MG Maglificio - MG Maglificio-Technogym

In 1995, former World Champion Gianni Bugno was signed by the team, now called MG Maglificio-Technogym. Head sponsor GB and manager Patrick Lefevere left the team, taking Johan Museeuw with them to Mapei-GB. Peeters, Bomans and Ludwig Willems joined them, removing the Belgian influence in MG Maglificio, which was now a team with many Italians, a few Swiss and one rider from Denmark and Great Britain each.

Like previous years, Italian specialists like Cassani and Richard won a lot of major one day races in Italy. Baldato also won a Tour de France stage.

In 1996, Michele Bartoli joined the team from Mercatone Uno. He won the Ronde van Vlaanderen and Giro dell'Emillia, among many other races. Baldato was victorious again in the Tour de France with a stage win, but also in the Vuelta a España where he won two stages. Pascal Richard won a special race in Atlanta, where he became Olympic Champion in the road race, where he won in front of former team mates Sorensen and Sciandri, who had left MG-Technogym earlier in 1996.

In 1997, MG signed then 22-year old Paolo Bettini and Matteo Tosatto, who made their professional debuts. Gilberto Simoni and Mauro-Antonio Santaromita were other new riders at the team in what would be its last under the MG-Technogym name. In this final success year, Bartoli won Liège–Bastogne–Liège and the Coupe du Monde and Alessandro Bertolini won Paris-Brussel.

MG Maglificio remained a sponsor in cycling for one more year, co-financing the Riso Scotti team of Alberto Volpi, with only a few riders from the old MG Maglificio team (among them Baldato). This team wasn't nearly as successful as the old Technogym team, although a young Danilo Di Luca did win the Baby Giro of 1998, after which he scored an internship with Riso Scotti in September.

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