effect split into two by a lengthy pause from racing with between 87km and 77km to go, when the race briefly stopped twice and then took a diversion to avoid a stretch of road which had been closed by an accident involving a motorcyclist. The incident was unrelated to the race, but it meant that the entire convoy had to be guided through back streets with racing neutralised and the bunch travelling at controlled speed.

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Tour of Britain: Ineos Grenadiers win team time trial

Hayter takes over race lead from Carpenter

Ineos Grenadiers claimed a home victory in the stage 3 team time trial at the Tour of Britain , moving Ethan Hayter into the overall lead. 

The British team clocked 20:22 on the rolling and technical 18.1-kilometre course in South Wales, beating Julian Alaphilippe’s Deceuninck-QuickStep by some 17 seconds, having been tied for time at the half-way mark. 

Jumbo-Visma finished third at 20 seconds but were left to wonder what might have been after Pascal Eenkoorn suffered a puncture in the final kilometre, leaving Wout van Aert, Tony Martin, and George Bennett to freewheel to the line looking around for the fourth rider they needed for their time to be registered. 

Rally Cycling were the last team to start but finished well down on Ineos’ time in 11th place and so stage 2 winner Robin Carpenter had to hand over the leader’s jersey to Hayter. 

The in-form 22-year-old Briton, who was fourth on the opening day and second on stage 2, established himself as the leader of the race and the leader of his own team, as Michał Kwiatkowski, who had been billed as a co-leader, was dropped from the train on the short climb in the latter phase of the course. 

Owain Doull had just been dropped at the base of the climb, but they still had three big engines in Rohan Dennis, Richie Porte and Carlos Rodríguez, before Hayter himself dragged the quartet to the line. 

“All six riders gave everything. We all rode a really good TTT, and that’s really satisfying to see,” said the new race leader.

Deceuninck-QuickStep, who set off earlier, had matched Ineos’ pace on the first half of the course but were slower on the climb. They sacrificed Tim Declercq and Davide Ballerini before Alaphilippe came to the line alongside Mark Cavendish, Yves Lampaert and Mikel Honoré. 

At the time, they’d beaten Jumbo-Visma’s benchmark by three seconds, forcing Van Aert and his teammates to curse their misfortune. When Ineos bettered their time by 20 seconds, the question of whether it had cost them the stage win was a little less clear cut, but it did cost Van Aert precious time in the overall standings. 

In any case, it was an impressive ride, as they started with just five riders after losing Chris Harper on stage 2 and then carried a virtual passenger in the form of youngster Gils Leemreize. They lost just 10 seconds to Ineos in the second half of the parcours, even accounting for the puncture. 

There was a gap of another 20 seconds back to Israel Start-Up Nation in fourth, while Team DSM and Alpecin-Fenix tied for time at 57 seconds to take fourth and fifth, as the only other teams within a minute of Ineos’ time. 

In the overall standings, Ineos have a one-two, with Hayter leading Dennis by six seconds. Van Aert, who picked up bonus seconds for his stage 1 win, is third at 16 seconds, ahead of Alaphilippe at 23 seconds. 

Israel Start-Up Nation’s leaders Michael Woods and Dan Martin are in seventh and eighth while Alpecin-Fenix also have two riders in the top 10 in Kristian Sbaragli and Xandro Meurisse.

“It’ll be very hard leading this race with five days left,” Hayter said. 

“It’s going to be super tough racing and it’ll be really hard to control. We’re up against it but it’s better to have 16 second than be behind by 16 seconds.”

How it unfolded

The Saint Piran team, local to the Cornwall region where the race started on Sunday, got stage 3 underway as the first team down the start ramp in South Wales. 

They clocked 22:56 and bettered the next team on the road, Swift Carbon, who suffered a mechanical, by six seconds, but it was a different British team who set the first real benchmark. Ribble-Weldtite, with James Shaw and aerodynamicist Dan Bigham in their ranks, went more than a minute quicker, stopping the clock at 21:31. 

After Global 6, the Great Britain national team, and Caja Rural had set off, Jumbo-Visma lined up as the first WorldTour team on the start ramp. The Dutch squad had just five riders at their disposal, with Chris Harper having crashed out the previous day, and it soon became apparent they were effectively riding as a quartet, as youngster Gils Leemreize remained glued to the back of the line. They suffered another setback in the final kilometre when Eenkhoorn punctured, forcing Van Aert, Martin, and Bennett to freewheel to the finish while looking around for their teammate.

