Refresh
Hello and welcome to our live coverage of the elite men’s road race at the Road World Championships in Zurich!
After a dramatic women’s race yesterday, this time is the men’s race – 273.9km, 7 laps of the hilly Zurich circuit, 4470 metres of elevation gain, national teams, no race radios, and a couple of big favourites but a huge array of credible candidates for the rainbow jersey. Worlds races don’t always deliver, but they are more often than give us some of the most thrilling racing all year.
The riders are all pretty much ready to go. The roll-out is coming up in around 10 minutes time, at 10:30 local time, with the race proper kicking off 10 minutes after that. Six hours later, we’ll have a world champion.
Here’s the route. We start out at Winterthur, with an opening loop and a trek over towards Zurich where we should see an early breakaway take shape. We head onto the circuit mid-way through, dropping towards the finish line to embark on seven full laps. The key features of the circuit are the pair of climbs early on, with the short and wickedly steep Zurichbergstraase followed soon after by the longer and steadier grind up to Witikon. From there, it’s a rolling plateau, a tricky descent, a little up-and-down kicker, and then a 6km run-in along the shores of Lake Zurich.
The circuit has hosted some great racing this week, and hopes are high it can deliver a classic here. It’s been spoken about as a course for the hilly one-day specialists, with some 4,500 metres of elevation gain, but it’s not an outright climbing affair, with plenty of room for manoeuvre on the rolling, twisting, roads and the tricky descents. It seems perfectly suited to open, tactical, and aggressive racing.
The riders are on the start line and they remove their helmets for a minute’s silence in honour of Muriel Furrer, the Swiss rider who tragically lost her life after a crash in the junior women’s road race earlier this week.
The riders are now on the move, making their way through the neutral zone. In contrast to yesterday’s rain, it’s dry, with some blue skies breaking through the clouds.
Who’s going to win the rainbow jersey?
We’re underway in Zurich and the first attacks are flying.
This was the scene on the start line, with the Swiss compatriots of Muriel Furrer taking place on the front row for the tribute.
On the subject of Furrer’s tragic death, I’d recommend this piece from Barry Ryan.
We’ve had a couple of forays off the front but no moves sticking as yet and now the pace has eased.
Poland are the most prominent nation in this early phase, constantly looking to spark or mark moves.
Four men off the front now, and it’s Filip Maciejuk (Poland), Ivo Oliveira (Portugal), Emils Liepins (Latvia), and Riley Sheehan (USA).
That quartet is brought back and we now have a new three-man breakaway attempt, featuring Cory Williams (Belize), Markus Pajur (Estonia), and Amir Arsalan Ansari (Refugee Cycling Team).
We’re heading uphill now on the opening climb of this opening loop and the peloton is close at hand, with more moves surely set to come here.
That trio is indeed swept up. Two more slip away but it’s a pretty quiet start so far today.
Here’s Ansari, in the red helmet, pictured on the start line earlier, along with his teammate from the Refugee Team, Ahmad Badreddin Wais, plus Rien Schuurhuis of Team Vatican City.
A new break with two riders: Andreas Leknessund (Norway) and Jonathan Caicedo (Ecuador).
Schuurhuis has just been dropped, as have a far few of the non-professional riders from the smaller cycling nations.
250km to go
There were some strong riders in that big group but it has been brought to heel now and the race is all together after almost 30km.
Is this the strongest team in the race?
Belgium are one of 10 teams to have qualified the full complement of eight riders, the others being Great Britain, USA, Australia, France, Spain, Italy, Denmark, Slovenia, and the Netherlands, who actually have nine thanks to the free ticket for the outgoing world champ Mathieu van der Poel.
We have a new three-man breakaway featuring Silvan Dillier (Switzerland), Luc Wirtgen (Luxembourg), and Piotr Pekala (Poland).
Tobias Foss (Norway) and Rui Oliveira (Portugal) are making their way over to this break, and there’s one more trio chasing as the peloton looks to be taking its foot completely off the gas.
