Quanta Capital Junior Tour of Ireland – Hall of Fame
Some of the Successful Quanta Capital Junior Tour of Ireland Participants
Nicolas Roche
Winner in 2002, Roche went on to enjoy a long WorldTour career with teams like Saxo Bank and Team Sunweb. He won stages in both the Vuelta a España and the Tour de France, wore the red leader’s jersey in the Vuelta, and became one of Ireland’s best-known professional cyclists of his generation.
Sam Bennett
The 2008 winner became one of the world’s top sprinters. Bennett won multiple stages in all three Grand Tours and famously captured the green points jersey at the 2020 Tour de France. He is widely considered one of the greatest Irish road sprinters ever.
Geraint Thomas
Competed in the Junior Tour of Ireland as a junior before building an extraordinary career with Team Sky/Ineos. He won the 2018 Tour de France, earned Olympic gold medals on the track, and became one of the most successful British stage racers ever.
Chris Froome
Chris is often associated with the generation of riders who came through top junior European races around that period, though his development path was more unusual because he raced extensively in Africa before moving into European cycling. Froome later dominated Grand Tour racing, winning four Tours de France, two Vueltas a España, and a Giro d’Italia.
Eddie Dunbar
Dunbar won the race in both 2013 and 2014. He later signed for top WorldTour teams including Team Sky/Ineos and Jayco-AlUla, becoming known as a strong climber and stage-race rider with high finishes in Grand Tours and major week-long races.
Luke Rowe
Winner in 2006, Rowe became one of the most respected road captains in professional cycling. Riding for Team Sky and Ineos Grenadiers, he helped teammates win multiple editions of the Tour de France and became famous for his leadership and Classics riding.
Bradley Wiggins
Bradley competed in Irish junior races during his development years before becoming one of Britain’s greatest cyclists. He went on to win the 2012 Tour de France, multiple Olympic gold medals on the track, and helped spark the modern British cycling boom.
Mark Cavendish
Mark competed in the Junior Tour during his early career and later became one of the greatest sprinters in cycling history. “The Manx Missile” won 35 Tour de France stages — the all-time record — along with the World Championship road race title and countless sprint victories across the Grand Tours.
Mark Scanlon
Winner in 1998, Scanlon later became the UCI Road World Championships under-23 world champion in 2003. He rode professionally for teams such as Ag2r and was one of Ireland’s biggest cycling talents of the early 2000s.
Ian Stannard
The 2004 champion developed into a powerful Classics specialist with Team Sky. His biggest victory came at Omloop Het Nieuwsblad in 2015, where he famously defeated three riders from Etixx–Quick-Step in a legendary solo performance.
Martin Earley
The inaugural winner in 1978 went on to become a successful professional rider in the 1980s and early 1990s. He won a stage of the Giro d’Italia and finished on the podium in major mountain stages at the Tour de France.
Kai Reus
Winner in 2003, Reus was considered one of the Netherlands’ brightest prospects and later rode professionally for Rabobank. Although injuries limited his career, he achieved strong results in European stage races and one-day events.
Colin Joyce
The 2012 winner became a respected American pro rider with Rally Cycling and Human Powered Health, collecting victories in U.S. stage races and criteriums.
Richard Groenendaal
Winner in 1988, Groenendaal later became one of the greatest cyclo-cross riders ever, winning the UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships in 2000 and dominating the sport for years.
Mel Sutcliffe
A stage winner in 1990. After his racing career, Sutcliffe became a major figure in Irish cycling through sponsorship and business. He repeatedly helped financially rescue and sponsor the Junior Tour through his companies Eurotrek, Eurocycles, and later Quanta Capital.
Ben Walsh
Ben won the 2017 Junior Tour of Ireland overall General Classification. He represented Ireland at junior level and later progressed into under-23 racing. Known for his climbing and time-trial abilities, he was regarded as one of Ireland’s strong junior riders during the late 2010s, with solid results in national and international junior competitions.