SPORTS> World Events
More freedom with new team BMC: Evans
(China Daily)
Updated: 2009-11-03 09:37

SYDNEY: Australia's world road race cycling champion, Cadel Evans, said on Monday his switch to the American BMC team gives him the freedom to plan his own program.

Evans, a two-time runner-up in the Tour de France, in 2007 and 2008, has announced he will leave the Belgian Silence-Lotto outfit at the end of the year despite having a year to run on his deal. BMC said it had signed Evans to a three-year contract in a "partnership (that) will create mutually beneficial opportunities for both the current world champion as well as the BMC racing team."

Evans said he had confidence in the group being assembled by BMC and had been given complete freedom to plan his own program next year.

"I get to do everything that I want," Evans said in Adelaide.

Related readings:
More freedom with new team BMC: Evans World Airline Road Race kicks off in Hangzhou
More freedom with new team BMC: Evans BOCOG official: Rain not to affect cycling road race
More freedom with new team BMC: Evans Women's road race: Cooke nets soggy gold

"All the program is done, the only race we don't know about is the Tour Down Under."

The signing of Evans will be considered a coup for BMC, who have been operating in cycling's second tier Continental Pro ranks.

His presence means the team can now look forward to being invited to many of the top races on the calendar, for which Pro Tour status is usually required.

Evans placed third in this year's Tour of Spain - a race that provided perfect preparation for his successful bid to win the rainbow jersey at the World Championships in September.

"We're guaranteed a start in the Tour of Italy, and then it's up to us to prove that we shouldn't be left out of the Tour de France," Evans said.

Evans said his decision to switch from the Silence-Lotto team was as much about the team environment as it was about the strength of riders to help him in the biggest races.

"They kind of go hand-in-hand, when you look for a team as a grand tour rider you need a team that is 100 percent behind you from day one," he said.

"But you also need the riders that are capable of doing that, capable of physically doing the work that is required."

Evans, 32, had a disastrous Tour de France campaign in 2009, finishing in 30th place.

AFP