Team Bianchi was a makeshift team that was put together from the remnants of the Coast team in time for the 2003 Tour de France.

Team Coast had been unable to pay the salaries of their riders and Bianchi took over the team and the role of title sponsor. Coast had recently signed Jan Ullrich following his departure from Team Telekom after his drunk driving and amphetamine use. During the 2003 tour while riding for Bianchi, Ullrich placed second to Lance Armstrong by just 61 seconds, his closest ever margin in any of Armstrong's seven victorious years. In the process, Ullrich also managed to upstage Alexander Vinokourov, Telekom's highest-placed rider, who finished third.

Team Bianchi had planned to continue on as a professional road racing team. However, Ullrich's return to his former team Telekom (later T-Mobile and HTC–Highroad), as well as the departure of Ángel Casero led to the demise of Team Bianchi as they now lacked the star power necessary to justify a top-tier team.

Major wins

2000

Grand Prix Pino Cerami, Jan Bratkowski

Stage 12 Tour de Langkawi, Jan Bratkowski

2001

Stage 4 Paris - Nice, Alex Zülle

2002

2003

Profronde Stiphout, Jan Ullrich

Rund um Köln, Jan Ullrich

Stage 1b International Niedersachsen-Rundfahrt, Thorsten Wilhelms

Stage 1 Bayern-Rundfahrt, Thomas Liese

Stage 1 Tour of Austria, Steffen Radochla

Stage 12 Tour de France, Jan Ullrich

Notable riders

NameDate of birthNationality
Stefan Adamsson03.01.1978Sweden
Daniel Becke12.03.1978Germany
Ángel Casero27.09.1972Spain
Félix García Casas29.12.1968Spain
Aitor Garmendia03.03.1968Spain
Fabrizio Guidi13.04.1972Italy
André Korff04.06.1973Germany
Francisco José Lara Ruiz25.02.1977Spain
Thomas Liese10.08.1968Germany
David Plaza Romero03.07.1970Spain
Steffen Radochla19.10.1979Germany
Thorsten Rund25.02.1976Germany
Raphael Schweda17.04.1976Germany
Tobias Steinhauser27.01.1972Germany
Jan Ullrich02.12.1973Germany
Malte Urban14.12.1974Germany
Christoph Von Kleinsorgen14.07.1980Germany
Thorsten Wilhelms31.07.1969Germany