Plowman Craven-Evans Cycles

madison.co.uk
Team information
Based  United Kingdom
Founded 2006 (2006)
Key personnel
Directeur sportif Garry Beckett
Team name history
2008
Jan 2009-June 2009
June 2009-
Plowman Craven Evans Cycles
Plowman Craven-Madison.co.uk
Madison.co.uk
 
Jersey

Madison.co.uk Professional Cycle Racing are a British cycling team. At the beginning of 2009 they were known as Plowman Craven-Madison.co.uk and were a UCI Continental bicycle racing team.[1]

Contents

History

Sponsored by geomatics company Plowman Craven in its inaugural season, the team won three National and one World title with Malcolm Elliot also taking the Elite Circuit Race Series. UK bicycle retailer Evans Cycles became a title sponsor after the first year to launch their own brand Pinnacle Bicycle range. Evans Cycles then pulled out of the sponsorship after the first year of sponsorship.

The team's focus is senior professional events in the United Kingdom and second-tier road races such as the UCI Europe Tour.

PCA was among the first professional cycling teams to introduce "doping passports" to prevent blood doping in cycling when it launched its Race Clean initiative before to the 2007 Tour of Britain.[2]

2006 Riders

2007 Riders

2008 Riders

Equipment

For the 2007 the Plowman Craven Evans Cycles race team were supplied bicycles by Pinnacle Bikes, a bicycle brand established by cycle retailer Evans Cycles.

For 2008 the team rode Pinnacle Bikes, namely Pinnacle Aeos Carbon Team Issue carbon fibre bikes, designed in the UK, and painted in matching team Pink & Blue colours. The team also tested new track and time trial models ready for consumer sale in the future. However these models didn't make it to market due to poor quality issues.

In 2009 the team decided to end the co-ownership with bicycle retailer Evans Cycles. A new deal was struck with distribution company madison.co.uk. In May 2009, Plowman Craven withdrew their sponsorship of the team. The team lost a number of riders including Evan Oliphant and Ross Creber. The team became known as simply madison.co.uk.

External links

References