Archiv der Kategorie: Strassenrennen

ESCAPE FROM HELL – (IV/V) 2016 : Mathew Hayman

2016 : Mathew Hayman
In the end, it’s not always the strongest who wins. Certainly not in cycling, and most definitely not in Paris-Roubaix. On the roads of the Hell of the North, the „strongest“ can just as easily win in the legendary velodrome as get bogged down in the Trouée d’Arenberg. Year after year, the cobblestone crushers crash in the Mons-en-Pévèle sector or collapse in the Carrefour de l’Arbre – and one cannot underestimate the traps of the asphalt either. On these unique roads, an aspirant for glory needs to be strong, but also brave and lucky. Paris-Roubaix smiles on the bold, even those who have been out there the longest. In a race where chaos is always the order of the day, early attackers create unsuspected openings. Conquerors of the Hell of the North, they tell us about their heavenly day on the cobbles.

Mathew Hayman : “I won in the year when I had the least chance”
Is the early breakaway to Roubaix an Australian specialty? Riders from Down Under waited until the turn of the 21st century to impose their panache on the Classic born in 1896 but they’ve done it in unique fashion. Henk Vogels was the first to break into the top 10 (in 1997 and 1998). Then, in 2007, Stuart O’Grady triumphed in the North after attacking in the first hour of the race. Ten editions later, in the spring of 2016, Mathew Hayman joined him on the list of winners, overturning all the predictions.
At 37, the native of Camperdown, an inner western suburb of Sydney, is a seasoned expert on the cobbled Classics, but he’s no guaranteed winner. Prior to his Roubaix triumph, his professional honours list includes the Challenge Mallorca (2001), the Sachsen Tour (2005), the road race at the Commonwealth Games (2006) and Paris-Bourges (2011). He headed into his 15th appearance in the Hell of the North – he will push his tally to 17, a record in the French Monument – with a wealth of experience at all levels of the race (8th in 2012, OTL in 2002), but with little certainty about his form: six weeks earlier, he fractured his right arm on his first cobbled race of the season, the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad.
For a month, the Australian stepped on his home-trainer and trained on Zwift. In his garage, he prepared to topple the oracles, dazzled by the stars Fabian Cancellara, Tom Boonen and Peter Sagan. For the first time, Paris-Roubaix was broadcast in its entirety on television, from the start in Compiègne to the finish in the André-Pétrieux velodrome. For six hours, the race was breathtaking and, in this extraordinary setting, Hayman delivered a masterclass, making the breakaway before surviving the return of the favourites and frustrating the legend Boonen.

KM 0. PREPARE FOR BATTLE : “Roubaix was on my mind, but I had a lot of doubts“
“When I broke my arm, the doctors put it in a cast and told me it would be six weeks. I looked at my phone and I said: ‘Okay, that’s one day before Roubaix…’ The team doctor was there and he said: ‘That’s not gonna happen’. You think of all the effort you’ve done for the classics, and it gets taken away… I have a track background, from Australia, and I’m used to training indoors, living in Belgium. Zwift wasn’t so big at the time but I decided to give it a shot. I did a lot of double sessions, there were a couple of days I even did three or four sessions.
Roubaix was on my mind, but I had a lot of doubts. I went and raced in Spain the week-end before Roubaix. I had done four or five days on the road before that. And I had one week left. By that point, I was pretty confident but other people in the team were still unsure. In the recon, I had to do a pretty hard ride. I think I did four and half hours on Wednesday and I went pretty deep to make sure… I had missed a lot. But I was pretty happy on that evening. I had good legs, my arm was holding up and I was gonna start in Roubaix on the Sunday.”