The chasing trio are Simon Geschke (Germany), Markus Pajur (Estonia), and Roberto Carlos Gonzalez (Panama).
Anyone with Roberto Carlos in their name deserves our support.
Although when it comes to cyclists with footballers’ names there is simply no topping the Belgian cyclo-cross journeyman Anton Ferdinande.
We’re on a steep little climb, Kyburgstraase, the second of three on this opening loop, and the chasing trio use it to make their way across to form a breakaway of eight riders. With the peloton having eased off, this is our breakaway of the day, fully formed after just over 40km of racing.
Saying that, Pajur is already distanced on these steep slopes, although he’s grinding away and will hope to rejoin on the descent.
Gonzalez is also distanced at the top of the climb.
The peloton comes over the top of the climb now led by representatives from France, Slovenia, and Great Britain.
Great Britain have an interesting team, led ostensibly by Tom Pidcock, a rider who can be hit and miss, but when he hits, he hits big. He says he’s not at 100% but remains GB’s highest-calibre rider.
Slovenia call a nature break in the bunch as the gap rises to three minutes.
Gonzalez and Pajur aren’t getting back in – they’re over a minute down after being dropped on that climb. That leaves six riders in our break: Dillier, Geschke, Foss, Wirtgen, R.Oliveira, Pekala.
Crash. A small spill sends Pello Bilbao – an outsider today – into a wire farmyard fence. He’s in a bit of pain but back on his feet.
Pogacar is back from his toilet stop and two Slovenian teammates in their glaring green jerseys are setting the pace at the head of the peloton.
Here was Pogacar at the start. Such is the hype around him, it’s easy to forget they also have Primoz Roglic, a former winner of Liege-Bastogne-Liege and five other hilly Classics. Jan Tratnik is their next strongest rider, while the rest of the squad is made up of Luka Mezgec, Domen Novak, Matevz Govekar, Matic Zumer, and Jaka Primozic.
Behind Slovenia sit two orange representatives of Van der Poel’s Dutch squad, and two from Evenepoel’s Belgium.
Abandon: Julian Alaphilippe
We’re hearing the Frenchman, two times a world champion, has been caught up in a crash. He’s out of the race and that’s a huge blow for France.
Michael Woods (Canada) is eating out of a tupperware box, with a spoon, in the middle of a World Championship.
The gap hits 4:15 as we head uphill onto the climb that takes us onto the Zurich circuit.
A reminder of our six-man breakaway
The Czech Republic squad have taken a prominent position on this climb – they have four riders led by Mathias Vacek, who had an eye-catching Vuelta.
The leaders head over the top of the climb and they are now on the main Zurich circuit, joining it atop the plateau that comes after the duo of key climbs. There’s a rolling section now, followed by a descent, a steep up-and-down, and a 6km run alongside Lake Zurich, before we head through the finish line for the first of eight times.
200km to go
Here’s a shot of the breakaway powering on.
And here’s the peloton amid some stunning Swiss scenery.
188km to go
Leaving the centre of Zurich, the circuit soon hits its pair of climbs, the first being the short but wickedly steep Zurichbergstraase, followed soon after by the longer and steadier grind up to Witikon. Beyond the summit there’s a rolling plateau, followed by the descent, kicker, and run-in we’ve just seen. It’ll be a whittling-down process from here, with almost encouraged to drop out due to the lap-based nature of the race, and before too long we should see some nations making some early moves and looking to fire danger men up the road.
Loads of fans on the Zurichbergstraase today, with the sun shining to contrast with yesterday’s downpour.
Here’s our story on Alaphilippe’s abandon:
The bunch hit the main climb and Slovenia have all eight of their riders in one line on the left-hand side of the road. Campenaerts leads a Belgian train alongside them and on the right it’s the orange of the Netherlands.
Here was Mathieu van der Poel at the start. He’s backed here by Bauke Mollema, Wilco Kelderman, Sam Oomen, Sjoerd Bax, Daan Hoole, Bart Lemmen, Oscar Riesebeek, and Frank van den Broek.
