‘It would be a dream to race the Tour de France Femmes’ – Pathways Fund provides novel support for two US riders to join French team and compete at Tour of Flanders, Paris-Roubaix

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‘It would be a dream to race the Tour de France Femmes’ – Pathways Fund provides novel support for two US riders to join French team and compete at Tour of Flanders, Paris-Roubaix

Allison Mrugal of Mayenne Monbana My Pie competes at GP Oetingen(Image credit: Getty Images)

In the span of a couple of months, US riders Allison Mrugal and Natalie Quinn went from racing UCI road events in Europe to unemployment to landing 2026 contracts with non-profit funding to ride at the ProTeam level in 2026.

Now the duo ride together for French-based Mayenne Monbana My Pie, not only living their dream careers by riding Spring Classics in Europe, but on the short list to take part in the Tour de France Femmes.

Article continues below

The two have survived a hectic and chaotic path to their new home with Mayenne, much like the terrain they have encountered at the early-season races, with Mrugal confirmed for Paris-Roubaix, La Flèche Wallonne, and Liège-Bastogne-Liège, and Quinn expected at the latter two.

“Both Allison and Natalie are showing themselves in some of the Classics and could end up riding in the Tour this year. Since we just started the Pathways Fund in 2026, it’s great to see how it already supports U.S. talent in a really efficient way,” Cynisca Cycling CEO Chris Gutowsky told Cyclingnews

Mrugal rode for Cynisca Cycling for two seasons, after most of her 2023 season with the Spanish-based Sopela squad, where she won a stage at Lea-Artibai Txallengea last year. Quinn’s experience with Cynisca last year saw her win her first Kermesse, win the mountains classification at the Tour of Portugal, and earn UCI top-10s at Elsy Jacobs à Garnich and the Maryland Cycling Classic Women.

“​​Flanders is challenging by nature, but also because I am still building back my form after getting sick at Oetingen. I really just did not have the fitness on Sunday. Personally, I was pretty disappointed to only be there for about 70 kilometres but the team’s goal was to be in the breakaway. It was important for me to play off of my teammate’s early efforts and give it whatever I had when the time came,” Mrugal recalled.

“The atmosphere was incredible—it’s the Tour of Flanders, it’s pretty crazy. I’m really grateful to be here, and I love this team.”

“Racing at this level takes more than talent, it takes consistent support,” Quinn said on a current fundraiser page by the organisation. “Reaching the full match means a complete season to learn, compete, and let me focus on becoming the best rider I can be.”

“Unlocking the full match means I don’t have to worry about the logistics off the bike, I can focus on racing,” Mrugal added.

TOPICS
Jackie Tyson
North American Editor

Jackie has been involved in professional sports for more than 30 years in news reporting, sports marketing and public relations. She founded Peloton Sports in 1998, a sports marketing and public relations agency, which managed projects for Tour de Georgia, Larry H. Miller Tour of Utah and USA Cycling. She also founded Bike Alpharetta Inc, a Georgia non-profit to promote safe cycling. She is proud to have worked in professional baseball for six years – from selling advertising to pulling the tarp for several minor league teams. On the bike, she has climbed l’Alpe d’Huez three times (not fast), and spends time on gravel around horse farms in north Georgia.

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‘It would be a dream to race the Tour de France Femmes’ – Pathways Fund provides novel support for two US riders to join French team and compete at Tour of Flanders, Paris-Roubaix

Allison Mrugal of Mayenne Monbana My Pie competes at GP Oetingen(Image credit: Getty Images)

In the span of a couple of months, US riders Allison Mrugal and Natalie Quinn went from racing UCI road events in Europe to unemployment to landing 2026 contracts with non-profit funding to ride at the ProTeam level in 2026.

Now the duo ride together for French-based Mayenne Monbana My Pie, not only living their dream careers by riding Spring Classics in Europe, but on the short list to take part in the Tour de France Femmes.

Article continues below

The two have survived a hectic and chaotic path to their new home with Mayenne, much like the terrain they have encountered at the early-season races, with Mrugal confirmed for Paris-Roubaix, La Flèche Wallonne, and Liège-Bastogne-Liège, and Quinn expected at the latter two.