KM 80. MAKE THE BREAK : “It was starting to get hard and I was still pretty fresh”
“Actually, I wasn’t supposed to be in the breakaway. I was supposed to kind of wait longer. We had three riders that were designated to jump with the early breakaway. But we’d been racing 70-80 kilometres and those roads out of Compiègne are quite rolling. It was starting to get hard and I was still pretty fresh because I had just been waiting, sitting in the bunch. I actually went twice. The first time, on a little rise, I thought maybe this is the break and I jumped in. And the next time, I actually already had a teammate, Magnus Cort Nielsen, and I didn’t see that until I had already jumped. The group became bigger and bigger and we were 21 in the end.
The collaboration was really good. There was some good riders in there, really good riders. And most of the guys, when you’re in that situation, you want to make the most of it. We never got a lot of time, about one and half, two minutes. We kind of had to keep pushing but at the same time, we weren’t racing each other for the sectors, except for Arenberg of course. Even then, being a group of 20, still you want to be in the front. But every other sector, we just went onto the sector and just rode. I think that’s where you save the energy.”

KM 198. CONTAIN BOONEN : “Tom really tried to make it hard”
“I was like: ‘Okay, I’m just here to get ahead, first I want to get through the first sector, then I want to get through Arenberg’, and then a big one for me was to get through Mons-en-Pévèle, but we got caught before. Some guys like Fabian [Cancellara] had missed the split and there were more splits in the group. They had also been racing since Arenberg and the guys that came across, by the time they got to me, they were pretty fatigued. Luke Durbridge was among the 15 riders who came back. He was one of the leaders for our team that day. He was looking very strong.
Tom [Boonen] was doing a lot of work, the group was too big and he wanted to thin it out. Onto Orchies, he really tried to make it hard again, he didn’t have so many teammates and I think he wanted to get rid of as many people as possible, and at the end of Orchies, Luke punctured. If he was in front of me, maybe I would have given my wheel but he was already behind and stopped before I could react. And then I was: ‘Oh well, I’m by myself now.’”

KM 257.5. BRING IT HOME : “Coming into the Velodrome, I probably had the smallest palmares”
“On Mons-en-Pévèle, there was a big acceleration, I was caught behind a rider, maybe it was [Marcel] Sieberg… And I could see Sep [Vanmarcke] or Ian Stannard going really fast. I hesitated, I was thinking: ‘I’ve been in the break, maybe I just stay there…’ But I understood I had to go. Still, I didn’t believe I could win. Then on the Carrefour de l’Arbre, I was knocked off the wheel, I managed to come across and that’s when I started believing. Coming into the Velodrome with Sep Vanmarcke, Ian Stannard, Tom Boonen and Edvald Boasson Hagen, I probably had the smallest palmares. But I wasn’t thinking like that, I was just thinking of racing, having moves, covering attacks, trying to get to the finish line.
Then, as soon as I crossed the line, I came back to reality and tried to understand what had happened. In other years, I was in great shape and something always happened. And I always put pressure on myself to have a good race in Roubaix. I knew that when Tom and Fabian accelerated on the cobbles, they were impossible to follow – for me and for everyone else! So I looked for other ways. It’s just a race I fell in love with. And I won it in the year when I had the least chance of doing well.“

Mathew Hayman :
• Born on 20th April 1978 in Camperdown (Australia)
• Sports director for Team Jayco AlUla
• Holds the record for most participations in Paris-Roubaix – 17 :
Winner in 2016 / 8th in 2012 / 10th in 2011

Baskenland – Rundfahrt 2. Etappe:

Irun – Kanbo – 160 Km

1 LAPEIRA Paul FRA Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale 03:42:28
2 BATTISTELLA Samuele ITA Astana Qazaqstan Team 00:00
3 VERVAEKE Louis BEL Soudal Quick-Step 00:00
4 MIQUEL DELGADO Pau ESP Equipo Kern Pharma 00:00
5 ARANBURU Alex ESP Movistar Team 00:00
6 SILVA Thomas URU Caja Rural-Seguros RGA 00:00
7 SERRANO Gonzalo ESP Movistar Team 00:00
8 RETAILLEAU Valentin FRA Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale 00:00
9 MCNULTY Brandon USA UAE Team Emirates 00:00
10 HERMANS Quinten BEL Alpecin-Deceuninck 00:00
11 BRAET Vito BEL Intermarché-Wanty 00:00
12 NICOLAU Joel ESP Caja Rural-Seguros RGA 00:00
13 EZQUERRA Jesus ESP Burgos-BH 00:00
14 DE PRETTO Davide ITA Team Jayco-AlUla 00:00
15 GERMANI Lorenzo ITA Groupama-FDJ 00:00
16 MARTÍN Gotzon ESP Euskaltel-Euskadi 00:00
17 GAROFOLI Gianmarco ITA Astana Qazaqstan Team 00:00
18 AYUSO Juan ESP UAE Team Emirates 00:00
19 VINGEGAARD Jonas DEN Team Visma | Lease a Bike 00:00
20 QUINN Sean USA EF Education-EasyPost 00:00

