Michael Mørkøv Explained

Michael Mørkøv
Fullname:Michael Mørkøv Christensen[1]
Birth Date:1985 4, df=yes
Birth Place:Kokkedal, Denmark
Height:1.83 m[2]
Weight:71 kg
Role:Rider
Ridertype:Lead out man
Amateuryears1:1996–2003
Amateurteam1:Lyngby Cycle Club
Amateuryears2:2004
Amateurteam2:Team Bornholm
Proyears1:2005–2008
Proteam1:Team GLS
Proyears2:2009–2015
Proteam2:[3]
Proyears3:2016–2017
Proyears4:2018–2023
Proteam4:[4] [5] [6]
Proyears5:2024–
Majorwins:
RoadGrand Tours
  • Vuelta a España
  • 1 individual stage (2013)One-day races and Classics
  • National Road Race Championships
    (2013, 2018, 2019)
    Track
  • Madison, Olympic Games (2020)
  • World Championships
  • Madison (2009, 2020, 2021)
  • Show-Medals:no

    Michael Mørkøv Christensen[1] (in Danish pronounced as /ˈmiˌkʰɛˀl ˈmɶɐ̯kʰøw/; born 30 April 1985) is a Danish professional racing cyclist, who currently rides for UCI WorldTeam .[7] He is the brother of racing cyclists Jacob and Jesper Mørkøv.[8]

    Career

    Born in Kokkedal, Mørkøv started as a track cyclist, becoming national champion in the points race in 2004. In the 2008 Olympic games, he won the silver medal in the team pursuit.

    As a road cyclist, Mørkøv became national time trial champion in 2005. Mørkøv rode the 2010 and 2011 Giro d'Italia, finishing both. Mørkøv rode his first Tour de France in 2012, drawing attention by featuring in the most important escapes of the first three stages, where he gained enough points to lead the mountains classification. He held polka-dot jersey until stage 7, where stage winner Chris Froome took it.[9]

    In 2013, he won Stage 6 in the Vuelta a España.

    In August 2015, it was announced that Mørkøv would join for the 2016 season, at the request of Alexander Kristoff, with a view to working for Kristoff as part of his sprint train and as a domestique in the classics.[10]

    Mørkøv joined the Belgian Quick Step team in 2018 and since then has acted as a successful lead-out man for Sam Bennett and then, as a late replacement for Bennett as the team's sprinter for the 2021 Tour de France, Mark Cavendish.[11] Mørkøv has been highly praised; Cavendish said “It’s a known fact Michael is the best leadout man in the world"[11] and retired sprinter Marcel Kittel said "Many sprinters would win with him as the last man on the sprint train".[11]

    In 2021 when the Madison track race was reinstated into the Olympic Games of Tokyo 2020, Mørkøv won the gold medal (partnered with Lasse Norman Hansen)

    Major results

    Road

    2004
  • 3rd Speditørløbet
    2005
  • 1st Team time trial, National Championships
    2006
  • 1st Post Cuppen Skive
  • 2nd Team time trial, National Championships
  • 4th Rund um den Elm
    2007
  • 2nd Ronde Van Vlaanderen Beloften
    2008
  • 1st Midt Data Løbet
  • 1st Team time trial, National Championships
  • 1st Stage 2 Giro del Capo
  • 2nd Speditørløbet
  • 2nd Duo Normand
  • 9th GP Nordjylland
    2009
  • 7th Châteauroux Classic
    2010
  • 1st Herlev-løbet
  • 3rd Time trial, National Championships
  • 4th Overall Tour du Limousin
    2011
  • 1st Fyen Rundt
  • 3rd Overall Danmark Rundt
  • 8th GP Herning
  • 10th Himmerland Rundt
    2012
  • 3rd Time trial, National Championships
  • 4th Overall Post Cuppen
  • 1st Roskilde
  • 1st Ringsted
  • Tour de France
  • Held after Stages 1–6
  • Combativity award Stage 3 & 13
    2013 (2 pro wins)
  • 1st Road race, National Championships
  • 1st Stage 6 Vuelta a España
  • 2nd Paris–Tours
  • 4th Overall Tour de l'Eurométropole
    2014
  • 3rd Road race, National Championships
  • 3rd Overall Tour de Luxembourg
  • 5th Overall Tour of Qatar
    2015 (1)
  • 1st Stage 6 Danmark Rundt
    2016
  • 10th Gent–Wevelgem
    2018 (1)
  • 1st Road race, National Championships
  • 2nd Fyen Rundt
    2019 (1)
  • 1st Road race, National Championships
  • 3rd London–Surrey Classic
  • 5th Road race, UEC European Championships
  • 7th Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race
    2020
  • 3rd Road race, National Championships
  • 5th Race Torquay
    2021
  • 5th Elfstedenronde
  • 8th Classic Brugge–De Panne
    2022
  • 7th Milano–Torino
    2023
  • 9th Elfstedenronde

    Grand Tour general classification results timeline

    Grand Tour201020112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024
    Giro d'Italia129156107DNF
    Tour de France93134DNF152130138DNF150DNF
    Vuelta a España128137148121
    Legend
    Did not compete
    DNFDid not finish

