Description
August 24, 2020
Individual Time Trial – European Championships 2020 ladies – Plouay – Plouay : 25,6 km
The European Road Cycling Championships are the set of European championship events for the various disciplines and distances in road cycling and have been regulated by the European Cycling Union since 1995.
Show more...
August 24, 2020
Individual Time Trial – European Championships 2020 ladies – Plouay – Plouay : 25,6 km
The European Road Cycling Championships are the set of European championship events for the various disciplines and distances in road cycling and have been regulated by the European Cycling Union since 1995. The championships are for under-23, junior (since 2005) and Elite riders (since 2016). The championships include a road race and an individual time trial since 1997, with women’s events shorter than men’s and junior’s events shorter than under-23’s. Championships are open to riders selected by their national cycling governing body. They compete in the colours of their country. As with national road race championships and the UCI Road World Championships, the winners are entitled to wear a special champion’s jersey when racing throughout the year; in the case of the European Championship, a white jersey with blue bands and yellow stars, modelled on the flag of the Council of Europe.
Stefan Küng (Switzerland) dominated the elite men’s time trial, catching his minuteman Eduardo Affini (Italy) and blasting around the rolling 25.6km Plouay course to take the European Championship title.
Küng set a time of 30:18, beating Remi Cavagna of France by 17 seconds, with Victor Campenaerts (Belgium) third at 21 seconds. Alex Dowsett (Great Britain) was the last rider to start, going on to finish fourth, 1:03 slower than Küng.
With just 28 riders on the start list rolling out at one-minute intervals, the racing was fast and furious and over in half an hour.
Justin Wolf of Germany started sixth off and soon set the fastest time of 31:48. That held for a while until the bigger names finished with only six riders going faster and several WorldTour-level riders finishing slower than the Bike Aid Continental team rider. Cavagna took the lead with a time of 30:35, confirming why he won the French time trial title last week.
Campenaerts looked strong as he pushed a huge gear but was slightly down on the Frenchman at time checks. He past his minuteman Jan Barta of the Czech Republic and pushed on his aero tuck but hit the line four second slower.
Meanwhile, Küng was flying, using his power to keep his speed over 50kph while staying rock solid on his bike in a controlled aerodynamic position. He caught Affini with around eight kilometres to go and the talented Italian couldn’t even stay in his slipstream. Yet he would go on to finish fifth at 1:15, further indicating the quality and dominance of Küng’s performance.
Dowsett fought hard as last rider off but continuously lost time to Küng ahead of him, who had time to take a drink, recover and savour the moment he knew victory was his; quietly punching the air in controlled celebration.
He then took the top step on the podium and pulled on the distinctive European champion’s jersey.
“I had really good legs. I did the Dauphiné, that was my last race and every day was climbing. When I changed to the TT bike last week, in the first training I died, I really didn’t have a good feeling. But I kept getting better and better and today was the best feeling I had. It was a great day, I was prepared perfectly, and the bike was perfect too, thanks to my mechanic and the team,” Küng said of his transformation from Groupama-FDJ rider to time trial expert for Switzerland.
“The course was a typical race in Brittany. The road surface is pretty rough, it’s always twisting and up and down, so you always have to keep pushing and keep focused. I really like this; it’s just an honest time trial, where you have to go full gas from start to finish. I had a plan in mind and I was able to execute it perfectly.”
Küng will not stay in Brittany for Wednesday’s European road race championships but will head to Nice to join-up with his Groupama-FDJ teammates for the Grand Depart of the Tour de France.
Despite no team time trial in this year’s Grand Boucle, Küng is considered a key rouleur, selected to protect team leader Thibaut Pinot on the flat roads.
“I leave directly for the Tour and then it’s three weeks about supporting Thibaut Pinot, which will hopefully it will end in a good way on the Champs-Élysées.”
Küng will not be able to target the world time trial championships in Switzerland after the COVID-19 pandemic forced the cancelation of the championships in Switzerland. The new location of the event has not yet been announced but Küng is just happy to be back racing.
“I’m just really happy we can race again,” he said. “Thanks to all the organisers and the riders who makes these efforts. It’d feel great to continue like this.”
Results :
1 Stefan Kung (Switzerland) 0:30:18
2 Remi Cavagna (France) 0:00:17
3 Victor Campenaerts (Belgium) 0:00:21
4 Alex Dowsett (Great Britain) 0:01:03
5 Edoardo Affini (Italy) 0:01:15
6 Jan Tratnik (Slovenia) 0:01:26
7 Justin Wolf (Germany) 0:01:30
8 Ryan Mullen (Ireland) 0:01:41
9 Jan Barta (Czech Republic) 0:01:43
10 Anthony Roux (France) 0:02:03
11 Rui Costa (Portugal) 0:02:15
12 Juri Hollmann (Germany) 0:02:31
13 Artem Nych (Russian Federation) 0:02:36
14 Evaldas Siskevicius (Lithuania) 0:02:39
15 Andreas Miltiadis (Cyprus) 0:02:42
16 Claudio Imhof (Switzerland) 0:02:47
17 Alexander Konychev (Italy) 0:03:08
18 Petr Rikunov (Russian Federation) 0:03:17
19 Jasper De Plus (Belgium) 0:03:19
20 Rafael Reis (Portugal) 0:03:22
21 Mykhaylo Kononenko (Ukraine) 0:03:24
22 Przemyslaw Kasperkiewicz (Poland)
23 Oleksandr Holovash (Ukraine) 0:03:26
24 Jan Andrej Cully (Slovenia) 0:03:40
25 Emil Dima (Romania) 0:03:55
26 Andrej Petrrrovski (Norway) 0:04:06
27 Polychronis Tzorrtzakis (Greece) 0:04:57