Gesamt:

1 ROGLIC Primoz SLO BORA-hansgrohe 03:55:02
2 SKJELMOSE Mattias DEN Lidl-Trek 00:10
3 EVENEPOEL Remco BEL Soudal Quick-Step 00:10
4 AYUSO Juan ESP UAE Team Emirates 00:14
5 VINGEGAARD Jonas DEN Team Visma | Lease a Bike 00:15
6 VAUQUELIN Kévin FRA ARKEA-B&B HOTELS 00:16
7 SCHACHMANN Max GER BORA-hansgrohe 00:16
8 MCNULTY Brandon USA UAE Team Emirates 00:23
9 ARMIRAIL Bruno FRA Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale 00:24
10 BILBAO Pello ESP Bahrain Victorious 00:25
11 LAPEIRA Paul FRA Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale 00:26
12 OLIVEIRA Nelson POR Movistar Team 00:28
13 GRÉGOIRE Romain FRA Groupama-FDJ 00:28
14 VINE Jay AUS UAE Team Emirates 00:30
15 SOBRERO Matteo ITA BORA-hansgrohe 00:30
16 RIVERA Brandon COL INEOS Grenadiers 00:32
17 ARANBURU Alex ESP Movistar Team 00:37
18 VERVAEKE Louis BEL Soudal Quick-Step 00:39
19 JEGAT Jordan FRA TotalEnergies 00:40
20 GERMANI Lorenzo ITA Groupama-FDJ 00:41
21 HAYTER Ethan GBR INEOS Grenadiers 00:42

Région Pays de la Loire Tour – 1. Etappe:


Plomi Foto

1 VAN DEN BERG Marijn NED EF Education-EasyPost 04:43:25
2 ABERASTURI Jon ESP Euskaltel-Euskadi 00:00
3 DEKKER David NED ARKEA-B&B HOTELS 00:00
4 WATSON Sam GBR Groupama-FDJ 00:00
5 DAINESE Alberto ITA Tudor Pro Cycling Team 00:00
6 MORIN Emmanuel FRA Van Rysel-Roubaix 00:00
7 OOSTERLINCK Joes BEL Bingoal WB 00:00
8 JEANNIÈRE Emilien FRA TotalEnergies 00:00
9 GALVÁN Francisco ESP Equipo Kern Pharma 00:00
10 KONIJN Alexander NED Nice Métropole Côte d’Azur 00:00
11 SALBY Alexander DEN Bingoal WB 00:00
12 KOPECKY Matyas CZE Team Novo Nordisk 00:00
13 LECROQ Jérémy FRA St Michel-Mavic-Auber 93 00:00
14 ANGULO Antonio ESP Burgos-BH 00:00
15 BONILLO Iker ESP Euskaltel-Euskadi 00:00
16 JAIME Alex ESP Equipo Kern Pharma 00:00
17 BOÚGLAS Georgios GRE Burgos-BH 00:00
18 BLIKRA Erlend NOR Uno-X Mobility 00:00
19 BENNETT Sam IRL Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale 00:00
20 HENNEQUIN Paul FRA Nice Métropole Côte d’Azur 00:00

Knapp an ersten Sieg vorbei – Dominik Amann auf Rang zwei bei 48. Rund um Schönaich!

