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September 25, 2021
World Championships 2021 – WE – Antwerp – Leuven : 157,7 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 25, 2021
World Championships 2021 – WE – Antwerp – Leuven : 157,7 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.
Elisa Balsamo (Italy) came of age with a stunning victory in the elite women’s road race at the UCI World Championships with an incredible sprint win over Marianne Vos (Netherlands).
The Italian had a perfect lead-out from her teammates, with Elisa Longo Borghini delivering her to within the final 100m before Balsamo held off a late charge from Vos who was forced to settle for the silver medal. Katarzyna Niewiadoma finished third to take bronze for Poland.
After a gruelling race the rainbow jersey came down to a sprint finish from a reduced bunch and after controlling most of the race it looked as though the Netherlands would continue their dominance in the event. However, the Italians had other ideas. They held their nerves and followed the wheels perfectly but had the numbers in the finale when it mattered most. In the final kilometre, Balsamo still had a number of teammates with her and the Italian hit the front with around 1,000m to go while the Dutch lead-out looked disjointed at times.
The key move came when Longo Borghini hit the front with only Balsamo and Vos able to match her on the rise to the line. It looked as though Vos’ experience would pay off when she calmly sat on Balsamo’s wheel but when the Italian opened her sprint Vos clearly struggled to even draw level before eventually sitting down in the saddle as her younger rival took the biggest win of her career.
“I’m totally speechless,” Balsamo said at the finish.
“It’s unbelievable. It was a dream for me after this long season. My team was so, so good. Without them, this jersey wasn’t possible. They were so, so good. Sorry I have no words. My team gave me a perfect lead out and I really believed in them. In the last corner, I switched off my brain and told myself that I needed to go full gas and not watch what was happening behind.”
On the final 15.5km lap, the Dutch took the race by the scruff of the neck with Annemiek van Vleuten and Ellen van Dijk trading turns in order to nullify a gutsy attack by Spanish star Mavi Garcia. The catch was finally made with 11km to go on the Keizersberg. Demi Vollering, who suffered a series of mechanical problems earlier in the race, hit the front with 10km to go before Lucinda Brand and Rachel Neylan attacked together with 7.8km to go on the Decouxlaan, and then Van Vleuten once more dragged the race back together over the top.
Van Dijk kicked clear on the Wijnpers with Elisa Longo Borghini matching her before Marianne Vos, Alison Jackon, and Katarzyna Niewiadoma made it a stellar five-rider group with 5.5km to go. Despite Van Dijk’s best efforts the rest of the peloton came back with 4.6km to go but Van Vleuten pushed clear once more just after the juncture was made. With 3.5km remaining Van Dijk made yet another attack with Niewiadoma latching on before the Dutch were forced to chase down their own rider as they put all their efforts into setting up Vos for the sprint.
On the final climb of Sint-Antoniusberg, Niewiadoma accelerated with 1.7km to go but as the race crested the top of the ascent no single rider could make the difference. Both the Italians and the Dutch had numbers coming into the final kilometre but it was the Italians who rammed home their dominance with an unstoppable leadout capped off by the 23-year-old Balsamo, who took her second rainbow jersey after winning the junior race in 2016.
How it unfolded
Under blue skies, the women’s elite field set out on their 157km road race to decide the 2021 world champion. After a long neutralised zone Urska Bravek of Slovenia put the hammer down with the first meaningful attack before she was joined Fernanda Yapura of Argentina. The two leaders managed to build up a small advantage as the German squad set the pace at the front of the main field.
The break was reeled in with little effort from the peloton but the race only came to life with just over 100km to when Annemiek van Vleuten (Netherlands) hit the front with just 101km to go. The 2019 winner almost came down soon after when she rode into the gutter but the veteran held herself up as the race began to hit a volley of climbs on the opening Leuven circuit.
The 15.5km circuit saw GB set the pace with Joss Lowden stringing out the peloton with a huge turn and she was still on the front as the race hit the Decouxlaan climb with 88km to go. Jessica Allen was one of the early casualties, with the Australian – who is still finding her form after injury – was dropped on the six per cent sections.
