Giro d'Italia pro bike: Mark Cavendish's Wilier Filante SLR

Giro d'Italia pro bike: Mark Cavendish's Wilier Filante SLR

A closer look at Cavendish's latest ride, which he's currently using on the hunt for stage wins at the Giro d'Italia

Photos: James Startt Words: Richard Windsor

Any rider with a professional career spanning more than 15 years is going to have ridden a lot of different bikes. In the case of Mark Cavendish, cycling’s most successful sprinter ever, he’s helped make icons of certain models thanks to his victories on the biggest stages. Think the first Specialized McLaren Venge from the HTC glory days, or the Pinarello Dogma 60.5 that he rode to victory on the Champs Élysées as world champion.

Now in the autumn of his career, Cavendish made the switch to Astana Qazaqstan for the 2023 season after finding opportunities hard to come by at his former Quick-Step squad. That meant switching from Specialized, the brand that has perhaps accompanied Cavendish to most of his success, to Wilier Triestina.

Read more: Giro d’Italia pro bike: Remco Evenepoel’s Specialized S-Works Shiv Disc time trial bike

Mark Cavendish Wilier Filante SLR

The Italian brand’s flagship race bike, the Filante SLR, is the only road offering to the Astana team riders currently. Like many brands, Wilier’s top-end bike is aimed at being both aerodynamic enough for the flat races and light enough for the high mountain stages of Grand Tours. It’s a familiar shape, the dropped seatstays and aero tubing a style fairly ubiquitous amongst the WorldTour peloton’s road bikes right now.

The most striking feature of Astana’s Filante SLR is definitely the colourway, which reflects the turquoise of the team’s jerseys. The glossy marbled effect with a blue fade into silver is certainly one of most standout designs in the peloton.

Mark Cavendish Wilier Filante SLRCavendish is known to have a particular attention to detail when it comes to his bike setup, but the whole setup is pretty much as standard for the team’s riders.

The whole groupset is Shimano’s 12-speed Dura-Ace R9270, and in this particular setup the Manxman is running 54/40 chainrings on a power meter crank, while the cassette looks like it’s potentially the 11-30 offering from Shimano.Mark Cavendish Wilier Filante SLRThe only change to the groupset is the oversized jockey wheels, which are provided by American company SLF Motion, who also provide bottom brackets to the squad. The ‘Speed System’ jockey wheels and cage are in fact the only nod on the bike to Cavendish as British national road champion, with red and blue jockey wheels paired with a Union Flag design on the carbon cage.

Mark Cavendish Wilier Filante SLRUp front, Cavendish has opted to use the Wilier proprietary integrated carbon bars, also in turquoise. The drop is a beautiful classic curve, which is becoming rarer to see in the peloton as riders opt for integrated and aero setups. Cavendish has often opted for classic curve bars when they’ve been available to him, and this set seemed to be created when Niki Terpstra began riding with Wilier at Total Energies back in 2020.

Mark Cavendish Wilier Filante SLRThe bars are topped with Prologo bar tape and there’s an integrated K-Edge out-front computer mount too. There’s also a set of sprint shifters on the outer, rear side of the drops. It’s quite common to see these set further on the inside of the drops to be operated by the rider’s thumbs, but clearly Cavendish is more comfortable with these positioned here.

Mark Cavendish Wilier Filante SLRThe wheels are by French brand Corima, and look like a tubeless version of their 47mm WS Black wheels. Conversely, Cavendish has actually been using deeper Hed wheels throughout the Giro d'Italia so far; the team has been using Hed wheels with certain riders all spring, despite not yet having an official partnership with the American brand. The Corima carbon wheels are shod with Vittoria’s new Corsa Pro tyres in 28mm, set up tubeless, and a 60mm front discs rotor with a 40mm rear.

Mark Cavendish Wilier Filante SLRCavendish’s seat of choice is a Prologo Nago C3, while the bottles and cages are provided by Tacx.

Photos: James Startt Words: Richard Windsor

READ MORE

Tiffany Cromwell

My other life as a graphic designer, by Tiffany Cromwell

Veteran of the women’s peloton since 2010, Canyon//SRAM zondacrypto’s Tiffany Cromwell spends most of her downtime drawing and creating, including a number of Formula One...

Leggi di più
Final Tour de France podium 2024

Tour de France favourites 2025: who will win the yellow jersey?

A look at who the bookmakers are backing to win the general classification at this year's Tour

Leggi di più
La Vuelta a España Femenina

Tour de Suisse 2025 Women’s preview: Vollering and Niewiadoma go head-to-head at key Tour warm-up race

The challenging Swiss parcours with no summit finish or time trial could lead to an open battle for the GC

Leggi di più
Tour de France 2024

Tour de France 2025 route: Summit finishes, time trials and a return to Paris

All you need to know about the route of the 112th edition of the Tour de France

Leggi di più
Florian Lipowitz

From ski star to GC hope: Florian Lipowitz's convoluted journey to becoming Germany's biggest cycling talent

Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe's young German didn't start out cycling, but he showed promise from the moment he first started taking the sport seriously. Now he's one...

Leggi di più
Tour de France 2024

Critérium du Dauphiné 2025 contenders: Pogačar, Vingegaard, and Evenepoel go head-to-head

The three superstars meet for a smaller-scale showdown ahead of the Tour de France in July

Leggi di più

READ RIDE REPEAT

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Get closer to the sport than ever before.

Enjoy a digital subscription to Rouleur for just £4 per month and get access to our award-winning magazines.

SUBSCRIBE