Der 25-jährige Vorarlberger wird am Ostermontag im Deutschen Schönaich, im Eliterennen über 144 Kilometer hervorragender Zweiter. Im Ausscheidungsrennen auf dem schweren Rundkurs, dezimierte Amann Runde zu Runde die Spitzengruppe. Im Finale muss er sich schlussendlich nur dem Deutschen Profi Dominik Röder (P & S Benotti) geschlagen geben. Jannis Peter wird Elfter. Pirmin Benz (22.), Nikolas Riegler (35.).

Dominik Amann: „Es war sehr intensiv bis die Spitzengruppe gestanden ist. Zur Rennhälfte waren wir noch fünf Mann. In der letzten von 16 Runden waren wir noch zu dritt. Der Deutsche Röber war heute etwas stärker, aber Rang zwei stimmt mich für die nächsten Rennen zuversichtlich!“

Resultat: https://www.procyclingstats.com/national-race/rund-um-schonaich/2024/result

Presseservice Team Vorarlberg
www.team-vorarlberg.at
office@proevent-cycling.at

1 Röber, Dominik P & S Metalltechnik Benotti 03:27:36
2 Amann, Dominik Team Vorarlberg
3 Schmidt, Jakob MYVELO Pro Cycling Team
4 Hatz, Christopher Radsport-Team Lutz Embrace The World Cycling
5 Fischer, Robin Team Storck – Metropol Cycling

6 Gathemann, Albert P & S Metalltechnik Benotti
7 Bettendorff, Loïc Leopard TOGT Pro Cycling
8 Amann, Meo RSV Öschelbronn Embrace The World Cycling
9 Albrecht, Anton P & S Metalltechnik Benotti
10 Graf, Silas TURA Untermünkheim Embrace The World Cycling
11 Peter, Jannis Team Vorarlberg
12 Nolde, Tobias P & S Metalltechnik Benotti
13 Helbig, Benedikt MYVELO Pro Cycling Team

Ronde de Mouscron – Damen – 123 Km

1 PIKULIK Daria POL Human Powered Health 03:51:17
2 AHTOSALO Anniina FIN Uno-X Mobility 00:00
3 FIDANZA Martina ITA Ceratizit-WNT Pro Cycling 00:00
4 TRUYEN Marthe BEL Fenix-Deceuninck 00:00
5 COLES-LYSTER Maggie CAN Roland 00:00
6 DE CLERCQ Katrijn BEL Lotto Dstny Ladies 00:00
7 FAHLIN Emilia SWE ARKEA-B&B HOTELS 00:00
8 JANSEN Noa NED Liv AlUla Jayco Women’s Continental Team 00:04
9 BYE Camilla Rånes NOR Team Coop-Repsol 00:04
10 VANHOVE Marith BEL VolkerWessels Pro Cycling Team 00:04
11 VAN ‚T GELOOF Marjolein NED Hess Cycling Team 00:04
12 BEULING Femke NED VolkerWessels Pro Cycling Team 00:04
13 GILLESPIE Lara IRL UAE Development Team 00:04
14 SANDER Laura Lizette EST AG Insurance-NXTG U23 Team 00:04
15 VAN ROOIJEN Eline NED Team Coop-Repsol 00:04
16 SANGUINETI Ilaria ITA Lidl-Trek 00:04
17 SCHOENS Quinty NED VolkerWessels Pro Cycling Team 00:04
18 DE ZOETE Mylene NED Ceratizit-WNT Pro Cycling 00:11
19 DE VRIES Femke NED GT Krush RebelLease 00:11
20 BRAUSS Franziska GER Ceratizit-WNT Pro Cycling 00:11

Ronde van Vlaanderen 2024

Männer 271km:


3er Nils Politt (Plomi Foto)

