Cycling World Championships 2023: Mathieu van der Poel wins men's road race after crash
- Published
UCI Cycling World Championships 2023 |
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Hosts: Glasgow and across Scotland Dates: 3-13 August |
Coverage: Watch live across BBC TV and iPlayer, with 200 hours of live streams on the BBC's digital platforms |
Dutchman Mathieu van der Poel recovered from a nasty crash to claim victory in a thrilling men's road race at the Cycling World Championships in Glasgow, which was earlier halted by a protest.
The 28-year-old attacked in the last 25km and held on despite breaking a shoe as he fell on rain-soaked roads.
Belgium's Wout van Aert took silver and Tadej Pogacar of Slovenia outsprinted Denmark's Mads Pedersen for bronze.
Five people were arrested after a protest caused a 50-minute delay.
The 271.1km route from Edinburgh, which was paused after about 80km of racing for the protest, ended with 10 laps of a 14.3km circuit of Glasgow's city centre.
"It means everything. It was one of my biggest goals and to win it today is amazing," Van der Poel told BBC Sport.
"It almost completes my career in my opinion, it's almost my biggest victory on the road."
On his fall, he added: "I was not taking risks, I don't know, all of a sudden I was on the ground. It was super slippery.
"To still manage to pull it off, I wouldn't say it makes it nicer as I would have loved to have stayed on the bike.
"But if it cost me a world title, I would have not slept for a couple of days."
One-day classics specialist Van der Poel, winner of Paris-Roubaix and Milan-San Remo this year, countered with an explosive move as Italian leader Alberto Bettiol was about to be caught.
The Dutch rider had taken an advantage of more than 30 seconds before suffering a crash after sliding off his bike on a tight right-hand corner with more than 15km remaining.
But he immediately got back on to continue his pursuit of gold, with a broken shoe, and recovered to begin the final circuit with a 32-second lead over a high-quality chasing trio consisting of Van Aert, Pogacar and Pedersen.
Van der Poel, wearing a shredded jersey and shorts because of the crash, was roared on to victory as he made his final ascent of Montrose Street before entering the last kilometre - placing his hands on his head in celebration after finishing one minute and 37 seconds clear in a quality field.
Defending world champion Remco Evenepoel had been among the main protagonists in a thinning front group as the race reached Glasgow.
However, it was Bettiol who got clear just as rain began to fall with 55km remaining, the weather creating tricky road conditions on the twisting city centre loop.
A crash for Ecuador's Jhonatan Narvaez, similar to Van der Poel's later incident, disrupted the chasing group and led to the final top four getting clear while signalling the end of Evenepoel's title defence.
Owain Doull was the highest-placed British rider in 18th.
Evenepoel came home 25th, one spot ahead of Briton Connor Swift, with national champion Fred Wright among those who did not finish the race.
With about 190km of the race remaining, the front group of riders were abruptly stopped near the Carron Valley Reservoir because of protestors blocking the road.
Great Britain's Doull had been part of a nine-man breakaway which established a seven-minute advantage, with the main peloton halted back down the road to ensure that gap stood as police dealt with the situation.
Environmental group This Is Rigged claimed responsibility for the demonstration and said four of its activists were involved.
Men's road race final results
1. Mathieu Van der Poel (Ned) 6hs 27mins 7secs
2. Wout van Aert (Bel) +1min 37secs
3. Tadej Pogacar (Slo) +1min 45secs
4. Mad Pedersen (Den) same time
5. Stefan Kung (Swi) +3mins 48secs
6. Jasper Stuyven (Bel) same time
7. Matthew Dinham (Aus) "
8. Toms Skujins (Lat) "
9. Tiesj Benoot (Bel) "
10. Alberto Bettiol (Ita) +4mins 3secs