Description
September 23, 2018
World Championships 2018 – Road Race (junior) – Kufstein – Innsbruck : 132,4 km
UCI Road World Championships – Men’s junior road race is the annual world championship race for road bicycle racing for men in the Junior category.
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September 23, 2018
World Championships 2018 – Road Race (junior) – Kufstein – Innsbruck : 132,4 km
UCI Road World Championships – Men’s junior road race is the annual world championship race for road bicycle racing for men in the Junior category. It is organised by the world governing body, the Union Cycliste Internationale. In the period 2005–2009 this event was part of the UCI Juniors World Championships, then the UCI Juniors Road World Championships in 2010.
Remco Evenepoel (Belgium) steamrollered the opposition into submission to win the junior road title at the UCI Road World Championships, completing the double after winning the individual time trial earlier in the week.
The soon-to-be Quick-Step Floors rider was simply on another level to the competition in Innsbruck, almost single-handedly coming back from a crash and a lone chase on the climb of the Gnadenwald, before a string of attacks whittled down the rest of the field. Such was Evenepoel’s dominance that the Belgian rode the final 19 kilometres on his own as the remnants of the peloton fought it out for the rest of the medals.
At times Evenepoel appeared to be riding in fast forward, while the best of the rest were made to look ordinary over the demanding Austrian course. Italy, Germany, the Czech Republic and the USA all had numbers during key stages of the race but no tactics would have unsettled Evenepoel’s ride. In the end Marius Mayrhofer (Germany) claimed silver well over a minute down, with Alessandro Fancellu (Italy) in third taking bronze. What started as a race ended in a procession.
“I’m very happy. I actually crashed at a bad moment before the climb and the mechanic didn’t see me crash,” Evenepoel said. “There was another guy in the team who crashed and he was changing the wheel of the other guy, so I had to wait like 20 seconds, I guess. I was almost two minutes behind the first guys, so I really had to work hard in the back.
“When I was back in the front group and there were just two guys in the front and another two guys – it was no problem because the two climbs were coming in the local rounds. Then there was one more teammate for me, Ilan Van Wilder, he did a great job on the climb. He just made pace and he caught the guys on like 35 seconds. Then there was an American who attacked and I just went behind him and got alone with two other guys at my back. Then I had an amazing descent where I almost dropped the two guys but the German came back after the local round.”
How it unfolded
There may have been 159 riders on the start line under the Austrian sun but all eyes were on Evenepoel after his stellar season and win in the time trial earlier in the week. Ahead of the Belgian, and the rest of the peloton, were 84km of rolling roads before two circuits of the 24km finishing course.
The German national team were the early pace-setters as a number of nations looked to shed the field of the weaker riders in the opening kilometres. There was a scare for time trial bronze medallist, Andrea Piccolo (Italy) when the rider was involved in an early crash but there were a flurry of early mechanicals and falls as nerves ran through the main field.
The race changed significantly on the approach to the Gnadenwald when a rider at the front switched wheels and in a brief lapse of concentration, brought down a significant portion of the peloton. Evenepoel was one of those involved and as the cameras panned sideways the Belgian could be seen motioning to his back wheel. The change for new equipment seemed to take an age, especially as a Belgian mechanic was seen assisting another rider before noticing Evenepoel’s predicament.
At the front of the race Italy and Germany understandably kept the pace high as Evenepoel eventually remounted and began his chase over the 2.6km ascent. He started the climb around two minutes in arrears but in scenes reminiscent of Alberto Contador chasing back through the field on the Mortirolo at the 2015 Giro, Evenepoel made it look almost effortless. He was unable to make contact before the summit but on the descent he and several remaining teammates were able to latch onto the diminished front group just after Piccolo and Mayrhofer clipped off the front and established a minute’s lead.
The pair’s advantage mattered little, with Belgian holding the gap at around 56 seconds before Evenepoel – frustrated with the situation – attacked. The first acceleration was just a warning, however, and as the race reached the first ascent of the Iglis the gap dropped to just over 30 seconds.
With just over 40km to go, an attack from an American rider was seized upon by Evenepoel. He drove across to the leaders with only five riders able to follow. One of them was the much-touted Karel Vacek (Czech Republic), who briefly looked to match Evenepoel but on the descent of the climb the class between the Belgian and the rest of the pack was made clear. The Italians were left floundering despite a decent team effort to chase, while Vacek cramped with 29km to go, and despite looking tired in the early break only a startled looking Mayrhofer remained when Evenepoel looked back.
By the time the final lap started the leading pair had over a minute on an Italian-controlled chase but with 19km to go Evenepoel opened up the throttle once more and rode away from his last remaining competitor.
