British climber Williams makes Bahrain-Merida debut
Weℱlshman lines up with te๊am at Giro della Toscana and Coppa Sabatini



British climber 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Stevie Williams made his debut with a WorldTour-level team on Wednesday, riding the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:one-day Giro della Toscana in the colours of 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Bahrain-Merida.
Williams 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:has a two-year deal with the team, starting in 2019, but is currently♐ riding with his future team as a stagiaire.
This season, riding for the Dutch 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:SEG Racing Academy team, the 22-year-old from Newport, Wales, won two stages and the overall classification at the fo♎🐬ur-day Ronde de l'Isard in the French Pyrenees in May, and then went on to take a stage win at the under-23 Giro d'Italia in June.
Prior to SEG, in 2016, Williams rode for the John-Herety-managed JLT Condor team, which this week 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:announced that it would fold after 12 years on the British scene.
Williams admitted to being a little nervous ahead of his first race with Bahrain-Merida, but was happy to see some familiar faces at the start of the Giro della Toscana, including 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Mark Donovan and 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Ethan Hayter – 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:both currentl♔y riding as stagiaires for Team Sk🔥y. Hayter, like Williams, was part of the Great Britain team that rode the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Tour of Britain earlier this month.
"To see us now in diffe🧸rent pro kit is something strange," Williams said. "But it's great to see so many young British ri෴ders at the highest level.
"Although I've raced at this level so many times, when you pull on a jersey like this, it seems different. The last few days have been nerve-racking and daunting, but I'm sure it'll be like any other race," he told Cyclingnews at the start.
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Williams was a non-finisher at Toscana, along with some 50 other riders, but after raci🌞ng the Coppa Sabatini in Peccioli, Italy, with Bahrain-Merida on Thursday, he'll head to Innsbruck, Austria, as part of the British team for the world championships, where he'll take part in the under-23 road race o🐲n September 28.
"I'm hoping to come good for the Worlds," he said. "I had a bad patch through the Tour de l'Avenir and the Tour Alsace but hopefully, having done the Tour of Britain, I'll🍨 feel a bit better,🐻 and form will come back."
Looking ahead to 2019, Williams hopes to be able to use his first year with Bahrain-Merida to settle in and find out exactly where his strengths a✃re likely to lie at the highest level.
"I hope to just find my feet at this level and improve gr🏅adually, and gain as much experience as possible in the first year," he said.
"Then I hope to see where my potential lies – 💎whether it's in the high mountains or in one-week stage races, or at the Classics in the Ardennes. I really have to see where my talents and opportunities take me.
"There was really good communication with the teꦚam and they offered me a development path that was perfect for me, and which wil🌞l help me to learn and improve," he continued, explaining his choice to sign with the team.
"That's what br꧅ought me in, along with riding with some of the best names in the sport. I couldn't turn it down."
Thanks to his🍸 slight🐬 build and aggressive racing style, Williams has often been compared to UAE Team Emirates' Dan Martin.
"I've always b🧜een compared to him, and that's great because I've always been an aggressive rider and liked to take the race on. I hope to keep continuing on that path with the help of all the people at Bahrain𒈔-Merida, who have so much experience at WorldTour level."
Williams agreed that there was now definitely more expectation 🐎from back home in Wales after Geraint෴ Thomas won this year's Tour de France.
"But you always put pressure on yourself, too," he said. "Now I want to prove everyone right♊ that I can ride at this level. I've done it at under-23 level, but I've got a clean slate now as I ꦍstep up to WorldTour level."

Stephen is one of the most experienced member of the Cyclingnews team, having reported on professional cycling since 1994. He has been Head of News at Cyclingnews since 2022, before which he held the position of European editor since 2012 and previously worked for Reuters, Shift Active Media, and CyclingWeekly, among other publications.