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September 22, 2021
World Championships 2021 – Team Time Trial Mixed Relay – Knokke-Heist – Bruges : 44,5 km
The UCI Road World Championships have been around since 1921 but for the first six years the event only consisted of a Men’s Amateur Road Race.
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September 22, 2021
World Championships 2021 – Team Time Trial Mixed Relay – Knokke-Heist – Bruges : 44,5 km
The UCI Road World Championships have been around since 1921 but for the first six years the event only consisted of a Men’s Amateur Road Race. The first professional World Championships took place in 1927 in Nürburgring, Germany. The amateur road race continued to run alongside the professional race up until 1995 when it was then replaced with the more familiar U-23 event. Jerseys are an integral part of cycling, both as a sport and as a culture. Not only do they indicate a rider’s team affinity or national colours, they also denote achievement and accomplishment too. Wearing the rainbow bands of World Champion is perhaps the highest honour and achievement one can attain in the sport. This year’s UCI Road World Championships is set to be one of the toughest events in recent times. Held in Flanders, Belgium, the 2021 courses are some of the most attritional we’ve seen for a decade and should therefore favour the pure Classic specialists and born Flandriens.
Germany pipped the Netherlands to victory in the team time trial mixed relay at the UCI Road World Championships in Bruges thanks to a well-balanced display across both legs of the 44.5km race. The win means that Tony Martin signs off on his professional career with a world title.
Martin, Max Walscheid and Nikias Arndt posted the second quickest time in the first leg and Lisa Brennauer, Lisa Klein and Mieke Kroeger maintained that momentum to claim the gold medal.
The Netherland were 23 seconds down on Germany after the first leg, and while the women’s trio of Annemiek van Vleuten, Ellen van Dijk and Riejanne Markus delivered a powerful display on the second leg, they were left with too much ground to recoup. In a reverse of the standings from the inaugural event in Yorkshire two years ago, the Netherlands took the silver medal, 12 seconds behind Germany.
Powered by Filippo Ganna, Italy set the quickest time on the first leg, 19 seconds clear of Germany and 32 ahead of Denmark, but their women’s trio was unable to defend that advantage on the second leg and they slipped to a final placing of third place at 37 seconds. They fended off Switzerland for the bronze medal by just five hundredths of a second.
The day belonged to Germany, however, and to Martin in particular, although he stressed afterwards that Brennauer, Klein and Kroeger had performed the bulk of the heavy lifting by holding off the highly-favoured Dutch women’s trio on the second leg.
Martin had done his part in the first half, too, riding strongly in the company of Walscheid to limit their losses to Italy and allow Brennauer et al set off with a 23-second lead on the Dutch.
“It’s the best finish, isn’t it? Going from the cycling scene with the gold medal is a dream for me, the best situation I can imagine. I am thankful to the whole team, especially our women, I think they made the difference today. We were hoping for the gold and now the dream has come true and it’s time to celebrate,” said Martin, who only announced his retirement from professional cycling on Sunday morning. This was the eighth world title of the German’s career after his four victories in the individual time trial and three in the team time trial over the years.
“First of all I’ll have a nice celebration tonight, and tomorrow I’ll go home. I haven’t made any plans, I’ll just take a holiday with my family and then we’ll see. The decision to retire is quite fresh, so we’ll see.”
How it unfolded
Thirteen teams took part in the second edition of the team time trial mixed relay, with a selection from the World Cycling Centre the first squad to roll down the start ramp. Their time was soon bettered by the Spanish squad but none of the first wave of starters would make a lasting impact on the leaderboard.
The United States were among the second wave of starters but were already out of medal contention by the end of the first leg, where Brandon McNulty, Neilson Powless and Lawson Craddock recorded the 8th best time, 1:20 down on Italy. They would remain in 8th place come the finish, 2:09 behind Germany.
It was perhaps hardly surprising that Italy were the pace-setters in the opening leg, with Ganna, Edoardo Affini and Matteo Sobrero posting a time that was 19 seconds clear of Germany, 32 ahead of Denmark and 33 up on Belgium.
Powered by Stefan Küng and Stefan Bissegger, Switzerland were 5th at 34 seconds at the midway point, but they gained ground on the second leg where Elise Chabbey hung on grimly as Marlen Reusser delivered a sparkling display. Their combined effort saw Switzerland move into the hot seat ahead of Great Britain, and they would remain in the medal placings right to the very end of the afternoon, denied at the very last by Italy.
The Dutch men’s trio of Bauke Mollema, Jos van Emden and Koen Bouwman set off with the knowledge that their women’s trio was likely to be the strongest in the race and their mission was effectively to limit their losses to Germany and Italy across the first half of the race.
