Red Bull–Bora–Hansgrohe Explained

Red Bull–BORA–Hansgrohe
Code:RBH
Registered:Germany
Website:http://www.bora-hansgrohe.com/en
Teammanager:Ralph Denk
Discipline:Road
Status:UCI Continental (2010)
UCI Professional Continental (2011–2016)
UCI WorldTeam (2017–)
Bicycles:Focus (2010)
Simplon (2011–2012)
Fuji Bikes (2013–2014)[1]
Argon 18 (2015–2016)
Specialized (2017–)
Current:2024 Bora–Hansgrohe season

Red Bull–BORA–hansgrohe (UCI Code: RBH) is a UCI WorldTeam cycling team established in 2010 with a German license, founded and managed by Ralph Denk. It is sponsored by global energy drinks brand Red Bull, BORA, a German manufacturer of extractor hoods and cooktops, and Hansgrohe, a bathroom fittings manufacturer. Its aim is "improving the image of road cycling in Germany".[2]

History

The team was formed in 2010 as Team NetApp, a UCI Continental Team with 14 riders. It was promoted to ProContinental Team status after the first season.[3]

For the 2013 season, Team NetApp and British based merged to form NetApp-Endura. The team's 2013 roster consisted of eight riders from Endura, and 12 riders from Team NetApp, as well as NetApp bringing the Pro Continental licence.[4] The eight Endura riders joining were Alexander Wetterhall, Erick Rowsell, Iker Camaño, Jonathan McEvoy, Paul Voß, Russell Downing, Scott Thwaites and Zak Dempster. The nine NetApp riders retained were Jan Barta, Cesare Benedetti, Markus Eichler, Bartosz Huzarski, Blaz Jarc, Leopold Koenig, Daniel Schorn, Andreas Schillinger and Michael Schwarzmann.[5]

On the first rest day of the 2014 Tour de France, 15 July 2014, the team announced they had secured sponsorship with German cooking surface and extractor manufacturer BORA. The team for 2015 onwards, thus becoming known as Team BORA. BORA became the first German team with a German title sponsor in the professional peloton since 2010. Team manager Ralph Denk expressed hope that BORA's backing would help the team achieve their aim of joining the UCI World Tour by 2017.[6]

After the end of the 2014 Tour de France, it was announced that starting in 2015 the team would ride bicycles from Canadian company Argon 18 which would also be the team's second title sponsor.[7] During this relationship, a glass kitchen was installed allowing fans to watch the chef, like a zoo, and advertise the Bora air extractor.

In late June 2016, days before the 2016 Tour de France, the team announced that from 2017 the team name would change from Bora-Argon 18 to Bora–Hansgrohe.[8] Hansgrohe is a bathroom products manufacturer with previous involvement in cyclo-cross, recently sponsoring the Superprestige series.[9] Following the announcement that Peter Sagan would join the team on a three-year deal from 2017, Specialized Bicycle Components announced in August 2016 that they would replace Argon 18 as the team's bike sponsor, having also agreed to a three-year agreement to supply the team's bicycles, helmets, shoes, tires, and wheels.[10]

On 1 August 2017, the team announced the signings of Peter Kennaugh on a two-year deal[11] and Daniel Oss for the 2018 season.[12] As of 2018 approximately 95% of funding comes from sponsorship. In order to develop, team manager Denk aims to reduce this to 50%.

In January 2024 Austrian Federal Competition Authority (FCA) announced Red Bull GmbH's planned acquisition of a controlling interests of 51% in RD pro cycling GmbH & Co KG and RD Beteiligungs GmbH, the owner of BORA-Hansgrohe.[13]

The FCA approved the acquisition on Monday 29 January 2024. Bora-Hansgrohe's manager Ralph Denk stated "the foundations of our partnership with Red Bull are now officially in place. This is the green light we've been waiting for to go ahead with the formalities and many specific parts of the collaboration."[14]

The team was officially renamed Red Bull–BORA–hansgrohe ahead of the 2024 Tour de France.[15]

Doping

In July 2017, the team revealed that former rider Ralf Matzka returned an adverse analytical finding for Tamoxifen on March 3, 2016. Matzka did not ride for the team after the Tour of Flanders. Tamoxifen usage can lead to an increase in the concentrations of testosterone within the body.[16]

Major wins

See main article: List of wins by Team NetApp and its successors.

