Description
October 5, 2023
Paris-Bourges 2023 🇫🇷 – Gien – Bourges : 198 km
Paris–Bourges is a French road bicycle race. The race originally started in Paris and ran to the town of Bourges in the Région Centre.
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October 5, 2023
Paris-Bourges 2023 🇫🇷 – Gien – Bourges : 198 km
Paris–Bourges is a French road bicycle race. The race originally started in Paris and ran to the town of Bourges in the Région Centre. However, in recent year with the length of races shortened it has become impossible to link the two cities and since 1996 the race has started in the town of Gien in the Loiret department which is 130 kilometres (80 mi) south of Paris. The official name of the race is now Paris-Gien-Bourges although it is still referred to as Paris–Bourges on the UCI calendar and throughout much of the media. The modern version of the race takes place over a distance of approximately 190 km with the middle part climbing the hills of the Sancerrois region including the three classified climbs of the Cote de Jars (324 metres), Cote de Graveron (337 metres) and La Chapelotte (378 metres), these climbs decide the mountains prize. Because of their modest height and distance from the finish (La Chapelotte is 35 km from the finish), these hills very rarely have a decisive effect on the race. The race usually concludes with a bunch sprint on the Boulevard de la République in Bourges.
An expected bunch sprint finish at Paris-Bourges delivered Arnaud Démare (Arkéa-Samsic) to the victory, with the Frenchman beating Arnaud De Lie (Lotto-Dstny) and Paul Penhoët (Groupama-FDJ) to the finish line at the end of the 198km race.
The 1.1 one-day race has long been one for the fastmen, and it was the case once more on Thursday, despite the day’s breakaway putting up a valiant fight until the final 2.5km.
After the trio, which included Dries De Bondt (Alpecin-Deceuninck), was brought back, it was up to the sprinters after a variety of teams had put in work on the front.
At the line, it was a head-to-head battle between several of the peloton’s quickest finishers, with Démare prevailing for his second win in Arkéa colours. The 32-year-old finished just ahead of De Lie on his left, Penhoët on his right, and Jordi Meeus (Bora-Hansgrohe) alongside De Lie.
The young Belgian almost lost control of his bike heading across the line, though just about managed to keep things upright for second place. However, behind him, Arne Marit (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty) was unable to avoid a collision and hit the ground as he came home for sixth place.
The first hour of race had seen the day’s break form with five others – Danny van der Tuuk (Kern Pharma), Enekoitz Azparren (Euskaltel-Euskadi), Maximilien Juillard (Van Rysel-Roubaix Lille Métropole), and the Nice Métropole Côte d’Azur duo of Paul Hennequin and Larry Valvasori – joining De Bondt in the move.
The group was kept on a tight leash by the sprinter’s teams for the bulk of the four-and-a-half-hour day in the saddle, not being allowed more than 3:30 in the lead.
Back in the peloton, it was no surprise to see the likes of Lotto-Dstny, Lidl-Trek, Arkéa-Samsic, and Bora-Hansgrohe doing much of the work on the front. The teams sought to control the break’s advantage and keep their sprinters safe over the hilly mid-section of the race.
In the end, the peloton passed the trickier parts of the day intact, leaving a furious chase over the final run to the line.
The gap hit the minute mark with 20km to go as Hennequin and Valvasori dropped back early. Slowly but surely, and despite a huge effort from the remaining quartet, the seconds ebbed away as the inevitability of a sprint finish increased.
De Bondt, Azparren, and Juillard were the last men standing from the move, battling on into the final 3km before giving way to the inevitable.
Lotto and Bora commanded the front of the peloton from that point onwards, setting up the titanic battle for the line, which saw the German team lead out with Danny van Poppel.
De Lie was the first to sprint, coming from Meeus’ wheel and heading into the final 100 metres. However, Démare enjoyed the slipstream for a few seconds longer before he, too, launched.
The trio raced side-by-side into the final metres of the race, with Penhoët also coming from behind to make it four abreast at the line. It was Démare who just about had the strongest kick in his legs, however, bursting through to take the 95th win of his career ahead of the young Belgian.
Results :