The gap stands steady at five minutes as we tick through what is a quiet opening lap of the Zurich circuit.
Belgium have taken over from Slovenia with their whole team now on the front as the bunch lines out through a series of bends. Campenaerts is doing the early work for the Belgians.
The increase in pace has seen the gap to the break come down to four minutes as we head onto the final part of this opening lap.
We’ve had a fair few abandons, most notably Mattias Skjelmose, a Danish dark horse and the stronger climber to former world champ Mads Pedersen’s thoroughbred Classics credentials. Spaniard Mikel Landa has also exited the race.
Bike change for Dillier, who works his way back to the break alongside Geshcke with a minimum of fuss. The six leaders head into the final kilometre of the first lap of the Zurich course, but they’re losing time due to Campenaert’s pace-making behind.
161km to go
Pajur and Gonzalez have ridden remarkably since being dropped from the break 40km ago, but they are now caught by the peloton as they come through the finish line now, 3:21 behind the break.
One of the steeper ramps on the circuit.
And here’s a look at a kicker that comes later on the lap.
Meanwhile, this is the start of the Zurichbergstraase climb, which is where most of the fans seem to have gathered.
Photodump complete, the bunch hit that Zurichbergstraase climb for the second time and it’s Campenaerts still on the front, with the Slovenians still muscling alongside.
The leaders head onto the Witikon climb now, which is longer but steadier, measuring 2.6km at 5.3%.
Marc Hirschi (Switzerland) drops back to his team car – he has had a couple of problems in these early phases. He’s happy to collect his own bottles despite being one of the favourites today. His 2020 exploits had felt like a long time ago but Hirschi has built quite the palmares of one-day success. Most of his wins have come in lower-level races but this summer he put together a run of five successive wins, including the Clasica San Sebastian and Bretagne Classic, both well over 200km.
150km to go
It’ll be interesting to see how the Belgian’s play this. They are certainly not averse to firing dangerous shadow-favourites into speculative moves. No Wout van Aert here but Van Gils has had a strong season, while the likes of Wellens, Benoot, and Stuyven are not the kind of riders their rivals can just forget about.
The race remains quiet, in a breakaway-peloton format. The second lap of the Zurich is ticking by. When will we see the first attempts to open this race up?
Here’s the USA team, who shouldn’t be underestimated. Matteo Jorgenson second from the left has had a hell of a season and is a true all-rounder. The same is true of Neilson Powless, who’s been left out of this shot but can do Classics and climbing. The US also have Magnus Sheffield third from left and Brandon McNulty third from the right. On the far right, sporting a hell of a mullet – handlebar mustache combo, is Quinn Simmons, who won junior Worlds five years ago, while the squad is rounded out by Riley Sheehan and Kevin Vermaerke.
The pace has eased in the peloton and the breakaway have taken their lead back out to 4:15 as they come into Zurich for the closing kilometres of the second lap.
132km to go
It looks a bit quicker, a bit more anxious here, as the third ascent of Zurichbergstraase looms. We’ve been treated to some fantastic early action at Worlds in recent years and by contrast this has been an extremely calm race so far. We’re only just past the half-way mark in fairness, but is it about to get going?
Yes! There it is – our first attack on the Zurich laps. Pablo Castrillo from Spain – a breakout starsof the Vuelta and subject of a fair bit of transfer speculation this summer – hits out on Zurichbergstraase.
Castrillo only takes a small gap over the top as Slovenia react quickly and take the bunch onto the Witikon climb.
The peloton has split! Castrillo’s attack and Slovenia’s reaction has cut the bunch in two, aided by the severity of those gradients on Zurichbergstraase. It should stitch back together on this steadier climb but who’ll be the next riders to try something?
Great Britain answer the call, sending Mark Donovan off the front.
Donovan looks over his shoulder and sees no one else is coming with him, so he stops his effort. And as he does so Jay Vine attacks for Australia.
