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March 24, 2019

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Billionaire Ratcliffe rides to the rescue of Team Sky

BRITAIN’S richest man Jim Ratcliffe rode to the rescue of Team Sky when his chemicals multinational INEOS was confirmed as the new owner of the powerhouse cycle team earlier this week.

A statement from the British outfit, which has eight Grand Tour victories to its name, said current owners Sky and 21st Century Fox had agreed a sale to INEOS, who will officially take control on May 1.

The hugely successful team’s future was thrown into doubt when British broadcaster Sky said last December it was pulling the plug on its 30 million pounds (US$40 million) per year backing.

Team owner Dave Brailsford appears to have hit the jackpot, however, by convincing keen cyclist Ratcliffe to step in — a partnership that should ensure the likes of four-times Tour de France winner Chris Froome, current champion Geraint Thomas and rising Colombian Egan Bernal need not look elsewhere.

David Lappartient, president of world cycling’s governing body UCI, welcomed the news.

“I am pleased that INEOS is taking over the team because it is important that teams find investors. It is healthy that the best team in the world finds a buyer,” Lappartient said.

Yorkshire Departure

Team INEOS’s first outing will be the low-profile Tour de Yorkshire starting in Doncaster on May 2.

“Cycling is a great endurance and tactical sport that is gaining ever more popularity around the world,” Ratcliffe, chairman and CEO of INEOS and whose personal wealth runs to a reported 21 billion pounds, said in a statement.

“INEOS is delighted to take on the responsibility of running such a professional team.”

Brailsford said it was a “hugely exciting” new chapter for a team already boasting 327 victories.

“It’s great news for the team, for cycling fans, and for the sport more widely,” he said. “It ends the uncertainty around the team and the speed with which it has happened represents a huge vote of confidence in our future.”

The takeover is a boost to Brailsford, the former performance director of British Cycling, after a torrid few years in which the “clean” reputation of the team, and his running of it, have come under forensic examination.

Brailsford’s “marginal gains” philosophy helped turn Britain’s track cyclists into gold-medal winning machines at the Beijing and London Olympics in 2008 and 2012.

When he formed Team Sky in 2010 with an ambitious target of giving Britain a first Tour de France champion while employing a “zero tolerance” policy to doping, many were sceptical.

But it took only two years with former tracks star Bradley Wiggins hitting the jackpot by winning the 2012 Tour.

Kenya-born Briton Froome won in 2013, 2015, 2016 and 2017 to move up the all-time list behind five-time champions Miguel Indurain, Bernard Hinault, Eddy Merckx and Jacques Anquetil.

Sky’s huge budget allowed them to cherry-pick the best Grand Tour domestiques to support their general classification riders — leaving rival teams green with envy.

The UCI’s Lappatient also voiced caution about the impact that a huge team budget can have on competition.

“I understand there can be concerns that the team with the biggest budget can have all the best riders and it affects the uncertainty of sport,” he said, adding that the element of uncertainty was key to the economic attractiveness of sport.

He said the UCI was in the process of creating a working group on the sport’s attractiveness which will tackle the subject.

The team’s reputation has been tarnished in recent years though after becoming embroiled in a series of controversies.

A mystery “jiffy bag” delivered to Wiggins at the 2011 Criterium du Dauphine was never properly explained — a 14-month UK Anti-Doping investigation eventually hitting a dead end due to a lack of accurate medical records.

A report published last year by Britain’s Digital, Culture, Media and Sport select committee accused Team Sky of crossing an “ethical line” by using permitted medications to improve the level of its riders — a claim Sky strongly refuted.

Froome also came under the microscope after an adverse doping test at the 2017 Vuelta a Espana showed double the permitted limit of the asthma medication Salbutamol in his system.

He strenuously denied any wrongdoing, won the Giro d’Italia in spectacular fashion while still under investigation, and was cleared by the UCI just before the start of the 2018 Tour de France won by his teammate Thomas.

Ratcliffe, 66, is no stranger to investing in British sport having ploughed 110 million pounds into Ben Ainslie’s America’s Cup project and Brailsford says he shares his own vision. “I know that we have found the right partner whose vision, passion and pioneering spirit can lead us to even greater success on and off the bike,” he said.




 

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