Whenever any country or region puts on a bike race, they hope they’re going to attract some big names. The stars of the sport, those that even transcend cycling perhaps, have the ability to put an event on the map just by showing up, and can almost guarantee some exciting racing.
When the race you’re organising is the World Championships, you can have fairly high hopes that many of the world’s very best riders will be there, because one of the sport’s top accolades is up for grabs: the rainbow jersey.
Many of the biggest stars will be there for the road races next weekend, with Tadej Pogačar and Remco Evenepoel headlining the men’s race, whilst Demi Vollering, Elisa Longo Borghini and Pauline Ferrand-Prévot will battle out for the women’s title.
However, plenty of riders won’t be there. Initially planning to go, Jonas Vingegaard pulled out recently, ending the hopes of the iconic Pogačar-Vingegaard rivalry at a World Championships. Former rainbow jersey Mathieu van der Poel will also be absent, as will his long-term foe Wout van Aert. On the women’s side, defending champion Lotte Kopecky won’t be seeking a third term in the rainbow jersey, and prodigious one-day racer Puck Pieterse won’t be there, either.
The reasons for riders skipping these Worlds are numerous. The logistics and expense of getting to Rwanda has seen many European federations – especially those strapped for funding anyway – forced to send reduced delegations. The hard courses have turned others off, with the climb-packed road races just not suitable for many – there’s no point in Mads Pedersen or Lorena Wiebes racing, for example, and Biniam Girmay only latterly decided to race for Eritrea.
The normal issues like injury, fatigue…
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