Team Katusha was launched on December 22, 2008 from the acquisition of team
Tinkoff Credit Systems. Initially, it relied solely on the financial support of
Igor Makarov, who served as its sponsor. This financial backing sustained the team until 2017 when a new partnership was forged with
Alpecin, resulting in the co-sponsorship and renaming of the team to Team Katusha-Alpecin. The director of the team was the retired cyclist
Alexei Sivakov that competed on numerous teams including
ZG Mobili from 1996 to 1997. The team was launched with a budget of over . In its first official season it signed leading cyclists such as
Robbie McEwen,
Vladimir Karpets,
Filippo Pozzato and
Gert Steegmans. The team first raced at the
2009 Tour Down Under. During the 2009 season, the team earned 23 wins. Some of the notable wins were
Sergei Ivanov’s
Amstel Gold victory,
Filippo Pozzato's Italian road title and triumph at
Giro del Veneto. After the 2012 season, Katusha lost their
UCI World Tour license, despite having in their ranks the champion of the 2012 season (
Joaquim Rodríguez) and finishing the
2012 UCI World Tour team rankings in second position. The team appealed that decision before the
Court of Arbitration for Sport and it was announced on 15 February 2013 that the decision of the UCI was overturned and that Katusha would be part of the
2013 UCI World Tour. Its most successful season was 2015 when the team took victories in the
Tour of Flanders,
Gent-Wevelgem,
Scheldeprijs and
GP Ouest France – Plouay, as well as overall wins in the
Tour of the Basque Country,
Tour de Suisse and
Tour de Romandie and stage wins in the
Tour de France,
Tour of Italy and
Tour of Spain. During the 2017 season, two staff members were videotaped dumping the team RV's septic system in a parking lot off the highway at the
Amgen Tour of California. The California Highway Patrol and race organizers were informed of the incident and the waste was later professionally removed. The pair were suspended and sent home from the race. In October 2019,
Israel Cycling Academy completed the takeover of Katusha–Alpecin, including its World Tour license. == Doping ==