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December 3, 2022
Superprestige 2023 WE – Boom
Organised by Flanders Classics, the Telenet Superprestige series comprises of eight rounds, all of which are held in Belgium. Points are awarded to the first 15 finishers of each race,
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December 3, 2022
Superprestige 2023 WE – Boom
Organised by Flanders Classics, the Telenet Superprestige series comprises of eight rounds, all of which are held in Belgium. Points are awarded to the first 15 finishers of each race, with 15 points awarded to the race winner and in descending order from there on. After the eighth and final round of the series, the overall winners of both the elite men’s and elite women’s categories are decided by which rider has accumulated the most points throughout the series.
Aniek van Alphen has claimed a landmark victory in the Superprestige Boom cyclocross race, outsprinting Denise Betsema in a closely fought race after the two riders went clear in the final two laps.
After flatting mid-way through the rugged country park course, Betsema battled back up to the leaders, but Van Alphen proved too strong in the last dash for the line. Shirin van Anrooij completed an all-Netherlands podium, some 30 seconds back, in third.
The winner of the opening Superprestige round, Betsema narrowly missed out on a second victory in the series this season. But despite her defeat, nonetheless has now put valuable space between herself and Ceylin del Carmen Alvarado at the top of the rankings.
If Betsema had mixed feelings about Saturday’s race, Van Alphen was unequivocally delighted, the 23-year-old saying afterwards, “this is the biggest win of my career, this is something else.”
“I knew I had to go through the sandbox first in the final lap, then I had a chance. I’m not a sprinter, but Denise isn’t really, either. Fortunately, I was able to finish it all off.”
Predicting the race outcome beforehand was hardly going to be straightforward on a day when two top names, Puck Pieterse or Fem van Empel were not present, while Lucinda Brand took part but abandoned after two laps.
On a day of freezing cold temperatures and dry weather, the six-lap race began with a dramatic charge away by Hungary’s Blanka Vas (SD Worx) and Shirin van Anrooij, while Betsema latched on shortly afterwards.
Arguably the strongest in the race, Betsema powered clear with some three laps to go, only for Van Alphen to regain contact with a struggling Vas and Anrooij and then instantly sear ahead of Betsema into the race lead.
Yet despite the Dutchwoman leading into the last lap by some 10 seconds, Betsema then regained contact, and a thrilling two-way battle ensued where neither rider could gain more than a few metres, and the lead swapped on multiple occasions.
Coming into the short finishing straight, Betsema was marginally ahead when she opened up the sprint, but Van Alphen then dug deep to claim an unpredictable race with a well-deserved victory.
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