    Track

    2001
  • 3rd Team pursuit, National Junior Championships
    2002
  • National Junior Championships
  • 2nd Individual pursuit
  • 2nd Team pursuit
    2003
  • National Junior Championships
  • 1st Points race
  • 2nd Team pursuit
  • 2nd Team pursuit, National Championships
    2004
  • National Championships
  • 1st Points race
  • 2nd Team pursuit
  • 3rd UIV Cup München
    2005
  • 1st Madison, UEC European Under-23 Championships (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 1st Overall UIV Cup
  • 1st Stuttgart
  • 1st Berlin
  • 1st Amsterdam
  • 2nd Copenhagen
  • 3rd Bremen
  • 2nd Madison, UCI World Cup, Sydney (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 2nd Madison, National Championships (with Marc Hester)
    2006
  • National Championships
  • 1st Madison (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 1st Points race
  • 3rd Team pursuit
  • 3rd Scratch
  • UCI World Cup
  • 1st Madison, Sydney (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 1st Team pursuit, Sydney
  • 2nd Madison, Sydney (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 2nd Team pursuit, Sydney
  • 3rd Madison, Moscow (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 1st Omnium, Danmarksturneringen i Banecykling
  • 2nd Six Days of Grenoble (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 3rd Points race, UEC European Under-23 Championships
    2007
  • National Championships
  • 1st Madison (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 2nd Points race
  • 3rd Team pursuit
  • UCI World Cup
  • 1st Madison, Los Angeles (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 2nd Team pursuit Los Angeles
  • 3rd Madison, Sydney (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 1st Six Days of Grenoble (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 3rd Team pursuit, UCI World Championships
  • 3rd Six Days of Zürich (with Danny Stam)
    2008
  • National Championships
  • 1st Madison (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 1st Team pursuit
  • 1st Scratch
  • 1st Points race
  • UCI World Cup
  • 1st Madison, Copenhagen (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 2nd Madison, Los Angeles (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 2nd Team pursuit, Copenhagen
  • 2nd Team pursuit, Los Angeles
  • 2nd Team pursuit, Olympic Games
  • 2nd Six Days of Copenhagen (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 3rd Madison, UCI World Championships (with Alex Rasmussen)
    2009
  • 1st Madison, UCI World Championships (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 1st Madison, National Championships (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 1st Six Days of Copenhagen (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 1st Six Days of Ghent (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 2nd Six Days of Munich (with Alex Rasmussen)
    2010
  • 1st Madison, National Championships (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 1st Six Days of Berlin (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 1st Six Days of Copenhagen (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 3rd Six Days of Rotterdam (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 3rd Six Days of Ghent (with Alex Rasmussen)
    2011
  • National Championships
  • 1st Madison (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 1st Omnium
  • 1st Six Days of Copenhagen (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 2nd Team pursuit, UEC European Championships
  • 3rd Six Days of Berlin (with Alex Rasmussen)
    2012
  • 1st Six Days of Amsterdam (with Pim Ligthart)
  • 2nd Six Days of Copenhagen (with Alex Rasmussen)
    2013
  • 1st Six Days of Copenhagen (with Lasse Norman Hansen)
    2014
  • 2nd Six Days of Copenhagen (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 3rd Six Days of Rotterdam (with Alex Rasmussen)
    2015
  • 1st Six Days of Ghent (with Iljo Keisse)
  • 1st Six Days of Copenhagen (with Alex Rasmussen)
  • 2nd Six Days of Rotterdam (with Alex Rasmussen)
    2017
  • 1st Six Days of Copenhagen (with Lasse Norman Hansen)
  • 2nd Six Days of Rotterdam (with Lasse Norman Hansen)
    2018
  • 1st Six Days of Copenhagen (with Kenny De Ketele)
    2019
  • 1st Madison, UEC European Championships (with Lasse Norman Hansen)
    2020
  • 1st Madison, UCI World Championships (with Lasse Norman Hansen)
    2021
  • 1st Madison, Olympic Games (with Lasse Norman Hansen)
  • 1st Madison, UCI World Championships (with Lasse Norman Hansen)
    2024
  • 3rd Madison, Olympic Games (with Niklas Larsen)
  • 3rd Madison, UEC European Championships (with Theodor Storm)

    Notes and References

    1. News: Rasmussen to join Saxo Bank, a Danish dream?. 5 November 2010. Gregor. Brown. 6 January 2012. Cycling Weekly. IPC Media Limited.
    2. Web site: Michael Mørkøv, Deceuninck – Quick-Step Cycling team. 15 July 2019.
    3. Web site: Team Saxo-Tinkoff (TST) – DEN. 12 January 2013. UCI World Tour. Union Cycliste Internationale.
    4. News: Morkov signs two-year contract with Quick-Step Floors. Cyclingnews.com. Immediate Media Company. 22 August 2017. 2 January 2018.
    5. News: 2020 Team Preview: Deceuninck-QuickStep. Barry. Ryan. Cyclingnews.com. 31 December 2019. 2 January 2020.
    6. Web site: Deceuninck - Quick-Step. UCI.org. Union Cycliste Internationale. 1 January 2021. https://archive.today/20210101071627/https://www.uci.org/road/teams/TeamDetail/15237/1000495/279. 1 January 2021.
    7. Web site: Astana Qazaqstan Team. UCI. 10 January 2024.
    8. Web site: Alle tre Mørkøv-brødre står på spring til podiet . Jacobsen . Mogens . 3 February 2015. Politiken. da . All three Mørkøv brothers poised for the podium . 27 October 2016.
    9. News: Froome leads double Sky success on La Planche des Belles Filles. Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. 7 July 2012. 8 July 2012. Susan. Westemeyer.
    10. Web site: Mørkøv signs for Katusha at the request of Kristoff. 16 August 2015 . . 16 August 2015.
    11. Web site: Michael Mørkøv: The man making Tour de France history with Mark Cavendish. 10 July 2021.