Despite the setback, and despite having not been much clear of Ribble-Weldtite at the half-way mark, they beat the best time by some 49 seconds to clock 20:42. However, the cost of the puncture soon became apparent when Deceuninck-QuickStep went through the half-way mark seven seconds up and then reached the finish three seconds up, with Alaphilippe, Cavendish, Lampaert, and Honoré their finishing four. 

Israel Start-Up Nation had suffered a mechanical of their own, losing Andre Greipel to a saddle problem, and they finished 29 second down, just after Trinity Racing had made themselves the second best of the British teams. 

Qhubeka-NextHash fell apart in the latter phases of their rider, apparently due to Mauro Schmidt crashing. The Swiss youngster, who won a stage of this year’s Giro d’Italia, couldn’t hold the wheel and crossed the line with blood on his knee after an utterly ragged final two kilometres from the team’s final four riders. They ended up finishing more than two minutes in arrears of Deceuninck-QuickStep. 

After Canyon-DhB had set 22:24, Arkéa-Samsic set off with a bare four riders, having only brought five to the race and then losing Bram Welten on the opening day. They remained cohesive but couldn’t get anywhere near Deceuninck-QuickStep, at 1:10 down. 

Alpecin-Fenix lost Silvan Dillier from their final four but went fourth fastest at 40 seconds, but that didn’t last long as Team DSM came home and nudged them out by a fraction of a second. 

Ineos Grenadiers, with Ethan Hayter wearing a light blue skin suit as leader of the points classification, were the penultimate team down the ramp, just ahead of the Rally Cycling squad of stage 2 winner and overall leader Robin Carpenter. Ineos quickly put themselves right into the mix, equalling Deceuninck-QuickStep’s time at the checkpoint, where they still had all six riders. However, as they hit the climb, they were quickly down to five, with Owain Doull immediately losing contact and then Kwiatkowski falling away further up. It turned out to be well-paced as the final four remained glued together on the dip down and the final couple of flat kilometres, with Hayter producing another final injection of pace to bring them to the line. 

Rally Cycling were the only team left out on the course but it was soon apparent that they would get nowhere near Ineos’ time and that Carpenter would be handing over the leader's jersey after one day in navy blue.

tour of britain jumbo team

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Patrick Fletcher

Patrick is an NCTJ-trained journalist, and former deputy editor of Cyclingnews, who has seven years’ experience covering professional cycling. He has a modern languages degree from Durham University and has been able to put it to some use in what is a multi-lingual sport, with a particular focus on French and Spanish-speaking riders. Away from cycling, Patrick spends most of his time playing or watching other forms of sport - football, tennis, trail running, darts, to name a few, but he draws the line at rugby.

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Tour of Britain teams

First teams announced for Tour of Britain 2022 6 mins read time

Dfp – header, 30 jun 2022.

Tour of Britain teams

All four of Britain’s male UCI Continental Teams and a Great Britain national squad have today been unveiled as the first confirmed squads for the Tour of Britain 2022 (Sunday 4 – Sunday 11 September).

Wiv SunGod will compete in their national tour for the fifth edition running, while Ribble Weldtite Pro Cycling, Saint Piran and TRINITY Racing return having all made their race debuts in 2021.

The Great Britain Cycling Team – who have ridden 14 of the 17 modern Tours to date, including every edition since 2012 – complete today’s team announcement.

Tour of Britain organiser SweetSpot and British Cycling have issued invites to the quartet of UCI Continental teams in recognition of the challenging sponsorship climate that they continue to face. Details of the UCI World and Pro Teams competing in this year’s race will be announced in July.

About the teams

Hampshire-based Wiv SunGod have enjoyed significant success at the Tour since their first participation in 2017, most notably winning both the ŠKODA King of the Mountains and sprints jerseys last year with Jake Scott. Their 16-man roster also includes newly-crowned Irish road race champion Rory Townsend, as well as Matt Bostock, who won the British circuit race championships in Kirkcudbright, Scotland, last Friday.

tour of britain jumbo team

Photo:  Wiv SunGod’s Jake Scott won the ŠKODA King of the Mountains and sprints jerseys at last year’s Tour of Britain

Ribble Weldtite Pro Cycling impressed on their Tour of Britain debut in 2021, recording four top-10 stage finishes and having the highest overall finisher – James Shaw – of the domestic teams. Six of their 16-rider squad could potentially get to race on home roads in this year’s race. Most notably, siblings and Commonwealth Games 2018 medallists Charlie and Harry Tanfield, are from the North Yorkshire village of Great Ayton, which is raced through on stage four.