On the following climb of Wijnpers it was Franziska Koch (Germany) who set a fast pace with the peloton put under further pressure as gaps started to appear with Teniel Campbell (Trinidad and Tobago) losing ground. As the road levelled off and a lull in pace ensued Michaela Drummond (New Zealand) kicked clear with the 23-year-old establishing a 25-second gap with 79km to go.
Drummond almost brought her lead out to a minute but she was caught as the peloton charged onto the Smeysberg with 70km to go as the British team once more set the pace as Demi Vollering dropped her chain and was forced to chase. On the Moskesstraat Vollering was again forced to dismount twice due to a gearing issue.
The Dutch finally made a cohesive presence felt on the front of the reduced bunch with 61km to go with van der Breggen and the rest of her teammates moving up alongside riders from Denmark and the United States of America. Van der Breggen initiated the increase in pace with just over 60km remaining. On the Bekestraat with 58km to go Alison Jackon lifted the pace with Lizzie Deignan and a number of pre-race favourites moving into contention before van Vleuten pushed hard on the pedals for a second time in the race. This injection of pace reduced the bunch to less than 30 riders with Lauren Stephens among those distanced. Lucinda Brand took over on the front as the gradient eased but the Dutch were briefly without Vollering, who was unable to make the front group and had to rely on a chase group to bring her back into contention with 52km to go.
On the second ascent of the Smeysberg it was Ashleigh Moolman Pasio (South Africa) who surged to the front with Vos, Katarzyna Niewiadoma, and Deignan in close attendance. Van Vleuten took over at the summit of the climb with the bunch split to pieced with 48km to go and pre-race favourite Lotte Kopecky (Belgium) among those caught out and forced to frantically chase and Anna van der Breggen also finding herself in the second group.
With 45km to go a general regrouping took place before Ellen van Dijk attacked a kilometre later. The move was pounced on by the Australian and British teams with Chantal van den Broek-Blaak the next Dutch rider to try and kick clear. The relentless attacking continued with Cecilie Ludwig (Denmark) and Sina Frei (Switzerland) going clear before the Dutch squad brought the race back together with 38km to go.
Audrey Cordon Ragot (France) and Tiffany Cromwell (Australia) formed part of a dangerous six-rider move that drew the German team into a chase as the race entered Leuven for the finishing loops.
On the Sint-Antoniusberg climb, Georgi Pfeiffer (Great Britain) moved to the front before Aude Biannic (France) stretched her legs with an attack just before the riders crossed the finish line for the first time.
Cromwell, van den Broek-Blaak and Marta Bastianelli (Italy) countered but were brought back as Marlen Reusser (Switzerland) took off alone with 27km to go. The move forced the Dutch and British teams to unite and form a chase as Biannic held a slender lead before being caught and passed on the Keizersberg.
Van Dijk attempted to go clear once the race was finally brought back together but her acceleration was matched all the way by a strung-out peloton. On the second climb of the Decouxlaan, Mavi Garcia broke free with no reaction from the peloton with the Spanish rider establishing a 25-second lead with 22km to go.
Garcia had 30 seconds at the foot of the Wijnpers before Niewiadoma launched a vicious move that reduced the gap to 14 seconds, and the chase group to less than a dozen riders. With 20km to go Van Vleuten accelerated but Elisa Longo Borghini was quickly on her case as Garcia maintained her 15-second lead with just one categorized climb to come.
Van Vleuten set the pace with 18km to go with her teammate Vos neatly tucked in as Deignan and Kopecky found themselves out of contention. On the Sint-Antoniusberg, the lead between Garcia and the chase was down to just eight seconds with the Dutch, Great Britain Australians, United States, and Denmark all with options remaining.
At the bell, Deignan and Kopecky returned to the front group with Cordon Ragot and Van Vleuten trading attacks as Garcia hung on to a slender 12-second lead with 15.5km to go and the race set up perfectly for the final lap.
