| |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Manager | Marc Madiot | ||||
One-day victories | 2 | ||||
Stage race overall victories | 1 | ||||
Stage race stage victories | 13 | ||||
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The 2010 season for the cycling team began in January with the Tour Down Under and ended in October at the Chrono des Nations. As a UCI ProTour team, they were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad to every ProTour event.
Personnel-wise, the team was mostly unchanged from the 2009 season. Its manager, as it has been since its inception in 1997, was former cyclist Marc Madiot.
On 2 July, the eve of the Tour de France, the team announced that the French national lottery would extend its sponsorship of the team for four years, and the team would immediately change its name to .[1] For the 2011 season, the team will ride as a UCI Professional Continental team. Only the top 20 teams from 2010 in the UCI's points system were eligible for ProTeam status, and FDJ finished 21st in that ranking.
Ages as of January 1, 2010.
Rider | 2009 team | |
---|---|---|
Olivier Bonnaire | ||
Pierre Cazaux | Roubaix Lille Métropole | |
Thibaut Pinot | neo-pro | |
Arthur Vichot | neo-pro |
Rider | 2010 team | |
---|---|---|
Jérôme Coppel | ||
Sébastien Joly | Saur–Sojasun | |
Guillaume Levarlet | Saur–Sojasun |
The team scored three victories at the Tour Méditerranéen, with Hutarovich in stages 1 and 3[2] [3] and Veikkanen in stage 2.[4] Veikkanen's stage win gave him the overall race lead, but he was unable to hold it through the conclusion of the race, losing it on the final day to Alejandro Valverde.[5] Française des Jeux' early season successes continued at the Tour du Haut Var, when Le Mével won the second stage of the two-day event, and with it the overall.[6]
As they did in 2009, Française des Jeux declined to participate in the Giro d'Italia.[7]
FDJ, as they became known shortly before the Tour de France began, entered the race with a squad led by Le Mével, tenth-place finisher and best French rider in 2009. In stage 1, the first road race stage after the prologue time trial, several crashes took place in the final few kilometers, meaning only five riders were at the front of the race to contest the sprint finish. Ladagnous avoided crashing and made this little selection, though he was last of the five riders in the kick to the finish.[8] Ladagnous took a meaningless ninth place the next day, as the peloton decided not to race to the finish, neutralizing the results for all but stage winner Sylvain Chavanel.[9] In stage 9, Casar made a breakaway of 10 riders, including such big names as Luis León Sánchez, Damiano Cunego, and Jens Voigt. All of them figured into the day's results. Race favorites Alberto Contador and Andy Schleck broke away from the other top riders in the race on this day. Voigt dropped back and paced them so long and so strenuously that they joined the leaders on the road, now a five-rider group including Casar, Sánchez, and Cunego. Contador and Schleck finished sixth and seventh on the day, not seeking the stage win. For their parts, Sánchez, Cunego, and Casar finished 2 seconds ahead as the three of them did aggressively seek the win. Cunego started his sprint early and had a gap for a moment, but Casar perhaps knew the course better, taking an aggressive line on the course's final left-hand turn. The finish line was just after that turn, so Casar made it across first and won the stage.[10]
In stage 13, Geslin finished seventh on the stage, sixth in the sprint behind solo winner Alexander Vinokourov.[11] Three days later in stage 16, Casar came close to a second victory. He was part of a day-long breakaway, that included Lance Armstrong, and finished second behind Pierrick Fédrigo in the sprint finish.[12] Casar finished the race in 25th place, the team's best finisher, just under 46 minutes behind Tour champion Alberto Contador. Le Mével was 42nd, more than an hour and 22 minutes back. The squad finished 15th in the teams classification.[13]
Date | Race | Competition | Rider | Country | Location | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tour Méditerranéen, Stage 1 | UCI Europe Tour | Souvain | ||||
Tour Méditerranéen, Stage 2 | UCI Europe Tour | Trets | ||||
Tour Méditerranéen, Stage 3 | UCI Europe Tour | Six-Fours-les-Plages | ||||
Volta ao Algarve, Stage 1 | UCI Europe Tour | Albufeira | ||||
Tour du Haut Var, Stage 2 | UCI Europe Tour | Montauroux | ||||
Tour du Haut Var, Overall | UCI Europe Tour | |||||
Circuit Cycliste Sarthe, Youth classification | UCI Europe Tour | |||||
Circuit Cycliste Sarthe, Teams classification | UCI Europe Tour | [14] | ||||
UCI Europe Tour | Brittany | |||||
Tour de Romandie, Mountains classification | UCI ProTour | |||||
Four Days of Dunkirk, Stage 5 | UCI Europe Tour | Dunkirk | ||||
Circuit de Lorraine, Stage 1 | UCI Europe Tour | Jarny | ||||
Circuit de Lorraine, Stage 5 | UCI Europe Tour | Hayange | ||||
UCI Europe Tour | Brittany | |||||
Route du Sud, Points classification | UCI Europe Tour | |||||
Tour de France, Stage 9 | Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne | |||||
Tour de Pologne, Stage 3 | Katowice | |||||
Paris–Corrèze, Stage 2 | UCI Europe Tour | Chaumeil | ||||
Paris–Corrèze, Points classification | UCI Europe Tour | |||||
Paris–Corrèze, Mountains classification | UCI Europe Tour | |||||
Paris–Corrèze, Teams classification | UCI Europe Tour | [15] | ||||
Tour du Poitou-Charentes, Stage 1 | UCI Europe Tour | Royan | ||||
Vuelta a España, Stage 2 | UCI World Ranking | Marbella |