1 VAN DER POEL Mathieu NED Alpecin-Deceuninck 06:05:17
2 MOZZATO Luca ITA ARKEA-B&B HOTELS 01:02
3 POLITT Nils GER UAE Team Emirates 01:02
4 BJERG Mikkel DEN UAE Team Emirates 01:02
5 MORGADO António POR UAE Team Emirates 01:02
6 SHEFFIELD Magnus USA INEOS Grenadiers 01:02
7 NAESEN Oliver BEL Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale 01:02
8 TEUNS Dylan BEL Israel-Premier Tech 01:02
9 BETTIOL Alberto ITA EF Education-EasyPost 01:02
10 SKUJINS Toms LAT Lidl-Trek 01:02
11 MATTHEWS Michael AUS Team Jayco-AlUla 01:02
12 WELLENS Tim BEL UAE Team Emirates 01:16
13 SHEEHAN Riley USA Israel-Premier Tech 02:02
14 MALECKI Kamil POL Q36.5 Pro Cycling Team 02:02
15 BENOOT Tiesj BEL Team Visma | Lease a Bike 02:02
16 MADOUAS Valentin FRA Groupama-FDJ 02:02
17 TARLING Joshua GBR INEOS Grenadiers 02:02
18 LAMPAERT Yves BEL Soudal Quick-Step 02:02
19 TRENTIN Matteo ITA Tudor Pro Cycling Team 02:02
20 WALSCHEID Max GER Team Jayco-AlUla 02:41
21 REX Laurenz BEL Intermarché-Wanty 02:41
22 PEDERSEN Mads DEN Lidl-Trek 02:41
23 VERMEERSCH Gianni BEL Alpecin-Deceuninck 02:41
24 TILLER Rasmus NOR Uno-X Mobility 02:41
25 TEUNISSEN Mike NED Intermarché-Wanty 02:41
26 GARCÍA CORTINA Iván ESP Movistar Team 02:41
27 CAMPENAERTS Victor BEL Lotto Dstny 02:41
28 ALBANESE Vincenzo ITA ARKEA-B&B HOTELS 02:41
29 DOULL Owain GBR EF Education-EasyPost 03:20
30 VAN DIJKE Tim NED Team Visma | Lease a Bike 03:20
31 JORGENSON Matteo USA Team Visma | Lease a Bike 03:38
32 ABRAHAMSEN Jonas NOR Uno-X Mobility 04:29
33 HALLER Marco AUT BORA-hansgrohe 04:29
34 STEIMLE Jannik GER Q36.5 Pro Cycling Team 04:29
35 RUTSCH Jonas GER EF Education-EasyPost 04:29
36 BISSEGGER Stefan SUI EF Education-EasyPost 04:29
37 DEGENKOLB John GER Team dsm-firmenich PostNL 04:29
38 TURNER Ben GBR INEOS Grenadiers 04:29

39 PITHIE Laurence NZL Groupama-FDJ 04:29
40 HAGENES Per Strand NOR Team Visma | Lease a Bike 04:29
41 KÜNG Stefan SUI Groupama-FDJ 04:29


2er Luca Mozzato (Plomi Foto)

Frauen 163km

1 LONGO BORGHINI Elisa ITA Lidl-Trek 04:16:04
2 NIEWIADOMA Katarzyna POL CANYON//SRAM Racing 00:00
3 VAN ANROOIJ Shirin NED Lidl-Trek 00:00
4 VOS Marianne NED Team Visma | Lease a Bike 00:09
5 KOPECKY Lotte BEL Team SD Worx-Protime 00:09
6 PIETERSE Puck NED Fenix-Deceuninck 00:09
7 PERSICO Silvia ITA UAE Team ADQ 00:09
8 VOLLERING Demi NED Team SD Worx-Protime 00:15
9 PATERNOSTER Letizia ITA Liv AlUla Jayco 01:40
10 SWINKELS Karlijn NED UAE Team ADQ 01:40
11 WIEBES Lorena NED Team SD Worx-Protime 01:46
12 SIERRA Arlenis CUB Movistar Team 01:46
13 GEORGI Pfeiffer GBR Team dsm-firmenich PostNL 01:46
14 BERTEAU Victoire FRA Cofidis Women Team 01:46
15 DE JONG Thalita NED Lotto Dstny Ladies 01:46
16 ADEGEEST Loes NED FDJ-SUEZ 01:46
17 VAN EMPEL Fem NED Team Visma | Lease a Bike 01:46
18 PALADIN Soraya ITA CANYON//SRAM Racing 01:46
19 BERTON Nina LUX Ceratizit-WNT Pro Cycling 01:46
20 NORSGAARD Emma DEN Movistar Team 01:46

