This past weekend the racing season properly began in earnest. Not to detract from the Tour Down Under or the early season racing in warmer climates like the UAE Tour, but for many of us the season only begins when we see racers clattering over musky cobbles, and panicked Italian neo pros wearing every layer imaginable, unable to comprehend that someone would stage a bike race in sideways hail.
After a train journey, a long drive, another train journey, and another long drive I arrived in Ghent, armed with a camera, a press pass and a curious disposition. If you want to know all the tech trends from opening weekend then I’ve already scribbled down my thoughts on where Classics tech is headed, and what we can learn from it for the upcoming season.
Now, though, I’m going to try and bring you a flavour of what the pit area for Omloop Het Niewsblad is like. The sign-on for the men’s and women’s race takes place in an ancient aircraft hanger. It’s a little gloomy, a little grimy, the surfaces are rough and the atmosphere is febrile; a perfect metaphor for the classics season if ever there was one.
Fortunately, the tech was shiny, and the music wasn’t overly intrusive as the riders processed through the clamouring crowds to the stage.
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