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Mark Cavendish celebrates after winning stage 13 of the 2021 Tour de France in Carcassonne, a win that tied Eddy Merckx’s record
Mark Cavendish celebrates after winning stage 13 of the 2021 Tour de France in Carcassonne, a win that tied Eddy Merckx’s record. Photograph: Chris Graythen/Getty Images
Mark Cavendish celebrates after winning stage 13 of the 2021 Tour de France in Carcassonne, a win that tied Eddy Merckx’s record. Photograph: Chris Graythen/Getty Images

Mark Cavendish keeps hopes of Tour de France record alive with move to Astana

This article is more than 1 year old
  • 37-year-old Manxman signs one-year deal with Kazakh team
  • Cavendish is level with Eddy Merckx on 34 Tour stage wins

Mark Cavendish’s switch to Astana Qazaqstan has been confirmed in a move that keeps alive his hopes of making more Tour de France history. The 37-year-old’s future had been up in the air since the French ProTour squad B&B Hotels-KTM – with whom Cavendish had reportedly agreed terms – failed to secure new sponsorship in December and was forced to disband.

Astana quickly made known their interest in signing Cavendish and the reigning British champion was photographed close to their training camp in Spain shortly before Christmas. Cavendish’s one-year contract will give him the chance to claim the outright record for Tour stage wins after he moved level with Eddy Merckx on 34 in 2021.

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The Kazakh team is managed by Alexandr Vinokurov, who tested positive for blood doping at the 2007 Tour de France and served a ban.

“I am really excited for this adventure,” Cavendish said. “I raced with Alexandr Vinokurov for many years and now I’m racing with his two boys. I remember when they were children the same age as my own, dreaming to be bike racers.

“Astana Qazaqstan Team is going to be a great place to be successful, with a strong team led by Alexandr, a champion on the bike and a gentleman off the bike. I’ve enjoyed a long career already, but the joy of riding my bike and the hunger to continue winning are as bright as ever.”

Given the last-minute signing of Cavendish – confirmed after the WorldTour season began at the Tour Down Under earlier in the day – it remains to be seen where he fits in the overall plans of the Astana team, but the Tour will surely be at the centre of his ambitions.

After winning the British title for a second time last June, Cavendish said: “Can you imagine winning a 35th Tour de France stage in the British champion’s jersey? It’d be really beautiful.”

Leadout man Cees Bol has also joined Astana, who have not had much sprinting pedigree in the past but are adjusting their own roster after the retirement of Vincenzo Nibali and the sacking of Miguel Ángel López because of alleged connections to a doctor under investigation for doping.

“The arrival of a top sprinter in our team is kind of challenge for us, but we are ready for it,” Vinokurov said. “We see new ways and new possibilities. The goals, however, are still the same – victories in any kind of race: Classics, stages in different stage races and, of course, in the Grand Tours.

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“Mark still has a big desire to win and we are going to support this feeling with all our forces in all kind of races.”

In 2021, Cavendish was given a contract by Deceuninck-QuickStep after several years dogged by injury and illness. He then stepped in as a late replacement for the injured Sam Bennett in the Tour and went on to win four stages, bringing him level with Merckx’s all-time record, which was set in 1975.

But Cavendish, who also won the green jersey for the second time, was left off the Tour squad in favour of the Dutch sprinter Fabio Jakobsen 12 months later as the team boss, Patrick Lefevere, made clear Cavendish’s contract would not be extended.

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  • Tour de France: Cavendish and Alaphilippe miss Quick-Step team cut

  • Mark Cavendish sprints to first Giro d’Italia stage victory in nearly 10 years

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