Rapha och EF Education går skilda vägar

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Rapha och EF Education går skilda vägar
Jag laäste precis att Rapha och EF Education går skilda vägar efter 7 år. Väldigt synd tycker jag, de var det enda laget som kändes som att de stod för något. Hoppas de hittar en ny bra samarbetspartner.

Från Roadman cycling på FB:

The partnership that redefined pro cycling just died.
Not from failure. From exhaustion.

Rapha and EF Education are splitting after seven years. One of the most recognisable, innovative partnerships in modern cycling - over.

The duck helmet. The Palace collaboration. The pink jersey everyone could spot from space. Gone.

Rapha's CEO said the relationship "had gotten tired."
Not unsuccessful. Not unprofitable. Tired.

That line stuck with me because it's brutally honest about something every brand partnership faces but nobody admits.

They didn't fail. They just stopped caring.

When Rapha joined EF in 2019, they weren't just supplying kit. They were building culture.

The alternative calendar sent pro riders to Unbound Gravel and Leadville. Lachlan Morton's solo Alt Tour captured millions of views. The Gone Racing documentary series brought fans inside the sport.

They gave cycling personalities again.

The partnership won stages at all three Grand Tours. Victories at Flanders and Paris-Roubaix Femmes. World championship gold this year.

By every metric, it worked.

But Rapha reported losses for seven straight years. And somewhere along the way, the magic became maintenance.

The innovation became obligation.

The disruption became routine.

That's how partnerships die in 2025. Not with a bang. With a memo about "broadening horizons."

Meanwhile, Ineos Grenadiers - once cycling's dominant super team - can't find a bike sponsor for 2026.

They're hiring agencies. Talking to "hundreds of brands." Offering unprecedented opportunities.

But nobody's signing.

Because the model is broken.

Brands enter cycling to build community, create culture, tell stories. Then they realise that costs money and doesn't show immediate ROI.

So they optimise. Cut the storytelling budget. Focus on logo placement and activation metrics.

The partnership becomes transactional.

The magic disappears.

The "relationship gets tired."

Then they leave. And everyone acts surprised.

Rapha and EF proved something valuable: partnerships that build culture create value beyond spreadsheets.

But building culture is expensive.

It's long-term. It's hard to measure.

So brands choose transactions over transformation.

Then wonder why nothing sticks.

The real tragedy isn't that Rapha left. It's what they're leaving behind.

EF now has to find a partner willing to fill boots that might be "too big to fill" according to brands who considered it.

Because Rapha wasn't just a kit supplier. They were culture architects.

And in cycling's current sponsor market, nobody wants to pay for architects.

They want vendors.

Seven years of losses finally made Rapha ask: is this worth it?

Their answer was no. And honestly, looking at the economics, I can't blame them.

But that's the problem. When the economics say no to building culture, everyone loses.
 
Rapha och EF Education går skilda vägar
Jag laäste precis att Rapha och EF Education går skilda vägar efter 7 år. Väldigt synd tycker jag, de var det enda laget som kändes som att de stod för något. Hoppas de hittar en ny bra samarbetspartner.

Från Roadman cycling på FB:

The partnership that redefined pro cycling just died.
Not from failure. From exhaustion.

[Wall of text]

But that's the problem. When the economics say no to building culture, everyone loses.

Bra skrivet, jag håller inte andan i väntan på att en LLM skriver med samma klass.

Om subject i stort så är det synd att det är svårt med sponsringen i cykling, det blir mer o mer sportwashing o mindre o mindre själ (inte för att det är så själ med t e x bettingbolag).
 
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