Volta NXT Classic – 191Km

1 KIELICH Timo BEL Alpecin-Deceuninck 04:31:53
2 EENKHOORN Pascal NED Lotto Dstny 00:02
3 UHLIG Henri GER Alpecin-Deceuninck 00:07
4 BUSATTO Francesco ITA Intermarché-Wanty 00:07
5 MEENS Johan BEL Bingoal WB 00:09
6 JOHANNINK Jelle NED TdT-Unibet 00:09
7 BAYER Tobias AUT Alpecin-Deceuninck 00:09
8 BLACKMORE Joseph GBR Israel Premier Tech Academy 00:09
9 VAN DEN BROEK Frank NED Dev. Team dsm-firmenich PostNL 00:09
10 VANHOUCKE Harm BEL Lotto Dstny 00:12
11 MENTEN Milan BEL Lotto Dstny 01:28
12 HOFSTETTER Hugo FRA Israel Premier Tech Academy 01:28
13 VAN SINTMAARTENSDIJK Roel NED Intermarché-Wanty 01:28
14 DE JONG Timo NED VolkerWessels Cycling Team 01:28
15 SAVINO Federico ITA Soudal Quick-Step Devo Team 01:28
16 GUALDI Simone ITA Intermarché-Wanty 01:28
17 CAMPRUBÍ Marcel ESP Q36.5 Pro Cycling Team 01:28
18 CÔTÉ Pier-André CAN Israel Premier Tech Academy 01:28
19 SOENENS Viktor BEL Soudal Quick-Step Devo Team 01:28
20 VAN DER SANDE Tosh BEL Team Visma | Lease a Bike 01:28

GP Miguel Indurain – 198Km


Plomi Foto

1 MCNULTY Brandon USA UAE Team Emirates 04:55:48
2 VAN GILS Maxim BEL Lotto Dstny 00:00
3 ONLEY Oscar GBR Team dsm-firmenich PostNL 00:02
4 IZAGIRRE Ion ESP Cofidis 00:06
5 RYAN Archie IRL EF Education-EasyPost 00:08
6 BATTISTELLA Samuele ITA Astana Qazaqstan Team 00:16
7 CHAMPOUSSIN Clément FRA ARKEA-B&B HOTELS 00:16
8 CRAS Steff BEL TotalEnergies 00:16
9 SCHACHMANN Max GER BORA-hansgrohe 00:16
10 BARCELÓ Fernando ESP Caja Rural-Seguros RGA 00:16
11 BARGUIL Warren FRA Team dsm-firmenich PostNL 00:23
12 BERRADE Urko ESP Equipo Kern Pharma 00:26
13 DEL TORO Isaac MEX UAE Team Emirates 00:31
14 DE PRETTO Davide ITA Team Jayco-AlUla 00:31
15 SIVAKOV Pavel FRA UAE Team Emirates 00:34
16 ARRIETA Igor ESP UAE Team Emirates 00:34
17 BAUDIN Alex FRA Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale 00:36
18 DONOVAN Mark GBR Q36.5 Pro Cycling Team 00:42
19 DOUBLE Paul GBR Team Polti Kometa 00:44
20 DE LA CRUZ David ESP Q36.5 Pro Cycling Team 00:53
21 VERONA Carlos ESP Lidl-Trek 00:53
22 MIQUEL DELGADO Pau ESP Equipo Kern Pharma 01:05
23 GUERREIRO Ruben POR Movistar Team 01:12
24 LEEMREIZE Gijs NED Team dsm-firmenich PostNL 01:17
25 HAMILTON Lucas AUS Team Jayco-AlUla 01:20

ESCAPE FROM HELL-2011 : JOHAN VANSUMMEREN (III/V)

2011: Johan Vansummeren (III/V)