Pavel Sivakov for France tracks him and now Stevie Williams marks him, so some bigger names coming through now.
These accelerations see a sizeable group go clear with some strong names in there.
The gap yawns out and plenty of big nations are represented, but no Dutchmen. More riders now look to ping out of the bunch.
Belgium have placed Laurens de Plus in here, Slovenia have Jan Tratnik – those are the two nations who’d done all the work in the peloton so far, so they’ll take a back seat back there now and force other nations to take command.
Vine attacks the group again but soon slots back in. They already have half a minute over the main bunch. USA, Italy, Norway, Denmark, Germany also have riders here.
The full composition of this attack
120km to go
The important thing here is which nations have missed out, as they’re the ones who will have to do the work in the peloton to mount a chase. Van der Poel’s Dutchmen are the obvious absentees, while Spain are the only other major nation not represented.
This dangerous attack closes to within a minute of the six-man break as we head downhill back towards the shores of Lake Zurich. They now have 2:30 on the bunch!
The Dutch aren’t blinking. In fact, it’s Britain and Belgium on the front, but they both have men up the road and are doing nothing more than turning the pedals over.
Three minutes now for this move, who are closing in on the breakaway.
This was the Castrillo attack that effectively opened up this race, even if the Spaniard is not in the eventual move that went clear.
The leading six come into the final kilometre and if they looked around they’d see this elite 10-man selection coming up to them.
108km to go
The pace has picked up as the peloton crosses the line, but that’s not due to any big chase but rather a jostle for position as we head towards the Zurichbergstraase climb once again.
Merger up front as the 10-man attack joins forces with the six-man break on Zurichbergstraase, who’ll try and hang on over these climbs and bag a ticket to the latter phases of this race.
A reminder that this is the steeper of the two main climbs, measuring 800 metres at 7.1% but with double-digit pitches. It’s followed soon after by the Witikon climb which is 2.6km at 5.3%.
Slovenia take back control and up the pace as the peloton approach the climb now.
Domen Novak leads the way for the Slovenians, with Pogacar poised a couple of wheels back. Roglic is a little further down the group.
No splits in the bunch over Zuirichbergstraase but the pace has seen the gap to the break drop to 2:15.
Attack! Kasper Asgreen (Denmark) hits out on the flat section between the two climbs. A Dutch rider jumps on board.
It’s Wilco Kelderman for the Dutch but they’re brought back by the Slovenians.
New attack now from Quinn Simmons (USA).
Pogacar attacks!
The big favourite makes his move on the fourth ascent of Witikon with just over 100km to go! Wow.
Simmons is there with him, along with Andrea Bagioli (Italy).
Simmons can’t handle the pace and Bagioli can’t either now! Pogacar is alone chasing down the front of the race. Wow.
97km to go
Slovenia have dropped Tratnik back from the break in order to pace Pogacar. Great racing so far from the Slovenians, although it helps when you have someone as strong as Pogacar – who else would be able to get away alone here?
Despite having a rider in the lead group, the onus now falls on Belgium who hit the front of the peloton once more.
20 seconds is the gap to the front as Tratnik makes his way back towards his former companions, this time with the best rider in the world in tow. ‘I’ve brought a mate’, he’ll say, and no one will be pleased to see him.
Pogacar offers Tratnik a turn as the swoop down a gentle descent. 12 seconds is the gap. Behind them the peloton is just under a minute in arrears.
This was the attack. He didn’t have company for long.
91km to go
Belgium are riding hard here. They’re aware of the threat but they also have the numbers to be able to try and keep Pogacar under some degree of control, with Evenepoel not having to put his nose in the wind at all.
Pogacar has darted off the front of this break. No joke. More a case of pushing on than attacking but there’s no containing this man.
Pogacar has a gap almost by accident and as he looks around he almost thinks about smashing on before he sits up, takes some food on, and allows Tratnik through once more.