Additionally, Stuart Balfour hails from the Scottish Borders, where stage two takes place (Hawick to Duns, Monday 5 September). Ollie Peckover and Ross Lamb are both from Nottinghamshire, host county for stage five (West Bridgford to Mansfield, Thursday 8 September), while selection would allow for Will Brown to race through his home town of Whitby on day four.

Also returning for a second-year running are Saint Piran , Cornwall’s first elite cycling team. Their roster was bolstered for 2022 by the arrival of sprinter Gabz Cullaigh, who has recorded three top-10 stage finishes in the Tour, most recently on the final day of last year’s race in Aberdeen. New signing Alex Richardson will make his debut for the team this week having been pipped to the British road race title by cycling legend Mark Cavendish in Castle Douglas, Scotland, on Sunday.

TRINITY Racing have quickly become one of the most-respected development teams in world cycling, with the performances of then-Irish road race champion Ben Healy in last year’s race helping him move up to UCI WorldTeam level with EF Education – EasyPost for 2022. The team’s roster includes Californian rider Luke Lamperti, who successfully defended his American circuit race title in Tennessee last week and finished fourth in Warrington on stage five in 2021.

tour of britain jumbo team

Photo:  TRINITY Racing’s Luke Lamperti is one to watch in the bunch sprints

The involvement of a Great Britain national team allows future stars to gain invaluable experience in one of the world’s leading races. Among those who have lined up in the race in home colours are 2021 Giro d’Italia champion Tao Geoghegan Hart, 2018 Vuelta a Espana victor Simon Yates and Grand Tour stage winner Hugh Carthy.

Mick Bennett, Tour of Britain race director, said: “We’re delighted to unveil the first teams who will be competing in this year’s Tour of Britain. As we look forward to one of the hardest editions of the modern Tour of Britain to date, we feel proud and honoured that the strength of cycling in Britain means that we can field four home UCI-registered teams in the race. We feel that giving them confirmation of their selection at this point in the season will allow them time to prepare fully for the event and therefore show off their prowess to a worldwide audience.”

Tim Elverson, Wiv SunGod team owner, said: “Wiv SunGod are super excited to be invited back to the Tour of Britain, which is one of the pinnacle races on any team’s calendar. Having won a jersey in every edition of the race since 2018, we plan to be ready to attack from kilometer zero!”

Jack Rees, Ribble Weldtite Pro Cycling director of operations, said: “There is something very special about riding in your national tour. It’s a great honour to line up on the startline again this year with the Ribble Weldtite squad. We intend to show the Tour of Britain the respect it deserves and aim to display our colours throughout this prestigious event. Our thanks go to SweetSpot for their continued support of Britain’s UCI Continental teams.”

Steve Lampier, Saint Piran directeur sportif said: “I’m over the moon that we’ve been given the opportunity to line up in this year’s Tour of Britain, the second in the team’s short history. We will be righting some wrongs from last year’s race and showing everybody that we deserve to be in the event.”

Ian Stannard, TRINITY Racing directeur sportif, said: “The Tour of Britain is an extra special event and, as a British development team, the riders have an added affinity to the Tour. Added to that the buzz of racing on home roads with home crowds cheering us on is an incredibly exciting prospect. We also see the event as an excellent opportunity for our riders to test themselves against the WorldTour riders and the chance to showcase their ability on a big stage.”

Matt Brammeier, Elite Road and Senior Men’s Academy Coach for the Great Britain Cycling Team, said: “Riding the Tour of Britain is always one of the highlights of the year for our young riders, and provides them with an invaluable opportunity to experience riding in the pro peloton and test themselves against the world’s best. As ever we’re thankful for the opportunity to ride and look forward to lining up on the start line alongside the four British UCI Continental teams, as we step up our preparations for this year’s UCI Road World Championships in Australia.”

About the Tour of Britain 2022

This year’s Tour of Britain (Sunday 4 – Sunday 11 September) will see over 100 of the world’s best riders race from Aberdeen to the Isle of Wight in what promises to be another memorable edition of this country’s flagship cycling event.

Race fans can get closer to the event than ever before in 2022 owing to our enhanced range of hospitality and experience packages . Whether you want to watch the finish of a stage from the best seat in the house or ride alongside our new race ambassador Dan Martin , our partners Sportsbreaks.com and Destination Sport Experiences have got you covered!

