Resurgent Remco Evenepoel won the Liege-Bastogne-Liege cycling classic on Sunday after his Quick-Step team leader Julian Alaphilippe was rushed to hospital following a mass crash.
In his first appearance in the race, the 22-year-old Belgian Evenepoel dropped his rivals 30km from the finish of the epic 257km run through the narrow, Ardennes forest lanes to seal a career landmark solo triumph in 6 hours 12 minutes and 38 seconds.
Quinten Hermans was second while Wout van Aert was third for an all-Belgian podium as 12 riders followed Evenepoel over the line 48 seconds adrift on a fast-paced 108th edition of this race known as La Doyenne, the oldest of the five ultra-long one-day âMonumentâ races.
âItâs crazy,â said the winner.
âMy first ever Liege and I win it.â
âI wanted to explode the race on the Redoute (a climb in the industrial neighbourhood outside Liege) and then I managed to cling on,â said the former football apprentice who was double junior world champion in 2018.
Riding the final kilometre through Liege, Remco Evenepoel looked behind to see the extent of his advantage before savouring the moment.
Remco Evenepoel plunged into a ravine two years ago
Evenepoel was billed as the great future hope of cycling until he plunged into a ravine two years ago whilst leading the prestige Tour of Lombardy.
âI thank everyone who believed I would get back to my best level,â he said of his long convalescence.
âI have done that and today Iâm among the best in the world.â
âHe was the best, there was no stopping him,â said third-placed Van Aert.
The victory makes up for an underwhelming classics campaign from the usually dominant Quick-Step side, whose leader Patrick Lefevere insisted on reserving judgement until today.
Remco Evenepoelâs team leader, the two-time defending world champion Alaphilippe fell 60km from home after British rider Tom Pidcock tumbled as the peloton was racing hard, taking down a mass of riders.
The Frenchman flew off the road and downhill where a tree broke his fall and where his mangled bike was abandoned as he was taken away by ambulance.
âThere was great confusion in the peloton, we also didnât know if some of us were involved or not so we hesitated for a couple of minutes,â said Bahrain Victoriousâ Matej Mohoric, hinting the crash had an impact on the outcome.
Alejandro Valverde was caught in the crash, as were Rigoberto Uran, Romain Bardet and Wilco Kelderman as the pack was reduced the pack to 60 riders.
The 2018 world champion Valverde rallied to finish seventh.
By Garrin Lambley © Agence France-Presse
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