The battle for the minor medals saw Fancellu escape with Alexandre Balmer inside the final 10km, but despite their efforts Mayrhofer hung on bravely for bronze. By the time the main field crossed the line Evenepoel was already talking about taking on the Grand Tours in the future.
“Next year I’ll be a pro, so I still have to learn a lot. I’m only biking one year and a half. I still have to learn a lot. We’ll see what the future gives. Quick-Step will be a good step for me. I hope I can grow in silence with the team. I have confidence in them, and they in me, so it will be a nice future I guess.”
“My main dream is the three Grand Tours. But I know that’s a long way. I’m still young and I have a long way to go. We’re going to work hard and then hopefully I can win one of the three Grand Tours.”
Results :
1 Remco Evenepoel (Belgium) 3:03:49
2 Marius Mayrhofer (Germany) 0:01:25
3 Alessandro Fancellu (Italy) 0:01:38
4 Alexandre Balmer (Switzerland)
5 Frederik Wandahl (Denmark) 0:03:20
6 Gabriele Benedetti (Italy)
7 Alois Charrin (France)
8 Kevin Vermaerke (United States Of America)
9 Antonio Tiberi (Italy)
10 Sean Quinn (United States Of America) 0:03:25
11 Andrea Piccolo (Italy) 0:04:37
12 Karel Vacek (Czech Republic)
13 Biniam Girmay Hailu (Eritrea) 0:06:41
14 Jakob Gessner (Germany)
15 Ludvig Fischer Aasheim (Norway)
16 Guilherme Mota (Portugal)
17 Ben Tulett (Great Britain) 0:07:20
18 Aksel Bechskot-Hansen (Denmark)
19 Jonathan Bogli (Switzerland)
20 Mason Hollyman (Great Britain)
21 Marco Frigo (Italy) 0:07:54
22 Gleb Brussenskiy (Kazakhstan) 0:09:34
23 Yevgeniy Fedorov (Kazakhstan) 0:10:47
24 Robin Juel Skivild (Denmark)
25 Ben Healy (Ireland)
26 Lewis Askey (Great Britain)
27 Michel Hessmann (Germany) 0:10:55
28 Marek Gajdula (Slovakia) 0:11:07
29 Daniil Pronskiy (Kazakhstan) 0:11:19
30 Vinicius Rangel Costa (Brazil)
31 Kim Alexander Heiduk (Germany) 0:12:14
32 Adne Holter (Norway) 0:12:22
33 Oleksandr Shchypak (Ukraine)
34 Casper Van Uden (Netherlands)
35 Lev Gonov (Russian Federation) 0:13:21
36 Jon Barrenetxea Golzarri (Spain) 0:13:37
37 Samuel Watson (Great Britain) 0:15:02
38 Felix Engelhardt (Germany)
39 Hugo Page (France) 0:15:18
40 Jean Eric Habimana (Rwanda) 0:15:25
41 Valentin Retailleau (France) 0:15:31
42 Vojtech Repa (Czech Republic)
43 Andrew Vollmer (United States Of America)
44 Enzo Leijnse (Netherlands)
45 Artjom Mirzojev (Estonia) 0:15:47
46 Thomas Schellenberg (Canada) 0:16:22
47 Marek Bugar (Slovakia)
48 Pelayo Sanchez Mayo (Spain) 0:17:18
49 Alfred George (Great Britain) 0:17:28
50 Lucas Plapp (Australia)
51 Kei Onodera (Japan)
52 Nurbergen Nurlykhassym (Kazakhstan) 0:17:29
53 Mesut Cepa (Albania) 0:17:40
54 Daniil Turuk (Belarus) 0:17:55
55 Aaron Van Der Beken (Belgium) 0:17:58
56 Henri Vandenabeele (Belgium)
57 Jakob Reiter (Austria) 0:18:15
58 Breandan Flannagan (Ireland) 0:18:45
59 Anton Vtiurin (Russian Federation) 0:18:54
60 Gilles Kirsch (Luxembourg)
61 Bas Van Belle (Netherlands)
62 Josh Lane (New Zealand)
63 Alekss Krasts (Latvia) 0:18:57
64 Simon Imboden (Switzerland)
65 Vladimir Miksanik (Czech Republic) 0:19:00