ITV4 will continue to broadcast live flag-to-flag coverage of every stage and nightly highlights show, allowing fans in the UK to watch wherever they are. The race will also be shown in over 150 countries worldwide, thanks to the event’s partnerships with Eurosport and the Global Cycling Network.

Last year’s star-studded race was won by Belgian rider Wout Van Aert (Team Jumbo – Visma), with reigning world road race champion Julian Alaphilippe finishing third overall. According to research by Frontline, a roadside crowd of over one million spectators resulted in the Tour of Britain generating £29.96m of net economic benefit for the UK economy.

Bike Library pilot scheme launched at Suffolk school to build on Tour of Britain legacy

Bike Library pilot scheme launched at Suffolk school to build on Tour of Britain legacy

Video: relive the Tour of Britain 2023

Video: relive the Tour of Britain 2023

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Go behind the scenes at the Tour of Britain with cottages.com

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  1. Eventual winner Dylan Groenewegen of Team LottoNL Jumbo (right) battles

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  2. LottoNL-Jumbo wins Tour of Britain team time trial to put Roglic in

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  3. Best pictures from the Tour of Britain 2019

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  4. Kirkcudbright, Scotland, UK. 7th September 2019. Dylan Groenewegen

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  5. Tour of Britain: Jumbo-Visma rues loss of Harper ahead of crucial team

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  6. Tour of Britain Stgae 5: LottoNL-Jumbo win Team Time Trial

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COMMENTS

  1. Tour of Britain

    Jumbo - Visma will be competing in the Tour of Britain, the UK's most prestigious cycle race, between Sunday 3 and 10 September 2023. ... Jumbo-Visma will be competing in the 2021 Tour of Britain, the UK's most prestigious cycle race, between Sunday 3 and 10 September 2023. ... Netherlands: Founded: 1984: Team name abbreviation: BTJV ...

  2. Jumbo

    28 Jul 2023. Sixteen of the world's leading teams, including Tour de France champions Jumbo - Visma and home fan favourites INEOS Grenadiers, will compete in this year's Tour of Britain. They are two of the five UCI WorldTeams who will take the start in the 19th edition of the UK's most prestigious race, which begins in Greater ...

  3. Tour of Britain: Van Poppel breaks Jumbo-Visma stranglehold to win

    Vernon, Gudmestad get the better of four stage winner Kooij. After complete domination by Jumbo-Visma in the first five stages of the 2023 Tour of Britain, their winning streak finally came to an ...

  4. Tour of Britain: Kooij and Van Aert score Jumbo-Visma 1-2 on stage 1

    Olav Kooij led Wout van Aert home for a Jumbo-Visma one-two on the opening stage of the Tour of Britain in Manchester, the pair beating out Sam Bennett (Bora-Hansgrohe) in the sprint finish. Van ...

  5. Tour of Britain: Olav Kooij doubles up with stage two win for Jumbo

    Olav Kooij made it back-to-back wins by edging a dramatic sprint finish on stage two of the Tour of Britain in Wrexham.. The Dutchman was led home at the end of a winding, undulating final few ...

  6. Tour of Britain stage 5: Wout van Aert powers to victory with final

    A final-kilometre attack from Wout van Aert earned Jumbo-Visma their fifth win in a row at the Tour of Britain, with four-time stage winner Olav Kooij handing over victory to his invaluable lead-out rider in Felixstowe. The whole squad taking a wrong turn on a roundabout in the final 10km threatened to let a team other than Jumbo-Visma win a ...

  7. Wout van Aert secures overall title at Tour of Britain

    Wout Van Aert (Jumbo-Visma) secured overall victory at the Tour of Britain with a calculated and hugely impressive ride on the final hilly stage in south Wales. The Belgian was attacked and ...

  8. Tour of Britain stage 1: Olav Kooij wins sprint as Jumbo-Visma go 1-2

    Olav Kooij won the opening stage of the Tour of Britain as his Jumbo-Visma team pioneered the front of the peloton into the closing kilometre. Behind Kooij it was teammate Wout van Aert who finished second, with Sam Bennett (Bora-Hansgrohe) rounding out the podium in third.