In the end, it’s not always the strongest who wins. Certainly not in cycling, and most definitely not in Paris-Roubaix. On the roads of the Hell of the North, the „strongest“ can just as easily win in the legendary velodrome as get bogged down in the Trouée d’Arenberg. Year after year, the cobblestone crushers crash in the Mons-en-Pévèle sector or collapse in the Carrefour de l’Arbre – and one cannot underestimate the traps of the asphalt either. On these unique roads, an aspirant for glory needs to be strong, but also brave and lucky. Paris-Roubaix smiles on the bold, even those who have been out there the longest. In a race where chaos is always the order of the day, early attackers create unsuspected openings. Conquerors of the Hell of the North, they tell us about their heavenly day on the cobbles.

Johan Vansummeren : „At Roubaix, I knew I had a chance“
4 + 3 + 2 = 9. From 2005 to 2013, nine editions of Paris-Roubaix were dominated by three major forces. There was Tom Boonen, Flanders hero, winner of the Hell of the North on four occasions, like Roger De Vlaeminck in the 1970s. Swiss icon Fabian Cancellara also made his way into the Roubaix legend with three triumphs. The other two editions contested during their reign crowned long-distance attackers specialising in the cobbles, who eventually found an opening to upset the pre-established (but rarely respected) scenarios of Paris-Roubaix.
In 2007, Stuart O’Grady achieved his conquest by taking part in the early breakaway before he surged in the final. In 2011, Johan Vansummeren was “at the back of the pack“ when the breakaway set off. The Trouée d’Arenberg was his winning launchpad, almost 100 kilometres away from the André-Pétrieux velodrome. At the same time, Boonen was lamenting a puncture. As for Fabian Cancellara, he remained behind, alongside the other main favourites, led by world champion Thor Hushovd, Vansummeren’s teammate in the ranks of Garmin-Cervélo.
Winner in Roubaix a year earlier (ahead of Hushovd, 2nd), Cancellara eventually unleashed his power. The gap to the front of the race had shrunk to around twenty seconds with 30 kilometres to go. But Vansummeren didn’t wait for anyone en route to the greatest success of his career. The Belgian suffered right to the end, with a puncture just outside of the Vélodrome. Still, he fulfilled the prophecy of his boss Jonathan Vaughters, who was convinced that Vansummeren, even more than Hushovd, held the key to breaking the Boonen-Cancellara lock.

KM 0. TOO EARLY TO MOVE : „I wasn’t going to jostle and lose energy“
„At the start, I was free – I didn’t have to do anything for the team leaders. Thor Hushovd had two riders working for him, [Roger] Hammond and [Andreas] Klier, and I could do my own thing. Up until the first sector in Troisvilles, I stayed at the back of the pack. You have to make a choice: either you try to get into the breakaway, or you try to preserve your legs as much as possible. That’s also a risk. If there’s a lot of wind, you can’t afford to lag behind. But that day, I told myself that I wasn’t going to jostle and lose energy. My idea was not to worry about the race for the first 100 kilometres. It was only in the last ten kilometres before Troisvilles that I started to work my way up to the front of the peloton.”

KM 98. SURVIVING THE FIRST COBBLES : „There are crashes, the peloton splits“
„The first cobbles in Paris-Roubaix are always dangerous. I was talking about it again last week with a friend: ‘We never talk about the first sectors, it’s not five stars… But there’s always tension.’ You have two hundred riders and everyone wants to be in the top ten. There are crashes, the peloton splits… OK, it comes back, but it takes energy. You have to fight beforehand and if you enter the cobbles in fifth or sixth position, you can even allow yourself to drop back a little. It’s all about being in the safety zone and staying well placed to avoid any splits.”

