Mark Cavendish on Team Sky exit and Bradley Wiggins

Cavendish: Playing second-fiddle to Wiggins and broken promises forced me to quit Sky

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UPDATED:

10:44 GMT, 2 November 2012

Mark Cavendish has claimed broken promises ahead of this year's Tour de France forced him to quit Team Sky.

The 27-year-old said he was left feeling like a 'back-up rider' as Bradley Wiggins went on to claim a historic yellow-jersey success.

Cavendish, who moved to Omega Pharma-Quickstep last month, believes he could have also have captured the sprinters' green jersey and fulfil an ambition he thought Sky had held when he signed.

Walking away: Mark Cavendish quit Team Sky over broken promises

Walking away: Mark Cavendish quit Team Sky over broken promises

But the Manxman believes dreams of a Tour double were put on hold in the lead-up to the race as Sky instead focused on Wiggins.

'We didn't achieve what I thought we were setting out to achieve at the start of the season,' he told The Daily Telegraph.

'Sky should have taken both jerseys. We could have done that without any risk or detriment to the yellow jersey. It's frustrating.'

Cavendish, who won his only Tour green jersey last year, admitted Wiggins' success should always have been Sky's primary objective.

Second-fiddle: Cavendish admits he did not enjoy playing back-up to Bradley Wiggins at the Tour de France

Second-fiddle: Cavendish admits he did not enjoy playing back-up to Bradley Wiggins at the Tour de France

But while he was proud to be part of a famous summer for British cycling he suspected it would be his last with Sky after one of his support riders, Juan Antonio Flecha, was dropped from the Tour team.

'It was then, on the eve of the Tour, that I realised the promise I had signed to Sky on wasn't rally a promise,' he said.

'I was a back-up rider. At the end of the day we weren't going for the two jerseys at all.

'It wasn't a failure, and I was very proud to be part of a British yellow-jersey winning team with Brad, but it wasn't the ultimate either.'

Chris Froome to lead Team Sky in Vuelta

Froome to lead Team Sky's bid for glory at Tour of Spain

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UPDATED:

10:27 GMT, 9 August 2012

Tour de France runner-up Chris Froome is set to lead Team Sky's Vuelta a Espana campaign.

Froome, who finished behind team-mate Bradley Wiggins in the Tour, was named in the squad alongside fellow Britons Ian Stannard and Ben Swift.

Olympic road race silver medallist Rigobero Uran, Juan Antonio Flecha, Sergio Henao, Danny Pate, Richie Porte and Xabier Zandio complete the nine-man squad.

Back on the bike: Chis Froome will lead Team Sky in the Tour of Spain

Back on the bike: Chis Froome will lead Team Sky in the Tour of Spain

Froome finished second in the 2011 Vuelta, one place ahead of Wiggins, and will be expected to challenge the returning Alberto Contador for the overall title.

'It's always been my plan to ride the Vuelta,' the 27-year-old said. 'I'll be going into the race as team leader but that's not to say we don't have other guys who can be right up there on the GC (general classification).

Medal man: British rider Froome took bronze in the time trial at the London Olympics

Medal man: British rider Froome took bronze in the time trial at the London Olympics

'Rigoberto and Sergio both have huge potential, and Richie is another guy who could shine.

'I'm going to do the best job I can and do whatever's required of me from the team.

'Initially
I'll be riding for the GC, but if one of my team-mates shows that
they're in a better place to win the race then I'll happily work for
them.

'We're sending a first-rate squad and it should be a really exciting race.'

Swift is the nominated sprinter.

He
added: 'I'm really excited about being the team's main sprinter. There
should be plenty of opportunities for me and I'll be doing my best to
get my first Grand Tour stage win.'

The Vuelta, also known as the Tour of Spain, begins on August 18 and finishes on September 9.

Mark Cavendish wins stage five in Qatar

Brilliant Cavendish storms to another stage victory on Tour of Qatar

Mark Cavendish has won stage five of the Tour of Qatar.

The Briton moved to the front with 200m to go, and claimed victory ahead of Daniel Oss and team-mate Peter Sagan.

Victory: Cavendish celebrates as he crosses the line first

Victory: Cavendish celebrates as he crosses the line first

Cavendish had already won the third stage of the tour on Tuesday.

Boonen retained a 31-second lead over Tyler Farrar going into Friday's final stage.

Spanish rider Juan Antonio Flecha is third, while Cavendish moved up to seventh.

What a sight: Cavendish just before the start of the fifth stage

What a sight: Cavendish just before the start of the fifth stage