Team Halfords Bikehut was a 2008 UCI elite women's cycling team based in the United Kingdom. The team was formed in January 2008 with Dave Brailsford, performance director of British Cycling, the general manager. It had been a pro/national team mooted as the first full British professional women's team[2] but there were two men in the team (Rob Hayles and Tom Southam). The team was in 2009 not an UCI Women's Teams anymore and consisted of a mix of mountain bikers and road racers (mainly men): Rob Hayles, Ed Clancy, Ian Wilkinson, Andy Tennant, Mark McNally, Rob Partridge, Seb Batchelor, David Fletcher, Annie Last, Sharon Laws, Ian Bibby. The team disbanded ahead of the 2010 season, with a number of riders moving to the Scottish-based Endura Racing team.
Team information | |
---|---|
UCI code | HBH |
Registered | United Kingdom |
Founded | 2008 |
Disbanded | 2009 |
Discipline(s) | Road with also riders active on the track |
Status | UCI Women's Team |
Bicycles | Boardman Bike[1] |
Key personnel | |
General manager | Dave Brailsford |
2008 Team Halfords Bikehut | |
---|---|
UCI Team ranking | 10th |
Season victories | |
One-day races | Road: 4 Track: 3 |
Stage race overall | 0 |
Stage race stages | 2 |
Best ranked rider | Nicole Cooke (4th) |
The team helped train some of the UK's medal-winning cyclists such as Nicole Cooke, who said: "Setting up Team Halfords was crucial to my success,".[3]
Team roster
editAges as of 1 January 2008.[4][5]
|
|
- ^ Junior rider.
- Male riders: Tom Southam, Rob Hayles
Season victories
editDate | Nation | Race | Cat. | Winner |
---|---|---|---|---|
17 May | France | Stage 1 Tour de l'Aude Cycliste Féminin | 2.2 | Nicole Cooke |
9 September | France | Stage 1 Tour Cycliste Féminin International de l'Ardèche | 2.2 | Nicole Cooke |
Date | Discipline | Jersey | Winner |
---|---|---|---|
28 March | Track Cycling World Champion – Team pursuit | Joanna Rowsell Wendy Houvenaghel (with Rebecca Romero) | |
28 June | British National Road Race Championships | Nicole Cooke | |
10 August | Olympic Champion – Women's road race | – | Nicole Cooke |
7 September | British National Time Trial Championships | Nicole Cooke | |
September | European Track Champion – Under-23 team pursuit | Lizzie Armitstead Katie Colclough Joanna Rowsell | |
7 September | European Track Champion – Under-23 scratch | Lizzie Armitstead | |
27 September | World Champion – Women's road race | Nicole Cooke |
Results in major races
edit# | Date | Race | Country | Best rider | Place |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
#1 | 24 February | Geelong World Cup | Australia | - | - |
#2 | 24 March | Trofeo Alfredo Binda-Comune di Cittiglio | Italy | Nicole Cooke | 20th |
#3 | 6 April | Tour of Flanders for Women | Belgium | Nicole Cooke | 16th |
#4 | 12 April | Ronde van Drenthe | Netherlands | - | - |
#5 | 23 April | La Flèche Wallonne Féminine | Belgium | Nicole Cooke | 8th |
#6 | 4 May | Tour de Berne | Switzerland | - | - |
#7 | 31 May | Coupe du Monde Cycliste Féminine de Montréal | Canada | - | - |
#8 | 30 July | Open de Suède Vårgårda | Sweden | - | - |
#9 | 1 August | Open de Suède Vårgårda TTT | Sweden | - | - |
#10 | 24 August | GP de Plouay – Bretagne | France | - | - |
#11 | 16 September | Rund um die Nürnberger Altstadt | Germany | - | - |
Date | Race[M 1] | Rider | Place |
---|---|---|---|
28 March | Track Cycling World Championships – Women's team pursuit | Joanna Rowsell Wendy Houvenaghel (with Rebecca Romero) |
|
29 March | Track Cycling World Championships – Women's points race | Lizzie Armitstead | 19th |
30 March | Track Cycling World Championships – Women's scratch | Lizzie Armitstead | 7th |
10 August | Summer Olympics – Women's road race | Nicole Cooke (GBR) | |
3 September | European Track Championships – Women's omnium | Ellen van Dijk | |
September | European Track Championships – Women's under-23 team pursuit | Lizzie Armitstead Katie Colclough Joanna Rowsell |
|
6 September | European Track Championships – Women's under-23 individual pursuit | Joanna Rowsell | |
7 September | European Track Championships – Women's under-23 scratch | Lizzie Armitstead Ex aequo with Ellen van Dijk |
|
6 September | European Track Championships – Women's under-23 points race | Lizzie Armitstead | |
24 September | Road World Championships – Women's road race[7] | Nicole Cooke (GBR) |
- ^ Riders are in these championships part of the national team
UCI World Ranking
editThe team finished 10th in the UCI ranking for teams.[8]
Rank | Rider | Points |
---|---|---|
4 | Nicole Cooke | 536 |
143 | Sharon Laws | 28 |
185 | Joanna Rowsell | 16 |
210 | Jessica Allen | 12 |
241 | Catherine Hare | 10 |
References
edit- ^ "Cooke given new bike for Beijing". 18 July 2008.
- ^ "Home". teamhalfordsbikehut.com.
- ^ Pattenden, Mike (4 January 2009). "HEY, I'M WORTH A LOOK TOO – Nicole Cooke, the queen of road cycling, tells Mike Pattenden why she feels like Cinderella". The Sunday Times.[dead link ]
- ^ "UCI Team Members; 2008 season". UCI. Retrieved 23 March 2015.
- ^ 2008 » Team Halfords Bikehut Procyclingstats.com
- ^ a b "Team Halfords Bikehut (HBH) - UCI 2008". CQranking.com. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ^ "2008 75th World Championships WE - Road Race (CM)". procyclingstats.com. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
- ^ a b 2008 UCI Road Rankings Women Elite