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October 1, 2020
BinckBank Tour 2020 – Stage 3 – Aalter – Aalter : 157 km
The BinckBank Tour, formerly the Eneco Tour, has been part of the WorldTour since it succeeded the old Tour of the Netherlands in 2005.
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October 1, 2020
BinckBank Tour 2020 – Stage 3 – Aalter – Aalter : 157 km
The BinckBank Tour, formerly the Eneco Tour, has been part of the WorldTour since it succeeded the old Tour of the Netherlands in 2005. It has typically been positioned in the late August cycling calendar. The 2020 the Dutch-Belgian World Tour race was rescheduled September 29 to October 3 with five stages instead of the original seven, and after stage 1 was completed re-organised for a total of four stages over five days due to COVID-19 coronavirus restrictions in the Netherlands. The 2020 BinckBank Tour starts in Blankenberge, Belgium with flat roads in West Flanders to Ardooie, a total of 132.1km. Rather than continue with a planned 11km individual time trial in Vlissingen in the Netherlands along the North Sea, organisers were forced to have a rest day on Wednesday instead. The start of Thursday’s stage in Philippine and the stage finish in Sittard on Friday also impacted the race, which made new plans to keep the entire event in Belgium, as the Dutch government imposed new limits prohibiting public attendance at sporting events in its borders.
Mads Pedersen (Trek-Segafredo) came from behind to win the rain-soaked third stage at the BinckBank Tour around Aalter in Belgium, surviving the twisting final kilometres on concrete roads to win convincingly.
After being protected and piloted by his teammates during the technical and downright dangerous finale, the former world champion made sure he was on Jasper Philipsen’s wheel and then kicked past him down the centre of the road to win by a bike length.
Philipsen finished second with Pascal Ackermann (Bora-Hansgrohe) third after leading out the sprint.
Pedersen is on the same time as stage 1 winner Philipsen but took the race leader’s green jersey thanks to a better stage placing on stage 3.
Jonas Rickaert (Alpecin-Fenix) was last to be caught from the break of the day just 2.5km from the finish and thanks to taking the three three-second time bonuses at the Golden Kilometre, he moved up to third overall at seven seconds.
After changes to the race route to avoid the COVID-19 restrictions on sport in the Netherlands, Friday’s stage is an 8.1km individual time trial around Riemst. The BinckBank Tour ends on Saturday with a 188km Flemish stage to Gerardsbergen that includes the Kapelmuur and the Bosberg climbs.
Pedersen rode strongly at the recent Tour de France but had only won a stage of the Tour de Pologne since winning his world title in Yorkshire in 2019. He hugged his staff and teammates in celebration of his victory and confirmed he is targeting overall victory at the BinckBank Tour before taking aim at the Tour of Flanders and Paris-Roubaix.
“It was hectic but my team has worked very well. We took our responsibility from the start and I was able to finish it. That is very nice,” he told Belgian television.
“It’s not that I like such rainy conditions but I don’t mind racing in the rain. You just have to accept it.”
“The classification is a goal. Tomorrow’s time trial is short and that is good for me, then on Saturday I will try to achieve a good final classification in Geraardsbergen.”
How it unfolded
After a day off following the cancellation of stage 2 in the Netherlands and changes to other stages, the riders were happy to be back racing on Thursday despite grey skies and heavy rain in Belgium.
To avoid the Netherlands’ COVID-19 restrictions, the revised stage covered a Kermesse-style circuit and seven laps around the Aalter countryside between Bruges and Gent for a total of 156km of racing.
The rain dampened the mood in the peloton but a break quickly formed with Oscar Riesebeek (Alpecin-Fenix), Pim Ligthart (Total Direct Energie) and Kenneth Van Rooy (Sport Vlaanderen-Baloise) jumping away. They opened a gap and were soon joined by Jonas Rickaert and Adrien Petit (Total Direct Energie) to create a quintet off the front.
After two laps around Aalter, the break had a lead of 2:50 as the UAE Team Emirates, Trek-Segafredo and Bora-Hansgrohe lead the steady chase thinking of the sprint finish.
With 50km to go, Jelle Wallays (Lotto Soudal) tried to go across to the attack but was marked new Belgian national champion Dries De Bondt, who was protecting his Alpecin-Fenix
teammates in the escape. Milan Menten (Sport Vlaanderen – Baloise) also went along for the ride to protect Van Rooy and irritate Wallays.
The five lead by 1:20 but after Rickaert swept-up all three of the Golden Kilometre sprints, the move fell apart.
Only Rickaert pushed on alone on the road back to Aalters but he was swept up with 2.5km to go after some hard work by Trek-Segafredo to give Pedersen his chance of victory.
Results :
1 Mads Pedersen (Den) Trek-Segafredo 3:26:11
2 Jasper Philipsen (Bel) UAE Team Emirates
3 Pascal Ackermann (Ger) Bora-Hansgrohe
4 Danny Van Poppel (Ned) Circus-Wanty Gobert
5 Tim Merlier (Bel) Alpecin-Fenix
6 Zdenek Stybar (Cze) Deceuninck-Quickstep
7 Christophe Laporte (Fra) Cofidis
8 Florian Senechal (Fra) Deceuninck-Quickstep
9 Lorrenzo Manzin (Fra) Total Direct Energie
10 Sep Vanmarcke (Bel) EF Pro Cycling
General Classification after Stage 3 :
1 Mads Pedersen (Den) Trek-Segafredo 6:25:21
2 Jasper Philipsen (Bel) UAE Team Emirates
3 Jonas Rickaert (Bel) Alpecin-Fenix 0:00:07
4 Pascal Ackermann (Ger) Bora-Hansgrohe 0:00:08
5 Mike Teunissen (Ned) Team Jumbo-Visma 0:00:11
6 Mathieu Van der Poel (Ned) Alpecin-Fenix 0:00:13
7 Yves Lampaert (Bel) Deceuninck-Quickstep
8 Danny Van Poppel (Ned) Circus-Wanty Gobert 0:00:16
9 Tim Merlier (Bel) Alpecin-Fenix
10 Lorrenzo Manzin (Fra) Total Direct Energie