66 Maksim Bilyi (Ukraine)
67 Ruben Eggenberg (Switzerland)
68 Tomas Aguirre Garza (Mexico)
69 Jakub Boucek (Czech Republic)
70 Afonso Silva (Portugal)
71 Ben Katerberg (Canada) 0:20:34
72 Theo Gilbertson (New Zealand)
73 Petr Kelemen (Czech Republic) 0:21:01
74 Carlos Rodriguez Cano (Spain) 0:22:34
75 Dzianis Mazur (Belarus) 0:22:43
76 Axel Van Der Tuuk (Netherlands) 0:23:13
77 Wessel Krul (Netherlands) 0:23:44
78 Emil Lindgren (Sweden)
79 Henri Treimuth (Estonia)
80 Archie Ryan (Ireland) 0:24:27
81 Fredrik Gjesteland Finnesand (Norway) 0:24:29
82 Dominik Gorak (Poland)
83 Damian Bieniek (Poland) 0:25:10
84 Noppachai Klahan (Thailand) 0:27:56
DNF Pirmin Benz (Germany)
DNF Aljaz Omrzel (Slovenia)
DNF Yoshiaki Fukuda (Japan)
DNF Martin Messner (Austria)
DNF Camilo Jose Navas Madera (Ecuador)
DNF Oskar Palm (Sweden)
DNF Samuele Rubino (Italy)
DNF Iakov Gusev (Russian Federation)
DNF Conor Martin (Canada)
DNF Carter Turnbull (Australia)
DNF Anze Skok (Slovenia)
DNF Soren Waerenskjold (Norway)
DNF William Blume Levy (Denmark)
DNF Daniel Arnes (Norway)
DNF Dennis Grasvold (Norway)
DNF Arthur Kluckers (Luxembourg)
DNF Hiryu Kayama (Japan)
DNF Abner Gonzalez Rivera (Puerto Rico)
DNF Rick Pluimers (Netherlands)
DNF Igor Humbert (Switzerland)
DNF Ricardo Broxham (South Africa)
DNF Cian Leveridge (South Africa)
DNF Carlo Jurisevic (Croatia)
DNF Taisei Hino (Japan)
DNF Robin Plamondon (Canada)
DNF Ilan Van Wilder (Belgium)
DNF Juan Tito Rendon Franco (Colombia)
DNF Ivan Cobo Cayon (Spain)
DNF Sam Cook (New Zealand)
DNF Hiroyuki Umakoshi (Japan)
DNF Xandres Vervloesem (Belgium)
DNF Steven Pattyn (Belgium)
DNF Phunsiri Sirimongkhon (Thailand)
DNF Quinn Simmons (United States Of America)
DNF Michael Garrison (United States Of America)
DNF Louis Barre (France)
DNF Luis Esteban Murillo (Costa Rica)
DNF Zani Sylhasi (Kosovo)
DNF Tyler Lindorff (Australia)
DNF Sergey Zatcepin (Russian Federation)
DNF Laurynas Kuras (Lithuania)
DNF Gavrail Stefanov (Bulgaria)
DNF Aaron Doherty (Ireland)
DNF Shahin Eyvazov (Azerbaijan)
DNF Nadjaf Baghirov (Azerbaijan)
DNF Yoel Asmerom Tesfasilasie (Eritrea)
DNF Admir Kolasinac (Serbia)
DNF Riley Sheehan (United States Of America)
DNF Raphael Da Costa Barros (France)
DNF Alex Baudin (France)
DNF Valentin Vasiloiu (Romania)
DNF Marcel Rodrigo Teneb Schiesewitz (Chile)
DNF Ventsislav Venkov (Bulgaria)
DNF Carson Miles (Canada)
DNF Julian Espinoza (Costa Rica)
DNF Imad Sekkak (Morocco)
DNF Jakub Hnik (Czech Republic)
DNF Jacob Hindsgaul Madsen (Denmark)
DNF Erikas Sidlauskas (Lithuania)
DNF David Alejandro Camargo Hernandez (Colombia)
DNF Renus Uhiriwe (Rwanda)
DNF Andrei Novicov (Republic of Moldova)
DNF Frederik Thomsen (Denmark)
DNF Josu Echeverria Azpilicueta (Spain)
DNF Maksim Kulakov (Russian Federation)
DNF Tsun Wai Chu (Hong Kong, China)
DNF Kwun Hei Ho (Hong Kong, China)
DNF Chalermchai Bangsiri (Thailand)
DNF Dorde Duric (Serbia)
DNF Ciprian Jitaru (Romania)
DNF Jeffrey Diaz Rivera (Puerto Rico)
DNF Blerton Nuha (Kosovo)
DNF Briton John (Guyana)
DNF Mojtaba Hajizadeh (Afghanistan)
DNF Vladislav Korotas (Republic of Moldova)