Campenaerts, who did most of the early work for Belgium, is still there, exchanging turns with Hermans at the head of the peloton.
There’s Pogacar in the wheel of Tratnik, being dragged up to the front of the race.
Let’s see how the rest of the lead group play this. At the moment they’re leaning on Tratnik and Pogacar, understandably taking a back seat. Certainly the bigger nations with favourites behind are not going to help this move go clear in the presence of Pogacar.
81km to go
The gap has fallen under Belgium’s work, and now, finally, the Dutch are contributing. We haven’t seen them all day.
A reminder that this Zurich circuit contains two early climbs, the steep Zurichbergstraase and the longer, steadier haul to Witikon. We’ll be on them soon and the race is going to light up once more.
Tratnik still on the front, and in reality this is one rider against the rotating cast of Belgians and Dutch.
But not for long as Tratnik comes to the end of his tank just ahead of the foot of Zurichbergstraase. Pogacar takes it on…
Vermaerke and Sivakov respond, gap to the rest.
Onto the steep section and how hard will Pogacar go? Will he want some company after these climbs?
Vermaerke drops. Sivakov riding well and still with him.
But now Sivakov labours and loses the wheel. Pogacar is drifting away solo.
Pogacar looks around and sees he’s alone. He’s almost surprised. And he now seems to think it wise to wait so that he has someone to work with.
Powless accelerates from the bunch as they hit the steep section of the climb.
There’s a lull now in the bunch over the top and now Powless hits it again.
30 seconds is the gap between Pogacar and the bunch. A fair few breakaway riders dropped in between.
Powless is caught as Wellens ups the tempo in the chase for Belgium.
75km to go
Wellens pulls over and now Evenepoel sits second wheel in the chase behind Van Gils. The pace is high.
The live timings are a little all over the place but the gap between Pogacar/Sivakov and the bunch is in fact 50 seconds.
Tiesj Benoot is dropped, and the Belgian are losing numbers now…
Van Gils is the only rider left with Evenepoel. Van der Poel is there but likewise only has one teammate. In fact the peloton has split and there’s another large group of riders who might get back in over the top of this main climb.
Evenepoel attacks!!
Here we go. Belgium were running out of numbers and the Olympic champion feels he has no other choice but to take this on himself from range.
Van der Poel responds as they go over the top. Jorgenson also looks keen.
But they all ease up now over the top and the pace drains away!!
Ben Healy (Ireland) sense an opportunity and accelerates but then the pace drains again. No cohesion here and that’ll be music to Pogacar’s ears.
McNulty gives it a nudge now for the USA, and now MIke Woods (Canada) goes clear.
Evenepoel lights it up but it’s stop-start accelerations given the lack of numbers for any one nation.
The front two
The front bunch of 30 riders continues to attack itself repeatedly. There’s another small bunch not too far behind.
Sivakov is working with Pogacar now. There’s a medal up for grabs, even if it would surely only be silver were they to stay away. The two are normally teammates, both riding for the UAE Team Emirates squad, so they’ll know each other well.
Bauke Mollema (Netherlands) is the next to push on behind in this unruly group, which is fragmenting even more through a series of bends before the descent.
The front section of that bunch has split, with 17 riders clipping off the front, including Van der Poel, who now accelerates!
Evenepoel is present and correct in this group.
45 seconds is the gap, which is holding steady with 63.5km to go.
Evenepoel drives this chase group on now, and it’s properly establishing itself over the rest of the bunch.
Van der Poel has a gap as Evenepoel lets the wheel go in a bid to force others to do some work.
Jorgenson drives is on as Healy and Onley jump on board along with an Australian.
It’s Hindley for Australia, who also have Ben O’Connor just behind.
And now Healy and Onley go clear in the chase amid another lull!
Van der Poel nips up onto the pavement to get around to respond as the moves rain down and the gaps become dangerous. Classics revelation Toms Skujins (Latvia) has jumped to Healy and Onley.
Those three are 40 seconds behind Pogacar and Sivakov with 57km to go.
