Unlike Team Sky, which did not get its UCI World Tour victory
until February, Orica GreenEdge secured its first World Tour victory at the
Tour Down Under when Simon Gerrans took out the general classification jersey. Success on the European continent was also
not very far as Gerrans backed up his early season success by winning one of
cycling’s five monuments – the Milan-San Remo – in a sprint finish against
Fabian Cancellera and Vincenzo Nibali.
This early season success at a number of World Tour events also translated
into victory at their debut Grand Tour when Matt Goss won stage three at the
2012 Giro d’Italia. While there were
no podium finishes at the Tour de France, Orica GreenEdge was back in the Grand
Tour winning circle when Simon Clarke won the fourth stage of the Vuelta a
Espana and then went on to win the mountains classification.
Overall, 2012 was an extremely successful first year for
Orica GreenEdge. The team managed to
finished 12th on Cycling Quotient CQ Team Ranking with 32 victories
and 6th on the UCI World Tour Team ranking. In comparison, Team Sky finished its debut
season also with 32 victories, but in 13th spot on Cycling Quotient
CQ Team Ranking. If Team Sky is seen as
the professional benchmark for all World Tour teams, then based on 2012 form,
the future looked very promising for Orica GreenEdge.
Fast forward to June 2013, Orica GreenEdge racing strategy
seems to be in disarray as the team shows signs of second year syndrome. Things were not helped when earlier in the
year the Team suspended Matt White after it was revealed that he has doped
while at US Postal Team with Lance Armstrong.
As at 1 June 2013, the team has slipped to 14th
on the UCI World Tour Team ranking, some 650 points behind Team Sky, and 13th
on Cycling Quotient 2013 CQ Team Ranking.
While the team had secured 17 victories to date, four of those victories
were in National or Oceania championships.
The 2013 Giro d’Italia was a failure for Orica GreenEdge, which set their
team up around Matt Goss, attempting to replicate the previous year’s
performance. Goss withdrew on Stage 16
and the team left the Giro empty handed.
It is difficult to see where a grand tour victory will come
from after analysing their Giro performance. In fact, if both Mark Cavendish and
Peter Sagan head to the Tour de France, it is hard to see Goss, or any other
Orica GreenEdge rider beating them. Furthermore,
Orica GreenEdge is unlikely going to match the likes of Team Sky is a team time
trial or individual time trial. Therefore, the rest of the 2013 season is not
looking too bright for Australia’s first UCI World Tour team.
I can understand why Orica GreenEdge focussed on stage wins
in its debut season. The team had to get
immediate runs on the board to get exposure and secure a team sponsor, which it
did when Orica, the Australian mining services and explosives company, came on
board just before the Tour de France. The
new team also had to justify why it was given a World Tour licence at the
expense of other established cycling teams.
It was clear that 2012 success meant the team was going to
follow a similar strategy in 2013– chase more stage wins rather than general
classification jerseys. The team brought
in Michael Matthews from Rabobank to bolster its sprinting stocks. A team that already had Goss, Howard, Alan
Davis, Aidan Kruopis and Baden Cooke in their sprinting ranks.
Team Sky objective was to deliver Britain’s first Tour de
France winner. It achieved that in three
years.
With the lack of big wins in 2013 it is time for team
management to re-assess their racing strategy. Orica GreenEdge should take a
leaf out of Team Sky’s racing manual and develop a similar objective and shift
its focus to securing general classification podium wins at one of the three
grand tour events.
But if Orica GreenEdge was serious about winning a grand
tour it would have secured Richie Porte at all cost – the next likely Australian
winner of a grand tour – rather let him re-sign for Team Sky in May. Surely, it would not be too hard to convince
Porte to switch teams given his limited chances at Team Sky because of the
presence of Wiggins and Froome in the team. I am sure Porte’s manager would
have held discussions with Orica GreenEdge.
Did Porte views his prospects were better staying at Team Sky? He was likely concerned about the level of
support that he would get from the team.
There are not many super domestiques in Orica which can drive the
peloton like Team Sky.
That leaves Orica GreenEdge to use its team resources to
have a tilt at the general classification victory. It is often reported that
Cameron Meyer is a future general classification winner. It is time for the team to back Meyer and
build a stage race around him, and not just around a sprinter like Goss or
Howard.
If Orica GreenEdge is going to compete against Astana, Team
Sky, BMC or Movistar then it needs to develop a genuine general classification
rider and build a squad around a rider to allow them to compete at the highest
levels in a grand tour. Orica GreenEgde
is a long way from building the perfect grand tour team.
Fans are eager to see their heroes on the podium wearing the
yellow jersey or the maglia rosa. Not
after one stage, but after 21 days of racing under the toughest conditions a
grand tour can throw at them.
![]() |
| On the podium, but still not first |
Unfortunately, this will not happen at Orica GreenEdge. Not until the owner and team management shift
their focus from stage wins to building a grand tour squad that can support a
truly general classification contender.

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