Team Jumbo-Visma

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Team Jumbo-Visma
Car with logo
Team data
UCI code TJV
nationality NetherlandsNetherlands Netherlands
License UCI WorldTeam
operator Team Oranje Road BV
First season 1984
discipline Street
Wheel manufacturer Bianchi
General manager NetherlandsNetherlands Richard Plugge
Sportl. ladder NetherlandsNetherlandsSierk-Jan de Haan Addy Engels Frans Maassen Grischa Niermann Arthur van Dongen Merijn Zeeman
NetherlandsNetherlands
NetherlandsNetherlands 
GermanyGermany
NetherlandsNetherlands
NetherlandsNetherlands 
Name story
Years Surname
1984–1986
1987–1989
1990–1992
1993–1994
1995
1996–2010
2011–2012
2013 (until the end of June)
2013–2014
2015–2018
2019-
Kwantum
Superconfex
Buckler
Wordperfect
Novell
Rabobank
Rabobank Cycling Team
Blanco Pro Cycling Team
Belkin-Pro Cycling Team
Team Lotto NL-Jumbo
Team Jumbo-Visma
Team photo
Team photo Team Jumbo-Visma
Website
www.teamjumbovisma.nl

The Jumbo-Visma team is the most successful cycling team in the Netherlands and is based in Amsterdam . The Dutch Rabobank was a sponsor for 16 years until 2012 .

organization

Rabobank at Around the Henninger Tower 2006

The team was built up by Jan Raas . The team with well-known Dutch drivers ( Erik Dekker , Michael Boogerd ) was able to strengthen itself in the early 2000s, mainly with Spanish drivers, above all the three-time world champion Óscar Freire . The mountain specialist Michael Rasmussen was also part of the team between 2003 and 2007. The team had a ProTeam license from the start and took part in the UCI ProTour and the successor series UCI World Tour .

The main sponsor was the Dutch bank Rabobank for 16 years until the end of 2012 . Under this sponsorship the team management also maintained even as the farm team , the Rabobank Continental Team , the UCI MTB Team Rabobank Giant Offroad Team and in women's cycling , the Rabobank Women Cycling Team .

Due to the continuing cases of doping in cycling, the main sponsor Rabobank announced in October 2012 that it would withdraw as a sponsor from cycling at the end of 2012. The occasion was the proceedings initiated against the Spaniard Carlos Barredo , who drove for the Rabobank team, and the doping affair Lance Armstrong .

In January 2013, several former Rabobank drivers admitted to having doped while playing for the team : Thomas Dekker , who drove for the team from 2005 until he tested positive for EPO , said doping was "part of the job" . Danny Nelissen stated that for the Tour de France 1996 and 1997 he was administered EPO by the team doctor Geert Leinders. Also Marc Lotz admitted doping. During his time at Rabobank, he took stimulants , steroids and EPO from 2001 . However, it made no connection to the team. Michael Rasmussen , who was about to win the Tour de France for the team in 2007 , made an extensive confession. He said he had been doping practically non-stop from 1998 to 2010. The German driver Grischa Niermann , who drove for the team for 13 years, also admitted to having doped several times between 2000 and 2003.

Logo 2013 to 2014

Likewise, in March the Dane Rolf Sørensen , who was active for the team from 1996 to 2000 , confessed to doping with EPO and cortisone. Even Michael Boogerd admitted the use of unauthorized aids, he was even administered blood transfusions his brother Rini Boogerd day before his Tour stage win in La Plagne.

As of late June 2013, the team rode under the name Belkin-Pro Cycling Team. The new main sponsor was the US computer hardware manufacturer Belkin International , who announced on June 17, 2014 that it would end the sponsorship at the end of 2014. The title sponsorship was carried out by the Dutch lottery and the supermarket chain Jumbo . The Norwegian enterprise software company Visma has been the second main sponsor of the Jumbo-Visma team since 2019 .

2020 season

Success in the UCI WorldTour

date run driver
February 26th United Arab EmiratesUnited Arab Emirates4th stage UAE Tour NetherlandsNetherlands Dylan Groenewegen
August 1st ItalyItaly Strade Bianche BelgiumBelgium Wout Van Aert
8th August ItalyItaly Milan-San Remo BelgiumBelgium Wout Van Aert
12. August FranceFrance1st stage Critérium du Dauphiné BelgiumBelgium Wout Van Aert
13 August FranceFrance2nd stage Critérium du Dauphiné SloveniaSlovenia Primož Roglič
August 16 FranceFrance5th stage Critérium du Dauphiné United StatesUnited States Sepp kiss

Success in the UCI ProSeries

date run driver
February 5th SpainSpain1st stage Valencia Tour NetherlandsNetherlands Dylan Groenewegen
February 7th SpainSpain3rd stage Valencia Tour NetherlandsNetherlands Dylan Groenewegen
12. August ItalyItaly Gran Piemonte New ZealandNew Zealand George Bennett

Success in the UCI Continental Circuits

date run Cat. driver
8th August FranceFrance2nd stage Tour de l'Ain 2.1 SloveniaSlovenia Primož Roglič
August 9 FranceFrance3rd stage Tour de l'Ain 2.1 SloveniaSlovenia Primož Roglič
7th-9th August FranceFrance Overall ranking Tour de l'Ain 2.1 SloveniaSlovenia Primož Roglič