Mads Pedersen (Denmark) has been a quieter presence than Van der Poel and Evenepoel but is present in this main chase group.
54km to go
Evenepoel ripped an acceleration there before swerving ostentatiously aside and waving his arm when Jorgenson refuses to come out of the wheel.
Pogacar alone out front!
Van der Poel hits out from his chase group!
Pogacar looks so comfortable as he heads over the steep climb and onto the steadier ascent. He still has 45 seconds in hand.
Onley struggling and dropped by Healy and Skujins.
Onley latches onto the wheel of Van der Poel who is making inroads now. Evenepoel accelerates behind but things aren’t going his way here.
Sivakov has been caught and passed by Skuijns and Healy who are riding really well and are 38 seconds behind Pogacar.
Sivakov now latches onto the Van der Poel/Onley duo. They’re a further 10 seconds back.
Behind them we have a swelling larger chase group after some made their way up on Zurichbergstraase and the Evenepoel group stalled due to a lack of cohesion.
Romain Bardet was one of the riders to come back on that climb and he now attacks it. Pedersen is really struggling in there.
45.5km to go
More movement now as Evenepoel responds once more. He’s dragging his way over to Van der Poel!
Evenepoel gives it a nudge over the summit. A selection of 12 riders has formed amid those accelerations, but it’s only the third group on the road.
Pogacar still leads solo by 54 seconds over Healy and Skujins, with the rest of the chase a further 20 seconds back.
37.5km to go
This is the composition of the chase group.
Evenepoel finds himself on the front of the chase once again but he’s not happy and he’s not going to be able to do this alone. The nations with two riders in this group are Netherlands, Spain, and France, but they’re not using them to put together any sort of cohesive chase as things stand.
31km to go
Pogacar’s lead heads up above the one-minute mark. Healy and Skujins are riding well but the Slovenian is just operating on another level. The ragged 12-man chase group slips to 90 seconds back and this looks like a fight for the minor medals.
All alone
27km to go
Healy and Skujins cross the line next, one minute later.
Another 30 seconds back it’s the 12-man chase group with Evenepoel and Van der Poel.
Situation going into the final lap
As we head onto our final lap, a reminder that we have two key climbs. The first is Zurichbergstraate and it’s short and steep at 800m long at 7.1%. It’s followed soon after by the haul to Witikon, longer and steadier at 2.6km and 5.3%.
Pogacar rides calmly in the saddle up Zurichbergstraase. There are an impressive number of fans but the leader’s ease has sucked a little of the adrenaline out of proceedings. Only an explosion will deny him but he’s holding firm.
Evenepoel accelerates as the chase hits the climb.
Skujins is dropping Healy.
Hirschi attacks! Evenepoel looks spent as the Swiss rider takes over and rips clear. Van der Poel can’t respond.
Healy claws his way back to Skujins and they pick up speed ahead of the Witikon climb. Hirschi isn’t far behind them.
Pogacar’s lead has dropped a little, down to 50 seconds as he hits the main climb.
Behind Hirschi, the chase is down to six: Evenepoel, Van der Poel, Mollema, Bardet, and the Spanish duo of Mas and Adria.
O’Connor and Simmons have worked their way back to it now, and Onley is just off the back of it.
Hirschi is closing in on Skujins and Healy but he himself is not far ahead of the rest of the chasers.
20km to go
Mas reaches Hirschi. Big ride from the Spaniard here and the minor medals are still up in the air.
Mas won’t work with Hirschi, who offers a confused flick of the elbow.
Pogacar lost a little bit of time earlier but is holding steady at 47 seconds on this main climb.
Evenepoel attacks again! He tries to get away from a group that has frustrated him for much of the day. Van der Poel reacts and the two are away.
O’Connor accelerates with a big push to try and respond to Evenepoel and Van der Poel.
Over the top now and Pogacar’s lead has been shaved to 40 seconds. What a ride this is by Healy and Skujins.
