Welcome to cyclingweekly.co.uk

Branding_print

Navigation


CAVENDISH: I DON'T BLAME CIOLEK FOR LEAVING

  • Wednesday, 26 November 2008
  • Lionel Birnie
  • 0 Comments

Mark Cavendish has admitted that losing Gerald Ciolek, a key part of the Columbia lead-out train, is a big blow but he’s confident he’ll still be the number one sprinter in 2009.

Ciolek, who played a big part in each of Cavendish’s four Tour de France stage wins, has joined German squad Milram. Columbia have signed Aussie Mark Renshaw from Crédit Agricole to replace him.

Cavendish said: “I knew he was going, and I don’t blame him at all. Of course I am very disappointed to lose him but if I was him I’d have done exactly the same thing.

“The guy is one of the top five sprinters in the world and he spent his Tour de France riding for me.

“I’ve lost an absolutely brilliant team-mate and a good friend, but when he’s had a great offer to go and be the number one sprinter in another team, you can’t expect him to stay.”

Cavendish said that although Ciolek would become a rival, he was still confident of beating him in head-to-head sprints.

“Eighty or ninety per cent of the time, I will be faster than him,” he said. “If it’s my kind of finish I’ll beat him. Gerald is a different kind of sprinter to me. He can do well in a lot more races. People under-estimate him by saying he’s a sprinter, but he’s just a fast bike rider. To me, he’s the next [Paolo] Bettini.”

Andre Greipel, who won a string of races for Columbia, will step up and Renshaw will slot into the lead-out train. “Andre and I get on really well off the bike so hopefully we can make that work on the road. He’s always been strong and he can win in his own right, but we’ll be working together a lot more now.

“And Renshaw is fast too. Plus he’s a Prince Harry look-alike… He’s going to take a bit of stick about that,” Cavendish added.


Cavendish with Ciolek at the team presentation at the start of this year's Tour de France

CAV V CIOLEK
MARK CAVENDISH
Great Britain
Turned pro
2007
Age 23
Career so far
A graduate of British Cycling's academy programme. Rode as a stagiaire for the German Sparkasse team in the late summer of 2005. Continued with Sparkasse in 2006 and then rode as a stagiaire for T-Mobile at the end of that season. Turned pro for T-Mobile in 2007 and won an astonishing 11 races in his debut season.
Pro wins (UCI ranked .1 and above)
2007: 11
2008: 17 including four Tour de France stages and two Giro d'Italia stages
2009 – staying with Columbia

GERALD CIOLEK
Germany
Turned pro
2006
Age 22
Career so far
Rode for the German Akud squad in 2005. Won the German national road race championship that year as an 18-year-old, beating Robert Forster and Erik Zabel in the sprint. Turned pro for Wiesenhof Akud in 2006 and won the under-23 world title the same year. Joined T-Mobile at the start of 2007
Pro wins (UCI ranked .1 and above)
2005: 1 German national road race championship
2006: 2 including one Tour of Germany stage
2007: 8 including three Tour of Germany stages
2008: 3
2009 – moving to Milram

Head-to-head
The only major occasion they have raced against each other in opposition was in the under-23 road race at the 2006 World Championships in Salzburg, Austria. Ciolek took the rainbow jersey that day in the bunch sprint. Cavendish was 11th.

See the January issue of Cycle Sport for the story of Team Columbia’s remarkable season. Out now

Share this article

email this to a friend

IPC Media Limited, owner of cyclingweekly.co.uk, will collect this information solely to process your request.

  • Bookmark
  • Print
  • Comment

Click on a link below to share this article with your favourite link sharing site


Rate this Article

Rate this content

0 stars

0 Votes

Current Rating


Reader comments

Add your comments

No comments have been added yet. Be the first by adding yours below...

Add your comments

Please note that we review all comments before they will appear on our site.

IPC Media Limited, owner of cyclingweekly.co.uk, will collect your personal information solely to process your request.

Back to top


Free Newsletter

Sign up to our free newsletter to get the latest updates from Cycling Weekly.

Free Newsletter

More information




Your vote

Take part in our latest poll...

Do you think that Bradley Wiggins can win the Tour de France?

Poll

  • Yes, this year (9%)
  • Yes, but not this year (34%)
  • No (57%)

See all polls..