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At the sharp end of professional cycling, marginal gains aren’t optional, they’re everything. From altitude camps to race-day execution, every decision is driven by data, testing, and proven performance outcomes.
That’s exactly why the collaboration between Q36.5 Pinarello Pro Cycling Team and Nomio feels like a natural fit.
After a full year of testing across both training and racing environments, Nomio has now been formally announced as the team’s Official Research Partner. This isn’t just a sponsorship. It’s a working relationship built around performance science, real-world testing, and continuous optimisation.
Elite cycling teams operate as high-performance laboratories. Every product used has to earn its place through data, not marketing.
For Q36.5 Pinarello Pro Cycling Team, that means working only with solutions that can stand up to rigorous testing. As Head of Nutrition, Adam Plucinski puts it:
“We are a data-driven team. All our improvements starts with science. That’s why working with Nomio makes sense. They support us with an advanced product that is backed by research, which we require when trying new methods.”
This approach reflects a broader shift in endurance sport. Athletes are no longer just looking for energy. They’re looking for tools that support adaptation, recovery, and long-term performance gains.
One of the key strengths of this partnership lies in how Nomio is being tested. Not in isolation, but in the exact environments that matter most.
Over the past year, the team has integrated Nomio into:
According to Scientific Adviser Bent Rønnestad:
“One of the main goals has been to optimise and maximise the effects of altitude training. We’ve tested Nomio on training camps on our riders during the last year, with promising results.”
Altitude training is already one of the most effective ways to boost endurance performance. Enhancing how the body responds and adapts to that stress is where innovations like Nomio come into play.
Nomio isn’t your typical sports nutrition product. It’s a concentrated 60ml shot developed through more than eight years of research at the Karolinska Institute and GIH Stockholm.
At the centre of its formulation are ITCs (isothiocyanates), naturally occurring compounds found in cruciferous vegetables.
Each shot delivers:
Research has linked these compounds to reduced lactate accumulation during intense efforts, alongside improved training adaptations over time. In simple terms, that means potentially better tolerance to high-intensity work and more effective gains from each session.
For elite riders pushing repeated efforts in training and racing, that’s a meaningful advantage.
What makes this partnership particularly interesting is the feedback loop it creates.
Nomio Scientific Adviser Filip Larsen explains:
"Working directly with professional athletes in elite training and racing environments, we generate real-world insights that inform our research and help deepen our understanding of the underlying mechanisms through which Nomio works.”
This is where things move beyond theory. Instead of relying purely on lab-based outcomes, Nomio is continuously refined using insights from athletes operating at the highest level of the sport.
It’s a two-way relationship. The team gains access to cutting-edge performance support, while Nomio gains invaluable data that helps shape future development.
The partnership between Nomio and Q36.5 Pinarello Pro Cycling Team is built on a shared philosophy. Test everything, trust the data, and prioritise performance.
After a year of real-world use across training camps and racing, Nomio has proven enough to move from trial to official research partnership. That speaks volumes.
As endurance sport continues to evolve, collaborations like this show where things are heading. Less guesswork, more science, and a constant push to unlock better performance.