Evenepoel waves his arms in frustration at a motorbike that he feels is too close to Hirschi and Mas just ahead.
O’Connor has made it over to Van der Poel and Evenepoel. They’re just behind Hirschi and Mas, who are only five seconds behind Healy and Skujins…
Hirschi and Mas reach Healy and Skujins! Four the in the chase and it could grow to seven soon.
That is indeed the chase as that trio makes contact. Seven men 40 seconds behind Pogacar with 16km to go!
Pogacar still has the race in the palm of his hands but his air of invincibility has been dented somewhat by the fact he has lost around 20 seconds so far on this final lap.
Evenepoel does the first turn and it’s a big one. Van der Poel comes through for a shorter nudge. Will this group work together? Evenepoel finds himself back on the front, so it looks like a no.
Mas and Hirschi help out on the front of the group and there’s some momentum, with Evenepoel by far the keenest. Healy, meanwhile, is glued to the rear.
12km to go
Hirschi attempts to force Healy through but only allows a gap to open as the Irishman refuses.
The chase isn’t strong enough here to bring Pogacar back. He finds a few more seconds as he prepares to head down to Lake Zurich for the run-in.
50 seconds now and surely this is a done deal. In the chase group it’s about the minor medals now.
A kicker and Van der Poel launches a vicious acceleration.
Hirschi and Skujins respond.
Pogacar hits 75km/h as he swoops downhill. 7.5km to go now and he still has 45 seconds after that Van der Poel dig.
The seven chasers are back together as they tick off the final part of this descent.
Hirschi rips the next attack from the chase.
O’Connor is alive to it but can’t follow. Healy nips around him and claws his way back but the others are going to get back in.
Evenepoel is dangling off the back of this group as Healy goes again!
They’re on the final kicker before the flat final run-in. This is no bluff from Evenepoel as he loses ground behind the remaining six.
Skjujins goes next as the pace drops. Van der Poel responds.
Hirschi and O’Connor go across. Bickering forces a split to the rest.
4km to go
Healy attacks once more. A small gap through a couple of bends but it comes back again.
Evenepoel attacks once more. Maybe he’s not quite done.
Healy weaves from the back and attacks but almost has to slow to get out of Van der Poel’s slipstream. Nothing doing.
O’Connor slides off the front next…
1km to go
Pogacar looks around, sees no one, and starts to drink it in. He sits up, covers his face with hi hands, punches the air with one hand, then two, and crosses the line. What a win.
Gold for Pogacar. Now for the minor medals, and O’Connor’s move has worked. He’s away and crosses the line for silver.
Sprint for bronze. Skujins opens it, but Van der Poel mops up.
Pogacar celebrates with his teammates and family as the rest of the finishers keel over their bikes in exhaustion.
Results
To recap, Pogacar burst out of the peloton with just over 100km to go. He worked his way over to the breakaway thanks to his teammate Jan Tratnik, and went solo from just over 50km out. Behind him, some huge names traded blows in what was a massive slugfest, but the Giro and Tour champion serenely soloed his way to an extraordinary title.
Let’s hear from the new world champion, Tadej Pogacar
That is Pogacar’s 23 victory of what will go down as one of the greatest seasons of all time. Giro d’Italia with six stage wins, Tour de France with six stage wins, Liege-Bastogne-Liege, Strade Bianche, GP de Montreal, Volta a Catalunya, and now a first world title.
Reaction now from Evenepoel who had this to say to Eurosport.
Here was O’Connor crossing the line for a sensational second place, to go with his runner-up finish at the Vuelta a Espana. He rode a strong and canny race and although he was arguably the quietest member of the chase group that emerged, he struck at the perfect moment to slip away at the end.
And here’s the sprint for bronze.
Race report, results, photos… all at the link below.
The rainbow jersey looks like a natural fit on the shoulders of Pogacar
We can now hear from the silver medallist, Ben O’Connor
And here’s the bronze medallist, Mathieu van der Poel
The podium finishers