Team Bianchi was a makeshift team that was put together from the remnants of the Coast team in time for the 2003 Tour de France.

Team Bianchi
Team information
UCI codeCOA (2000-2003)
TBI (2003)
RegisteredGermany
Founded2000 (2000)
Disbanded2003 (2003)
Discipline(s)Road
BicyclesBianchi
Team name history
2000
2001
2002–2003
2003
Team Coast
Team Coast–Buffalo
Team Coast
Team Bianchi

Team Coast had been unable to pay the salaries of their riders[1] and Bianchi took over the team and the role of title sponsor.[2] Coast had recently signed Jan Ullrich following his departure from Team Telekom after his drunk driving and amphetamine use. During the 2003 tour while riding for Bianchi, Ullrich placed second to Lance Armstrong by just 61 seconds, his closest ever margin in any of Armstrong's seven victorious years. In the process, Ullrich also managed to upstage Alexander Vinokourov, Telekom's highest-placed rider, who finished third.

Team Bianchi had planned to continue on as a professional road racing team. However, Ullrich's return to his former team Telekom (later T-Mobile and HTC–Highroad), as well as the departure of Ángel Casero led to the demise of Team Bianchi as they now lacked the star power necessary to justify a top-tier team.

Major wins edit

2000 edit

Grand Prix Pino Cerami, Jan Bratkowski
Stage 12 Tour de Langkawi, Jan Bratkowski

2001 edit

Stage 4 Paris - Nice, Alex Zülle

2002 edit

2003 edit

Profronde Stiphout, Jan Ullrich
Rund um Köln, Jan Ullrich
Stage 1b International Niedersachsen-Rundfahrt, Thorsten Wilhelms
Stage 1 Bayern-Rundfahrt, Thomas Liese
Stage 1 Tour of Austria, Steffen Radochla
Stage 12 Tour de France, Jan Ullrich

Notable riders edit

Name Date of birth Nationality
Stefan Adamsson 03.01.1978   Sweden
Daniel Becke 12.03.1978   Germany
Ángel Casero 27.09.1972   Spain
Félix García Casas 29.12.1968   Spain
Aitor Garmendia 03.03.1968   Spain
Fabrizio Guidi 13.04.1972   Italy
André Korff 04.06.1973   Germany
Francisco José Lara Ruiz 25.02.1977   Spain
Thomas Liese 10.08.1968   Germany
David Plaza Romero 03.07.1970   Spain
Steffen Radochla 19.10.1979   Germany
Thorsten Rund 25.02.1976   Germany
Raphael Schweda 17.04.1976   Germany
Tobias Steinhauser 27.01.1972   Germany
Jan Ullrich 02.12.1973   Germany
Malte Urban 14.12.1974   Germany
Christoph Von Kleinsorgen 14.07.1980   Germany
Thorsten Wilhelms 31.07.1969   Germany

References edit

  1. ^ "Team Coast suspended". Eurosport. 6 March 2003. Retrieved 2 April 2022.
  2. ^ "www.cyclingnews.com news and analysis". autobus.cyclingnews.com. 2003. Retrieved 2 April 2022.