National, continental, world and Olympic champions

2011
  • South Africa Time Trial, Daryl Impey
    2012
  • Czech Republic Time Trial, Jan Bárta
    2013
  • Czech Republic Time Trial, Jan Bárta
  • Czech Republic Road Race, Jan Bárta
    2014
  • Czech Republic Time Trial, Jan Bárta
    2015
  • Czech Republic Time Trial, Jan Bárta
  • German Road Race, Emanuel Buchmann
    2016
  • Portuguese Road Race, José Mendes
    2017
  • Latvia Time Trial, Aleksejs Saramotins
  • Czech Republic Time Trial, Jan Bárta
  • Austria Road Race, Gregor Mühlberger
  • Slovakian Road Race, Juraj Sagan
  • German Road Race, Marcus Burghardt
  • World Road Race, Peter Sagan
    2018
  • Polish Time Trial, Maciej Bodnar
  • Slovakian Road Race, Peter Sagan
  • Austria Road Race, Lukas Pöstlberger
  • German Road Race, Pascal Ackermann
    2019
  • Polish Time Trial, Maciej Bodnar
  • German Road Race, Maximilian Schachmann
  • Italy Road Race, Davide Formolo
  • Ireland Road Race, Sam Bennett
  • Slovakian Road Race, Juraj Sagan
  • Austria Road Race, Patrick Konrad
    2020
  • Slovakian Road Race, Juraj Sagan
    2021
  • Polish Time Trial, Maciej Bodnar
  • Austria Road Race, Patrick Konrad
  • German Road Race, Maximilian Schachmann
  • Slovakian Road Race, Peter Sagan
  • Olympic omnium, Matthew Walls
    2022
  • New Zealand Criterium, Shane Archbold
  • Colombian Road Race, Sergio Higuita
  • Austria Time Trial, Felix Großschartner
  • German Road Race, Nils Politt
    2023
  • Ireland Time Trial, Ryan Mullen
  • German Road Race, Emanuel Buchmann
    2024
  • Colombian Time Trial, Daniel Felipe Martínez

    Notes and References

    1. News: NetApp extends sponsorship, Endura Racing merges. VeloNation LLC. 6 September 2012. 1 January 2013.
    2. Witts . J . 2018 . Bora-Hansgrohe at the Tour de France, German Revival . Bora-Hansgrohe might be best known for their Slovakian superstar, but the team's remit is improving the image of road cycling in its native Germany . . 80 . 70–78 .
    3. Web site: Team history 2010 - 2017 . BORA-hansgrohe . 25 July 2018 . 26 July 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180726005759/https://www.bora-hansgrohe.com/en/team/history . dead .
    4. Web site: Team NetApp and Endura Racing merge for upcoming season. 6 September 2012. Cyclingnews.com.
    5. Web site: enduraracing.com. .
    6. Web site: Team NetApp to become Team BORA. 15 July 2014. Cyclingnews.com. July 25, 2018.
    7. Web site: The NetApp-Endura team will be known as BORA – ARGON 18. 29 July 2014. Argon 18. July 25, 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20141112235539/http://www.argon18bike.com/news/compagny/argon-18-signed-partnership-bora-a18.html. 12 November 2014. dead. dmy-all.
    8. Web site: Report: Bora-Argon 18 to sign Sagan and add Hansgrohe as naming rights sponsor. 30 June 2016. Cyclingnews.com. 25 July 2018.
    9. Web site: Bora-Argon 18: Sagan is too big a rider for us. Benson. Daniel. 30 June 2016. Cyclingnews.com. 25 July 2018.
    10. Web site: Specialized confirmed as Bora-Hansgrohe bicycle sponsor with three-year deal . . 2 August 2016 . Cyclingnews.com. 14 October 2016.
    11. Web site: Peter Kennaugh signs two-year deal with Bora Hansgrohe. Benson. Daniel. 1 August 2017. Cyclingnews.com. 25 July 2018.
    12. Web site: Daniel Oss signs for Bora-Hansgrohe . 2 August 2016. Cyclingnews.com. 25 July 2018.
    13. Web site: Austrian Federal Competition Authority. Austrian Federal Competition Authority. en. 2024-01-30.
    14. Red Bull and Bora-Hansgrohe partnership given 'green light to go ahead' https://www.cyclingweekly.com/racing/red-bull-and-bora-hansgrohe-partnership-given-green-light-to-go-ahead
    15. Web site: 2024-06-26 . Red Bull - BORA - hansgrohe is set to fight for Tour de France glory . 2024-06-27 . Red Bull . en.
    16. Web site: Bora reveal 2016 positive test for Ralf Matzka. 12 July 2017. Cyclingnews.com. 25 July 2018 .