Results :
1 Elisa Balsamo (Italy) 3:52:27
2 Marianne Vos (Netherlands)
3 Katarzyna Niewiadoma (Poland) 0:00:01
4 Kata Blanka Vas (Hungary)
5 Arlenis Sierra Canadilla (Cuba)
6 Alison Jackson (Canada)
7 Demi Vollering (Netherlands)
8 Cecilie Ludwig (Denmark)
9 Lisa Brennauer (Germany)
10 Coryn Rivera (United States Of America)
11 Ashleigh Moolman-Pasio (South Africa)
12 Alena Amialiusik (Belarus)
13 Elise Chabbey (Switzerland)
14 Elizabeth Deignan (Great Britain)
15 Sina Frei (Switzerland)
16 Lotte Kopecky (Belgium)
17 Elisa Longo Borghini (Italy)
18 Ellen van Dijk (Netherlands) 0:00:08
19 Annemiek van Vleuten (Netherlands)
20 Marta Cavalli (Italy) 0:00:15
21 Ruth Winder (United States Of America) 0:00:17
22 Marta Bastianelli (Italy)
23 Maria Giulia Confalonieri (Italy) 0:00:29
24 Rachel Neylan (Australia) 0:00:45
25 Anna Henderson (Great Britain) 0:00:49
26 Ella Harris (New Zealand)
27 Audrey Cordon Ragot (France)
28 Spela Kern (Slovenia) 0:00:50
29 Margarita Victoria Garcia Canellas (Spain)
30 Amy Pieters (Netherlands)
31 Karol-Ann Canuel (Canada)
32 Chantal van den Broek-Blaak (Netherlands)
33 Christine Majerus (Luxembourg)
34 Jolien D’Hoore (Belgium) 0:01:21
35 Pfeiffer Georgi (Great Britain)
36 Lucinda Brand (Netherlands) 0:03:01
37 Franziska Koch (Germany) 0:03:29
38 Sarah Roy (Australia) 0:03:31
39 Ane Santesteban Gonzalez (Spain)
40 Anna Shackley (Great Britain)
41 Tiffany Cromwell (Australia)
42 Paula Andrea Patino Bedoya (Colombia)
43 Hanna Nilsson (Sweden)
44 Omer Shapira (Israel)
45 Aude Biannic (France) 0:03:34
46 Juliette Labous (France)
47 Anne Dorthe Ysland (Norway) 0:06:23
48 Jesse Vandenbulcke (Belgium) 0:07:31
49 Eugenie Duval (France)
50 Evita Muzic (France)
51 Karolina Kumiega (Poland)
52 Kristen Faulkner (United States Of America) 0:08:22
53 Marta Lach (Poland) 0:08:50
54 Rasa Leleivyte (Lithuania)
55 Eider Merino Cortazar (Spain) 0:08:55
56 Leah Thomas (United States Of America) 0:09:13
57 Ganna Solovei (Ukraine)
58 Eugenia Bujak (Slovenia)
59 Shari Bossuyt (Belgium)
60 Jarmila Machacova (Czech Republic)
61 Hayley Preen (South Africa)
62 Noemi Ruegg (Switzerland)
63 Leah Kirchmann (Canada)
64 Michaela Drummond (New Zealand)
65 Amalie Dideriksen (Denmark)
66 Lisa Klein (Germany)
67 Sarah Rijkes (Austria)
68 Marta Jaskulska (Poland)
69 Sara Martin Martin (Spain)
70 Anastasiya Kolesava (Belarus)
71 Tayler Wiles (United States Of America)
72 Aurela Nerlo (Poland)
73 Nathalie Eklund (Sweden)
74 Kathrin Hammes (Germany)
75 Susanne Andersen (Norway)
76 Valerie Demey (Belgium)
77 Lourdes Oyarbide Jimenez (Spain)
78 Ingvild Gaaskjenn (Norway)
79 Julie Leth (Denmark)
80 Stine Borgli (Norway)
81 Sheyla Gutierrez Ruiz (Spain)