KM 172. ARENBERG, THE LAUNCH PAD : „Lotto pulled and pulled and pulled“
„At Arenberg, there isn’t really a safe zone any more. Even in second place, if the guy in front of you crashes, there’s no room. And if you have a mechanical… I was able to go through without having to push too hard. And as soon as we came out of the cobbles, [Jurgen] Roelandts attacked. I was on his wheel and off we went. We quickly caught up with the breakaway and then Lotto had three riders [Roelandts, André Greipel and David Boucher]. It was magnificent. They didn’t ask for anything, they just pulled and pulled and pulled… And I was around tenth place [he whistles]. They carried me for nearly 70 kilometres, until we battled it out in the finale with [Lars] Bak, [Maarten] Tjallingi… At no point did I think about the gap or the chasing riders. Anyway, the situation changes a lot. And as soon as there are only three or four of us in front, it’s a mano a mano.”

KM 242. THE RIGHT TURN ON THE CARREFOUR : „Tjallingi was five metres away“
„I felt really good. And I know the Carrefour de l’Arbre quite well, the corners, the first left-right… And after about a kilometre, there’s a left-hand bend… And that’s where I went really fast. Tjallingi was five metres from my wheel. He never came back. I had good legs, a clear head and my experience of Paris-Roubaix, the recons… Even today, you leave me in Troisvilles and I’ll take you to Roubaix, with my eyes closed! But there, I wasn’t at ease. In the last sector before Roubaix, my wheel hit a cobblestone. I thought to myself: ‘ouch…‘ And in the last three kilometres, my rim was touching the road. It was a bit of a panic, I was really stressed. On the videos, you can see that I entered the velodrome with a soft tubular. But it worked out.”

KM 256.5. ELATION IN ROUBAIX AND LOMMEL : „I bought a few tons of beer“
„It was total madness. I was so proud, so happy. When I signed my contract with Garmin, I told Vaughters: ‘I know I can’t win many races… But Roubaix, I can do it.’ Then, just because you can doesn’t mean you’re going to win! But at Roubaix, I knew I had a chance. The team organised dinner that evening, then we left around midnight. And when I arrived in my town [Lommel], there must have been 2,000 people in the streets. The police were there, the roads were blocked, there was the mayor, the TV cameras… I bought a few tons of beer, stayed for an hour, an hour and a half, and then went home. I was dead.“

Johan Vansummeren :
Born on 4th February 1981 in Lommel (Belgium)
9 participations in the Tour de France
9 participations in Paris-Roubaix :
• Winner in 2011 / 5th in 2009 / 8th in 2008 / 9th in 2012
• Winner of Tour de Pologne 2007 (stage 7 and general classification)
• Winner of Liège-Bastogne-Liège Espoirs in 2003

Route Adélie de Vitré – 177 Km


Plomi Foto

1 BIERMANS Jenthe BEL ARKEA-B&B HOTELS 04:03:27
2 DUJARDIN Sandy FRA TotalEnergies 00:00
3 DELETTRE Alexandre FRA St Michel-Mavic-Auber 93 00:00
4 GAUDU David FRA Groupama-FDJ 00:00
5 BEVORT Carl-Frederik DEN Uno-X Mobility 00:00
6 LABROSSE Jordan FRA Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale 00:00
7 BERASATEGI Xabier ESP Euskaltel-Euskadi 00:02
8 ISIDORE Noa FRA Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale 00:02
9 BRAZ AFONSO Clément FRA CIC U Nantes Atlantique 00:02
10 DALBY Simon DEN Uno-X Mobility 00:09
11 COSTIOU Ewen FRA ARKEA-B&B HOTELS 00:09
12 DVERSNES Fredrik NOR Uno-X Mobility 00:14
13 COSNEFROY Benoît FRA Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale 00:18
14 HOBBS Noah GBR Groupama-FDJ 00:20
15 CARDIS Romain FRA St Michel-Mavic-Auber 93 00:20
16 ABERASTURI Jon ESP Euskaltel-Euskadi 00:20
17 FOUCHE James NZL Euskaltel-Euskadi 00:20
18 COUANON Jonathan FRA Nice Métropole Côte d’Azur 00:20
19 VENTURINI Clément FRA ARKEA-B&B HOTELS 00:20
20 MAGLI Filippo ITA VF Group-Bardiani CSF-Faizanè 00:20