Alejandro Valverde

The rider widely rated as cycling’s current number one, Spaniard Alejandro Valverde, has received an offer from German squad T-Mobile for 2007. The 2006 ProTour winner and runner-up in the Tour of Spain could take over from Jan Ullrich - sacked from T-Mobile following his implication in Operacion Puerto  -  as their leader for the Tour de France and Ardennes Classics.

Despite official denials by the German team, T-Mobile’s offer has been confirmed by both Valverde’s current squad, Caisse D’Epargne and  - according to Valverde’s  team manager Eusebio Unzue - by the rider himself.

“Alejandro had told us that T-Mobile had been in touch and they had even turned up at his house [in Murcia, Spain] to discuss the deal.” Unzue said. He  added that Caisse D’Epargne was currently negotiating with Valverde to renew his contract until 2010 and described the T-Mobile offer as a “hostile and highly unscrupulous strategy.”

Whilst the amount of money T-Mobile have offered to Valverde  is unclear, it can hardly be less than the 1.3 millions Valverde currently earns per annum. Should Valverde, who already has a contract with Caisse D’Epargne ending in 2007, opt to leave the Spanish team, then the ‘get-out clause’ specifies he would have to pay out two million euros.

The news could hardly have come at a worse time for Caisse D’Epargne. The team are currently negotiating with a sponsor from Valverde’s local region, 3 Molinos Resort , to take over as a second backer for the squad for 2007 - a deal that would almost certainly fall through if Valverde moved on at the last minute. Not only that, T-Mobile’s offer will also considerably increase Valverde’s market value even if he remains with Caisse D’Epargne.