82 Emma Cecilie Joergensen (Denmark)
83 Katrine Aalerud (Norway)
84 Alice Barnes (Great Britain)
85 Eri Yonamine (Japan)
86 Rotem Gafinovitz (Israel)
87 Romy Kasper (Germany) 0:09:25
88 Mieke Kroeger (Germany)
89 Anna van der Breggen (Netherlands) 0:09:30
90 Marlen Reusser (Switzerland)
91 Niamh Fisher-Black (New Zealand)
92 Lauretta Hanson (Australia)
93 Amanda Spratt (Australia)
94 Vittoria Guazzini (Italy)
95 Elena Cecchini (Italy)
96 Marita Jensen (Denmark) 0:13:21
97 Karolina Karasiewicz (Poland)
98 Diana Carolina Penuela Martinez (Colombia)
99 Lizbeth Yareli Salazar Vazquez (Mexico)
100 Phetdarin Somrat (Thailand)
101 Julia Borgstroem (Sweden)
102 Trine Holmsgaard (Denmark)
103 Daniela Campos (Portugal)
104 Christina Schweinberger (Austria)
105 Caroline Baur (Switzerland)
106 Lauren Stephens (United States Of America)
107 Valeriya Kononenko (Ukraine)
108 Dana Rozlapa (Latvia)
109 Roxane Fournier (France)
110 Jelena Eric (Serbia)
111 Jessica Allen (Australia)
112 Frances Janse van Rensburg (South Africa) 0:18:47
113 Yuliia Biriukova (Ukraine)
114 Yanina Kuskova (Uzbekistan)
115 Inga Cesuliene (Lithuania)
116 Nina Berton (Luxembourg) 0:22:01
117 Yeny Lorena Colmenares Colmenares (Colombia)
DNF Joscelin Lowden (Great Britain)
DNF Henrietta Christie (New Zealand)
DNF Chloe Hosking (Australia)
DNF Kim de Baat (Belgium)
DNF Kathrin Schweinberger (Austria)
DNF Verena Eberhardt (Austria)
DNF Teniel Campbell (Trinidad & Tabago)
DNF Fernanda Yapura (Argentina)
DNF Urska Zigart (Slovenia)
DNF Maria Martins (Portugal)
DNF Lina Marcela Hernandez Gomez (Colombia)
DNF Erika Milena Botero Lopez (Colombia)
DNF Nicole Koller (Switzerland)
DNF Kerry Jonker (South Africa)
DNF Sara Penton (Sweden)
DNF Paola Munoz Grandon (Chile)
DNF Tiffany Keep (South Africa)
DNF Aidi Gerde Tuisk (Estonia)
DNF Valentine Nzayisenga (Rwanda)
DNF Tereza Medvedova (Slovakia)
DNF Chaniporn Batriya (Thailand)
DNF Briet Kristy Gunnarsdottir (Iceland)
DNF Desiet Kidane (Eritrea)
DNF Urska Bravec (Slovenia)
DNF Caroline Andersson (Sweden)
DNF Agua Marina Espinola Salinas (Paraguay)
DNF Tamara Dronova (Russian Cycling Federation)
DNF Shaknoza Abdullaeva (Uzbekistan)
DNF Liane Lippert (Germany)
DNF Emilie Moberg (Norway)
DNF Megan Armitage (Ireland)
DNF Rebecca Koerner (Denmark)
DNF Thayna Araujo de Lima (Brazil)
DNF Agusta Edda Bjornsdottir (Iceland)
DNF Courteney Webb (South Africa)
DNF Luciana Roland (Argentina)
DNF Bisrat Gebremeskel (Eritrea)
DNF Diane Ingabire (Rwanda)
DNF Kamonrada Khaoplot (Thailand)
DNF Elin Bjorg Bjornsdottir (Iceland)
DNF Ayan Khankishiyeva (Azerbaijan)
DNF Anna Kulikova (Uzbekistan)
DNF Lina Svarinska (Latvia)
DNF Stephanie Subercaseaux Vergara (Chile)
DNF Adyam Tesfalem (Eritrea)