EF Education-EasyPost did not release
much in terms of incoming transfers for 2026 until now, but Jonathan Vaughters' team put an end
to that on Tuesday. With
Luke Lamperti, the American team directly recruits a rider who is important for the sponsors for the coming seasons.
“I am really excited to join the team,” Luke says. “I already know quite a lot of the guys and am looking forward to joining a nice group and seeing what the next years bring. It feels like I am coming home. It’s an American team. Obviously, cycling isn't massive in the US, so it is pretty special to be able to join an American WorldTour team as an American rider.”
“Where I grew up, in Sonoma County, there is just amazing riding,” Luke says. “I fell in love with riding there, being out and always striving to be better. Having goals drove me forward. It went quite fast, and I ended up where I'm at now.”
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Lamperti loves Flemish classics
“I would say I'm a sprinter, but not a pure sprinter,” Luke says. “I am more of a punchy sprinter who can do well in the classics and then sprints, where there are fewer guys. There are races like Sanremo, where I would really like to do well. Grand tour stages are also something I'd like to go for more in the future.”
“I love the thrill from the start to the finish of the classics,” he says when talking about the classics. “No matter if it's 200 kilometers to go or two kilometers to go, you always have excitement. I really like the full day of excitement and full gas racing and positioning for the cobbled climbs. The fans and cycling culture in Belgium are also super nice.”
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Vaughters sees road captain in Lamperti
''Luke is a great sprinter and a great classics rider who knows how to do a lead out,” says EF Pro Cycling founder and CEO Jonathan Vaughters. “He is a real leader, especially for a guy who is as young as he is. He can already be a road captain, even though he is 22 years old. He has a great ability to lead a group of people on the road, and he knows how to read race tactics incredibly well. He's going to be one of our go-to classics guys in the cobbled races.''
''And he is going to be a sprinter that we use quite a bit. I also think he's going to be a great mentor for Noah Hobbs, our superstar U23 sprinter that we're bringing on. Doing a grand tour this year along with a heavy schedule like Luke did should set him up for success this coming year. I could see him winning a race like Gent Wevelgem. If you really want to dream: Milano-Sanremo. Luke is good in highly technical, highly tactical races.”