  9. Flying Dutchman Olav Kooij wins stage two at Tour of Britain

    Away from the Tour of Britain, Jumbo-Visma lead the Vuelta a España with American rider Sepp Kuss going into Tuesday's 25.8km time trial in Valladolid, while three-time winner Primoz Roglic and ...

  10. Tour of Britain stage 6: Danny van Poppel ends Jumbo-Visma dominance

    Danny van Poppel (Bora-Hansgrohe) powered to the win on stage 6 of the Tour of Britain, edging out Ethan Vernon (Great Britain) in a tightly contested sprint into Harlow.Tord Gudmestad (Uno-X Pro Cycling) finished third.. Van Poppel avoided several late crashes inside the final 20km and then came from behind in a messy and chaotic sprint after Jumbo-Visma saw their train hijacked by several ...

  11. Jumbo-Visma and INEOS Grenadiers headline teams for Tour of Britain

    Sixteen of the world's leading pro cycling teams, including Tour de France champions Jumbo-Visma and British home fan favourites INEOS Grenadiers, will compete in this year's Tour of Britain. They are two of the five UCI WorldTeams who will take the start in the 19th edition of the UK's most prestigious cycling race, which begins in ...

  12. Olav Kooij wins Tour of Britain first stage with Wout van Aert in

    If the Tour of Britain needed a statement of intent from Jumbo-Visma on stage one into Manchester, this could hardly have been bettered: victory for the Dutch team's sprinter Olav Kooij with the ...

  13. Tour of Britain

    The Tour of Britain, the UK's most prestigious cycle race, takes place between Sunday 3 - 10 September 2023. ... Catch up on all the action from the Tour of Britain 2023, won by Wout van Aert (Jumbo - Visma),... Featured Video. 2023 Video; Featured Video; News; ... TEAM CLASSIFICATION. Q36.5 PRO CYCLING TEAM (SUI) Latest News All news.

  14. Wout van Aert wins Tour of Britain title as Carlos Rodríguez takes

    Second place on the climbing stage into Caerphilly secured Wout van Aert his second overall title in the Tour of Britain. ... where the Belgian's Jumbo-Visma team were unable to exert any real ...

  15. Tour of Britain: Olav Kooij makes it three on stage 3

    Jumbo-Visma's domination at the 2023 Tour of Britain continued on stage 3 in Beverley as race leader Olav Kooij won his third stage in a row, beating Danny van Poppel (Bora-Hansgrohe) to the line ...

  16. Tour of Britain: Dutch rider Olav Kooij sprints to victory on ...

    Dutch rider Olav Kooij sprinted to victory on stage one of the Tour of Britain after being led out by his Jumbo-Visma team-mate Wout van Aert. The Belgian finished second on the 161.6km route that ...

  17. Tour of Britain

    Former champion Wout van Aert says his Jumbo - Visma team will seek success through multiple riders at this year's Tour of Britain. The 2021 winner has been tipped by many to take overall glory in this year's race, which begins in Greater Manchester on Sunday, but the Belgian star believes his team's strength-in-depth could pay off.. Van Aert will have Dutch sprinter Olav Kooij, former ...

  18. Van Aert about Tour of Britain

    Wout van Aert will be at the start of the Tour of Britain this Sunday. Two years ago, he won three stages and the general classification. Curious about his t...

  19. Tour of Britain 2021: Results & News

    Follow live coverage of the 2021 Tour of Britain, including news, results, stage reports, photos, podcasts and expert analysis ... Jumbo-Visma also bring a strong team with Wout van Aert, Tobias ...

  20. Tour of Britain: Ineos Grenadiers win team time trial

    The Jumbo-Visma team at speed in the Tour of Britain TTT (Image credit: Getty Images) Ineos Grenadiers take the win on stage 3 of the Tour of Britain after the team time trial. (Image credit ...

  21. Tour of Britain

    Wout van Aert hoping to reward Jumbo - Visma team-mates with Tour of Britain GC victory. 1 min read time. DFP - Header. ... Having come close to all but clinching overall honours in this year's Tour of Britain following three explosive attacks en route into Gloucester on Saturday, race leader Wout van Aert is still hopeful of being ...

  22. First teams announced for Tour of Britain 2022

    First teams announced for Tour of Britain 2022. 6 mins read time. 30 Jun 2022. All four of Britain's male UCI Continental Teams and a Great Britain national squad have today been unveiled as the first confirmed squads for the Tour of Britain 2022 (Sunday 4 - Sunday 11 September). Wiv SunGod will compete in their national tour for the fifth ...