“Both Allison and Natalie are showing themselves in some of the Classics and could end up riding in the Tour this year. Since we just started the Pathways Fund in 2026, it’s great to see how it already supports U.S. talent in a really efficient way,” Cynisca Cycling CEO Chris Gutowsky told Cyclingnews

Mrugal rode for Cynisca Cycling for two seasons, after most of her 2023 season with the Spanish-based Sopela squad, where she won a stage at Lea-Artibai Txallengea last year. Quinn’s experience with Cynisca last year saw her win her first Kermesse, win the mountains classification at the Tour of Portugal, and earn UCI top-10s at Elsy Jacobs à Garnich and the Maryland Cycling Classic Women.

“​​Flanders is challenging by nature, but also because I am still building back my form after getting sick at Oetingen. I really just did not have the fitness on Sunday. Personally, I was pretty disappointed to only be there for about 70 kilometres but the team’s goal was to be in the breakaway. It was important for me to play off of my teammate’s early efforts and give it whatever I had when the time came,” Mrugal recalled.

“The atmosphere was incredible—it’s the Tour of Flanders, it’s pretty crazy. I’m really grateful to be here, and I love this team.”

“Racing at this level takes more than talent, it takes consistent support,” Quinn said on a current fundraiser page by the organisation. “Reaching the full match means a complete season to learn, compete, and let me focus on becoming the best rider I can be.”

“Unlocking the full match means I don’t have to worry about the logistics off the bike, I can focus on racing,” Mrugal added.

TOPICS
Jackie Tyson
North American Editor

Jackie has been involved in professional sports for more than 30 years in news reporting, sports marketing and public relations. She founded Peloton Sports in 1998, a sports marketing and public relations agency, which managed projects for Tour de Georgia, Larry H. Miller Tour of Utah and USA Cycling. She also founded Bike Alpharetta Inc, a Georgia non-profit to promote safe cycling. She is proud to have worked in professional baseball for six years – from selling advertising to pulling the tarp for several minor league teams. On the bike, she has climbed l’Alpe d’Huez three times (not fast), and spends time on gravel around horse farms in north Georgia.

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.

‘It would be a dream to race the Tour de France Femmes’ – Pathways Fund provides novel support for two US riders to join French team and compete at Tour of Flanders, Paris-Roubaix

In the span of a couple of months, US riders Allison Mrugal and Natalie Quinn went from racing UCI road events in Europe to unemployment to landing 2026 contracts with non-profit funding to ride at the ProTeam level in 2026.

Now the duo ride together for French-based Mayenne Monbana My Pie, not only living their dream careers by riding Spring Classics in Europe, but on the short list to take part in the Tour de France Femmes.

Article continues below

The two have survived a hectic and chaotic path to their new home with Mayenne, much like the terrain they have encountered at the early-season races, with Mrugal confirmed for Paris-Roubaix, La Flèche Wallonne, and Liège-Bastogne-Liège, and Quinn expected at the latter two.

“Both Allison and Natalie are showing themselves in some of the Classics and could end up riding in the Tour this year. Since we just started the Pathways Fund in 2026, it’s great to see how it already supports U.S. talent in a really efficient way,” Cynisca Cycling CEO Chris Gutowsky told Cyclingnews

Mrugal rode for Cynisca Cycling for two seasons, after most of her 2023 season with the Spanish-based Sopela squad, where she won a stage at Lea-Artibai Txallengea last year. Quinn’s experience with Cynisca last year saw her win her first Kermesse, win the mountains classification at the Tour of Portugal, and earn UCI top-10s at Elsy Jacobs à Garnich and the Maryland Cycling Classic Women.

“​​Flanders is challenging by nature, but also because I am still building back my form after getting sick at Oetingen. I really just did not have the fitness on Sunday. Personally, I was pretty disappointed to only be there for about 70 kilometres but the team’s goal was to be in the breakaway. It was important for me to play off of my teammate’s early efforts and give it whatever I had when the time came,” Mrugal recalled.

“The atmosphere was incredible—it’s the Tour of Flanders, it’s pretty crazy. I’m really grateful to be here, and I love this team.”

“Racing at this level takes more than talent, it takes consistent support,” Quinn said on a current fundraiser page by the organisation. “Reaching the full match means a complete season to learn, compete, and let me focus on becoming the best rider I can be.”

“Unlocking the full match means I don’t have to worry about the logistics off the bike, I can focus on racing,” Mrugal added.

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