George Hincapie's new Modern Adventure team: Renaissance or more of the same? - Opinion
Has the spectre of Lance Armstrong's doping evaporated or will it🐈 come back to haunt the new squad?

This week, former 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Tour de France stage winner George Hincapie announced he and several partners are forming a new professional cycling team, 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Modern Adventure Pro Cycling, w☂ith an 😼aim to race in the Tour de France in five years or less.
Hincapie said he hoped the project would be a "r𒊎enaissance of American cycling" - but one has to wonder, exactly why does Ameri🍸can cycling need a renaissance?
Think back to 2010, when Hincapie's former teammate F🌞loyd Landis 🌊levelled some shocking doping accusations against Lance Armstrong and the rest of the former US Postal team that eventually led to🍎 the lifetimꦦe ban of Armstrong, and a sport-wide reckoning that led to doping confessions from Hincapie, Bobby Julich and others.
Hincapie and Julich are directly involved in this new team, as is Armstrong - a꧑lbeit adjacently. The 💙team lists "The Move" podcast as a sponsor, saying it "elevates our team with world-class analysis, thought leadership, and a community of deeply engaged fans" while ignoring the fact that this podcast's strapline is A Cycling Podcast (by) Lance Armstrong.
Ar𓂃mstrong's lifetime ban includes a prohibition on any involvement in pro cycling, yet here he is sponsoring America'sℱ renaissance.
While th🦋e UCI will have to work out the legalities, it's worth pondering what his involvement, however tertiary, means for the future of American pro cycling and asking whether the country really needs Armstrong's associates to rescue the sport.
The sport has undergone a massive transformation in the 15 years since Landis' accusations and, for a time, it appeared that the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:CIRC report, t🥀he biological passport and peer pressure had gone a long way to reverse decades of rampant abuse of performance-enhancing drugs in▨ pro cycling.
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In the past, new teams made a point of advertising ♓an anti-doping ethos to distinguish themselves from their sullied predecessors, yet Modern Adventure avoided the topic entirely when a🍃nnouncing their launch.
Pro cycling has long ago moved on from Armstrong, and hasn't had to use his name to draw mainstream media and fans into the sport for years, thanks to new stars like Peter Sagan, Julian Alaphilippe, Mathieu van der Poel, Wout van Aert, Tadej Pogačar and Jonas Vingegaard.
American cycling has also moved on from the Armstrong effect. Road cycling might not be as popular ♌as an activity with the rise of gravel and the increasing numbers of enormous SUVs and trucks that make training on open roads dang▨erous in the US, but there is still a huge US audience for pro cycling.
Modern Adventure also made a big deal abou💜t their ambitions to make "America's Dream Team"♛ and bring it to the Tour de France. Is that even novel?
The statement does a disservice to Jonathan Vaughters and his 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:EF Education-EasyPost teamꦺ. Slipstream started as a grassroots team in 2004 and raced their first Tour de France in 2008.
While the team now have a far more international line-up, they're still technically a US-registered team. Does that exclude them from being the country's "dream team"? What about hard-w♎orking lower-level teams like Project Echelon, Novo Nordisk, L3GION of LA and the slew ℱof women's squads that have been slogging it out on tiny budgets?
Does America really even need a dream team? The whole idea smacks of nationalism, which, in the current climate, might appeal to a certain target audience, but cycling fans don't seem to care which team their♊ compatriots are on.
American cycling fans went nuts over Sepp Kuss' unexpected🃏 2023 Vuelta a España overall victory, and there are still legions of 🐈Visma-Lease a Bike fans in the country. I've seen dozens of non-US team jerseys worn by weekend warriors while out riding - UAE Team Emirates, Visma, Bahrain Victorious, and Ineos Grenadiers. US fans are not exclusively interested in US teams.
So, if American cycling has declined in the past 15 years even with EF-EasyPost (as Garmin) and Sepp Kuss winning Gra𒁃nd Tours, does the answer to the issue lie in a new team? It seems not.
The real renaissance of American cycling would come from the ground up, first off with an impro𓄧ved race calendar. The pro road calendar has shrunk dramatically over the past decade, with races like the Tour of California, Tour of Utah, and USA Pro Challenge e🧔vaporating.
There would need to be a deeper pool of talent and of course, more teams - the number of men's teams has fallen ౠfrom a high of over 20 pro teams to only eight.
Yᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚet even with a sparse calendar and few teams, the US still has two men's and two women's WorldTour teams - Lidl-Trek, ranked second in the world in 2025, and EF Education-EasyPost for the men, Lidl-Trek and Human Powered Health for the women.
Granted, those teams have only a grand total of six American riders between them this year, but that's mainly becausꦯe other teams have taken an interest in signing riders from this country.
There is talent in the US, but the pathway from the development ranks to the WorldTour has changed in the last few yearsღ, with teams more closel꧂y scoping out the junior ranks. Arguably, teams like Hot Tubes and EF Education-ONTO are a more important stepping stone to the WorldTour than a domestic Continental or ProTeam - think Artem Shmidt, AJ August, and Magnus Sheffield.
Are there riders who are missing out on a pro cycling career because there ar✱en't enough US pro teams? Probably - but half of them are women, and Modern Adventure made no mention of including a women's squad in the organisation.
So what does this team's renaissance actually look like? They'll need to choose from established pros or talented under-23s ageing up to be suc𒐪cessful as a ProTeam. They'll do some European races, and they'll give some underdogs rare opportunities (but doesn't Novo Nordisk do this too?). How is Modern Adventure different?
A real renaissance for road cycling will need a lot more: safer roads, affordable police support and less opposition from drivers for road races, interest from sponsors, more people willing to sacrifice hard work a✤nd no pay for the pleasure of seeing riders succeed, and a better-funded USA Cycling.
I hope Modern Adventure Pro Cycling succeeds but I just don't see thꦇem changing anything - one team cannot be a movement.

Laura Weislo has been with Cyclingnews since 2006 after making a switch from a career in science. As Managing Editor, she coordinates coverage for North🅰 American events and global news. As former elite-level road racer who dabbled in cyclo-cross and track, Laura has a passion for all three disciplines. When not working she likes to go camping and explore lesser traveled roads, paths and gravel tracks. Laura specialises in covering doping, anti-doping, UCI governance and performing data analysis.
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