Cycling News

How to lose a race astonishingly badly

Two cyclists do an early victory salute and lose the race in France

We’ve seen it so many times in cycling. The early victory salute that is just a bit too early, and results in someone stealing your win. As a spectator, it is hard to watch. As the guy who blows the win, it’s probably something that gives you nightmares for years.

Painful to watch early victory salute ends in disappointment

There’s also those brutal days when the rider who wins the bunch sprint didn’t know they were racing for second.

Bettiol thought he won today’s stage of Tour de Suisse…but there was a rider ahead

it’s happened so often in cycling that it is still surprising to see it happen again.

How to lose a bike race…twice

It happens to riders at all levels. Even Annemiek van Vleuten thought she had won Olympic Gold…except she’d been riding for second.

The top 4 most unexpected moments of the Olympic women’s road race

But all of these many screw-ups in cycling history now take second place to this collossal whoopsie. At the Critérium Saint Symphorien sur Coise on Saturday in the open race, two teammates thought they had a beautiful win. Two riders from the EC Saint-Étienne Loire team, Remi Arsac and Charly Merle were coming to the line with a victory in hand. Echoing Bernard Hinault and Greg LeMond at Alpe d’Huez in 196, the two riders started to do a joint victory salute. That’s when disaster struck. You can hear people in the crowd yelling at them to keep going…but it was too late.

Simon Ruet (VC Villefranche Beaujolais) came around them in literal “come-from-behind” victory.

Oh, this is painful to watch. That must have been a fun podium afterward.

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Canadian Cycling Magazine…