Manolo Saiz
Liberty Seguros-Würth |
Manuel "Manolo" Saiz Balbás (born 16 October 1959 in
Saiz was a hands-on manager and directeur sportif. He consolidated his riders' training and hired staff to manage their coaching and racing. Despite not having a racing background, he nurtured ONCE to become one of the biggest teams. His riders included Frenchman Laurent Jalabert and Swiss Alex Zülle; both dominated the Vuelta a España, each winning the general and other classifications. In 1995 Jalabert achieved the trifecta by winning the general classification along with the points and King of the Mountains.
Saiz's next riders included Spaniard Abraham Olano, Igor González de Galdeano and Joseba Beloki. ONCE dominated team time trials in the Tour de France.
At the end of the 2003 ONCE discontinued sponsorship, saying penetration was 100% in Spain, meaning every Spaniard knew what ONCE was. Saiz brought
Controversy
1998 - Festina affair
During the turmoil of the
On 17 June 1999 The organisers of the 1999 Tour de France took the unprecedented step of banning teams, team officials and individual riders in the aftermath of the Festina affair. This included both Saiz and Dr Nicolas Terrados team doctor of Team ONCE. The ban was in relation to the actions and behaviour of these teams and riders during the 1998 Tour[1][2] when Saiz withdrew his riders and said: "[I have] stuffed a finger up the Tour's arse".
Richard Virenque's lawyers depended on a clause in the UCI's rules, number 1.2.048, which says that tour organisers must say at least 30 days before a race whom they wished to admit. The Tour had not done so. The UCI also obliged the Tour to accept Saiz.
2006 - Operación Puerto
On 23 May 2006, Saiz was arrested in connection with the
Saiz was cleared of damaging public health and managed a restaurant and wedding catering business in his home region of Cantabria for several years. In August 2013, he expressed an interest in returning to cycling.[4]
References
- ^ "Richard Virenque banned from Tour de France". Cyclingnews.com. Retrieved 2008-06-06.
- ^ "Dutch Team Is Also Refused Invitation:Tour Bans 4 Cyclists From This Year's Race". International Herald Tribune. Retrieved 2008-06-06.
- ^ Eurosport, TdF, 2006
- ^ Stephen Farrand (8 August 2013). "Manolo Saiz: I could return to cycling". Cycling News. Retrieved 2013-08-19.