There are a lots of jobs I wouldn’t envy in this world, and one of them is surely those managing the Ineos Grenadiers squad. The British team finds itself in a weird, precarious spot — going into the Tour with 2019 winner Egan Bernal, 2018 winner Geraint Thomas, the young promising stage racer Carlos Rodriguez, as well as the talented all-rounder Tom Pidcock.
And of course, where there’s even a whiff of competition, you know that Netflix is going to squeeze every last drop and then some more out of that bag. In the streaming platform’s latest foray into cycling documentaries, the Tour de France: Unchained, now in its second season, Ineos was portrayed as a team made up of riders not getting along with each other and having bad blood.
And that’s not sat well with the 24-year-old Tom Pidcock, who in the Netflix show was shown to defy team orders during the 2023 Tour de France and ride his own race, only to suffer in the third week, leading to suggestions of an internal Pidcock-Rodriguez rivalry.
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“I was portrayed as the bad guy…,” Pidcock said, adding that he had not seen the Netflix episode. “It just makes a drama you know and it's not even in chronological order. But at the end of the day, we're racing.
"At the start of the [2023] Tour, me and Carlos were both going for GC. Then at some point, someone comes out on top, and they're the person who's the leader at that point. And that was Carlos. So, it's just a drama. It probably made a good episode, but I was the bad guy. Whatever…”
Rodriguez also dismissed any talks of bad blood between the two, reports Cyclingnews. He said: “Unfortunately they wanted to make it entertaining. Maybe they even put some things out of context to create more audience but the relationship between Tom and me is good.
“I hope this year Netflix isn’t about us anymore. It’s not about us fighting or anything,” he added. “The feeling in training racing is better than last year and the year before. That's why I feel that I made the state step forward. But we'll find out during the race. I will give my best and try to do everything I can to try to beat them.”
Meanwhile, at least one Ineos rider has cleared up that he won’t be going for the GC, and that Geraint Thomas, fresh off riding the Giro. Speaking on his and his teammate and fellow Welshman Luke Rowe’s podcast Watts Occurring, he said: “I think I’ll be there to help Carlos.
“I think he’s all guns blazing for this. And yeah, [I’ll] just look for a stage at some point. But mainly there for the team. I’m not going to sit up and lose minutes straight away, but no stress, just get into the race and see how I am.”