National road cycling champions

date run winner
June 21st SloveniaSlovenia Slovenian Championship - Road Race SloveniaSlovenia Primož Roglič
20th of August BelgiumBelgium Belgian Championship - Individual Time Trial BelgiumBelgium Wout Van Aert

team

Wikidata logo S.svgTeam roster
Surname Date of birth country Previous team
George Bennett April 7, 1990 NZL New Zealand Cannondale (2014)
Koen Bouwman 2nd December 1993 NED Netherlands SEG Racing (2015)
Laurens De Plus 4th September 1995 BEL Belgium Quick-Step Floors (2018)
Tom Dumoulin November 11, 1990 NED Netherlands Sunweb (2019)
Pascal Eenkhoorn February 8, 1997 NED Netherlands BMC Development (2017)
Tobias Foss May 25, 1997 NOR Norway Uno-X Norwegian Development (2019)
Robert Gesink May 31, 1986 NED Netherlands Rabobank Continental (2006)
Dylan Groenewegen June 21, 1993 NED Netherlands Roompot-Charles (2015)
Chris Harper November 23, 1994 OUT Australia BridgeLane (2019)
Lennard Hofstede December 29, 1994 NED Netherlands Sunweb (2018)
Amund Grøndahl Jansen February 11, 1994 NOR Norway Joker Fuel of Norway (2016)
Steven Kruijswijk June 7, 1987 NED Netherlands Rabobank Continental (2009)
Sepp kiss September 13, 1994 United States United States
Tom Leezer December 26, 1985 NED Netherlands Rabobank Continental (2007)
Bert-Jan Lindeman June 16, 1989 NED Netherlands Rabobank Development (2014)
Paul Martens October 26, 1983 GER Germany Skil-Shimano (2007)
Tony Martin April 23, 1985 GER Germany Katusha-Alpecin (2018)
Christoph Pentecost November 20, 1987 GER Germany Bora-Hansgrohe (2019)
Primož Roglič October 29, 1989 SLO Slovenia Adria Mobil (2015)
Timo Roosen January 11, 1993 NED Netherlands Rabobank Development (2014)
Mike Teunissen August 25, 1992 NED Netherlands Sunweb (2018)
Antwan Tolhoek April 29, 1994 NED Netherlands Roompot-Oranje Peloton (2016)
Wout Van Aert September 15, 1994 BEL Belgium
Taco van der Hoorn 4th December 1993 NED Netherlands Roompot-Nederlandse Loterij (2018)
Jos van Emden February 18, 1985 NED Netherlands
Jonas Vingegaard December 10, 1996 THE Denmark ColoQuick (2018)
Maarten Wijnants May 13, 1982 BEL Belgium Quick Step (2010)
Source: UCI

Placements in UCI rankings

UCI world rankings (until 2004)

season Team ranking Driver ranking
1995 12. RussiaRussia Vyacheslav Yekimov (14.)
1996 11. DenmarkDenmark Rolf Sørensen (25.)
1997 6th DenmarkDenmark Rolf Sørensen (19.)
1998 3. NetherlandsNetherlands Michael Boogerd (5th)
1999 2. NetherlandsNetherlands Michael Boogerd (2nd)
2000 6th NetherlandsNetherlands Erik Dekker (17.)
2001 3. NetherlandsNetherlands Erik Dekker (2nd)
2002 9. NetherlandsNetherlands Michael Boogerd (17.)
2003 8th. NetherlandsNetherlands Michael Boogerd (9th)
2004 5. SpainSpain Óscar Freire (4th)

UCI ProTour

season Team ranking Driver ranking
2005 3. RussiaRussia Denis Menshov (14.)
2006 3. NetherlandsNetherlands Michael Boogerd (16.)
2007 8th. SpainSpain Óscar Freire (5th)
2008 10. SpainSpain Óscar Freire (23.)

UCI World Calendar

season Team ranking Driver ranking
2009 9. NetherlandsNetherlands Robert Gesink (10.)
2010 4th NetherlandsNetherlands Robert Gesink (7th)

UCI World Tour

season Team ranking Driver ranking
2011 10. NetherlandsNetherlands Robert Gesink (18.)
2012 8th. NetherlandsNetherlands Bauke Mollema (17.)
2013 11. NetherlandsNetherlands Bauke Mollema (17.)
2014 12. NetherlandsNetherlands Bauke Mollema (19.)
2015 14th NetherlandsNetherlands Robert Gesink (41st)
2016 12. BelgiumBelgium Sep Vanmarcke (18th)
2017 16. SloveniaSlovenia Primož Roglič (27.)
2018 10. SloveniaSlovenia Primož Roglič (11.)

UCI world rankings (from 2019)

season Team ranking Driver ranking
2019 3. SloveniaSlovenia Primož Roglič (1st)

Web links

Commons : Lotto NL-Jumbo  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Doping affairs: Rabobank withdraws from cycling. Spiegel Online, October 19, 2012, accessed October 22, 2012 .
  2. radsport-news.com of January 21, 2013: Rabobank: Nelissen and Lotz also admit doping
  3. ^ Dane Rasmussen unpacks: doped from 1998 to 2010. Radnet, January 31, 2012, accessed February 23, 2012 .
  4. Ex-professional cyclist Niermann admits EPO doping. Radnet, January 28, 2012, accessed February 23, 2012 .
  5. Ex-Radstar Sörensen makes a doping confession. Radnet, March 18, 2012, accessed March 18, 2012 .
  6. Boogerd kreeg bloedtransfusie van broer. (No longer available online.) June 18, 2013, formerly in the original ; Retrieved July 11, 2013 (Dutch).  ( Page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.nusport.nl  
  7. Belkin to end team sponsorship after 2014 season. Cycling News, June 17, 2014, accessed June 19, 2014 .
  8. From Alpecin to Bora to Sprandi - an overview of new sponsors. radsport-news.com, January 7, 2015, accessed July 20, 2017 .
  9. Team Jumbo welcomes Visma as name sponsor from 2019 , last accessed on May 25, 2019