They could only post the 7th best time among the men’s trios, but the deficit – 42 seconds down on Italy and 23 seconds behind the Netherlands – was not insurmountable, which made for a gripping second half to the race.
It was soon apparent that Italy’s Elisa Longo Borghini, Elena Cecchini and Marta Cavalli would struggle to hold onto the gold medal position, and they duly slipped to third by the intermediate check midway through their effort, 15 seconds down on Germany.
Brennauer, Klein and Kroeger, meanwhile, could take heart from the fact that the Dutch had been unable to make significant inroads into the gap in the opening half, clawing back just 8 seconds. The Germans reached the finish line with a new best time ahead of Switzerland and while it was clear that Italy, the penultimate team down the ramp, would not beat them, they endured an anxious wait for the arrival of the defending champions from the Netherlands.
Van Vleuten, Van Dijk and Markus could only take back another 3 seconds on the final segment of the course, however, and the rainbow jerseys went to Germany to provide a fitting send-off to Tony Martin’s career.
“It means a lot. It was a super painful race and I think we all went over our limits,” said Lisa Klein. “It’s so great to be part of this team. There’s a super good atmosphere. And congratulations on Tony’s last race – it was a big honour for all of us to fight with him for the win today.”
Results :
1 Germany 0:50:49
Lisa Brennauer (Ger)
Lisa Klein (Ger)
Mieke Kroeger (Ger)
Nikias Arndt (Ger)
Tony Martin (Ger)
Max Walscheid (Ger)
2 Netherlands 0:51:02
Annemiek van Vleuten (Ned)
Ellen van Dijk (Ned)
Riejanne Markus (Ned)
Koen Bouwman (Ned)
Bauke Mollema (Ned)
Jos van Emden (Ned)
3 Italy 0:51:27
Marta Cavalli (Ita)
Elena Cecchini (Ita)
Elisa Longo Borghini (Ita)
Edoardo Affini (Ita)
Filippo Ganna (Ita)
Matteo Sobrero (Ita)
4 Switzerland 0:51:27
Elise Chabbey (Swi)
Nicole Koller (Swi)
Marlen Reusser (Swi)
Stefan Bissegger (Swi)
Stefan Kueng (Swi)
Mauro Schmid (Swi)
5 Great Britain 0:51:44
John Archibald (GBr)
Alice Barnes (GBr)
Anna Henderson (GBr)
Daniel Bigham (GBr)
Alex Dowsett (GBr)
Joscelin Lowden (GBr)
6 Denmark 0:52:05
Amalie Dideriksen (Den)
Emma Cecilie Joergensen (Den)
Julie Leth (Den)
Mikkel Bjerg (Den)
Mathias Joergensen (Den)
Magnus Cort Nielsen (Den)
7 Belgium 0:52:10
Shari Bossuyt (Bel)
Jolien D’Hoore (Bel)
Lotte Kopecky (Bel)
Victor Campenaerts (Bel)
Ben Hermans (Bel)
Yves Lampaert (Bel)
United States of America 0:52:59
8 Coryn Rivera (USA)
Leah Thomas (USA)
Ruth Winder (USA)
Lawson Craddock (USA)
Brandon McNulty (USA)
Neilson Powless (USA)
9 France 0:53:41
Marion Borras (Fra)
Clara Copponi (Fra)
Coralie Demay (Fra)
Thomas Denis (Fra)
Valentin Tabellion (Fra)
Benjamin Thomas (Fra)
10 Poland 0:54:12
Karolina Karasiewicz (Pol)
Karolina Kumiega (Pol)
Aurela Nerlo (Pol)
Filip Maciejuk (Pol)
Damian Papierski (Pol)
Bartosz Rudyk (Pol)
11 Spain 0:54:55
Ziortza Isasi Cristobal (Spa)
Sara Martin Martin (Spa)
Lourdes Oyarbide Jimenez (Spa)
Xabier Mikel Azparren Irurzun (Spa)
Diego Lopez Fuentes (Spa)
Luis Guillermo mas Bonet (Spa)
12 Austria 0:55:22
Sarah Rijkes (Aut)
Christina Schweinberger (Aut)
Kathrin Schweinberger (Aut)
Tobias Bayer (Aut)
Felix Ritzinger (Aut)
Maximilian Schmidbauer (Aut)
13 UCI World Cycling Centre 0:57:18
Akvile Gedraityte (Ltu)
Anastasiya Kolesava (Blr)
Tereza Medvedova (Svk)
Paul Daumont (Bur)
Jean Eric Habimana (Rwa)
Ahmad Badreddin Wais (Syr)