For the second time in a fortnight, Julian Alaphilippe begins all over again from a familiar place. Two weeks ago, he won atop the Mur de Huy on the opening stage of the Tour de Wallonie only to test positive for COVID-19 a day later. On Sunday, the world champion returns to the fray in the very city where he won that title when he lines out at the Tour of Leuven.
“It’s going to be bizarre to race there on Sunday, especially with such different sensations to last year at the Worlds. It will be a hard race, but I’m looking forward to seeing how I feel,” Alaphilippe told reporters in a video call on Friday afternoon.
The Tour of Leuven was a late addition to Alaphilippe’s programme as he seeks to bank race days ahead of the Vuelta a España. Indeed, his recent COVID-19 diagnosis was in keeping with the tenor of a season blighted by ill fortune. Illness had already hampered the QuickStep-AlphaVinyl rider’s Classics campaign even before his horrific crash at Liège-Bastogne-Liège.
Although Alaphilippe recovered in time to race the French Championships in late June, his condition did not allow him to line out at the Tour de France. Victory amid the friendly confines of the Mur de Huy two weeks ago suggested a corner had been turned only for Alaphilippe to be laid low by COVID-19 and compelled to start all over again.
“Not every year is the same. I’d had a few seasons in a row at a high level, without big setbacks and with good results. This year I haven’t had the wind at my back, so I’ve had to adapt,” said Alaphilippe. “Things haven’t gone how I’d have liked, but you have to take it as it comes. But there’s still the end of the season to come, with the World Championships and Il Lombardia. I hope the season will finish better than it started.”
After racing in the city of his greatest triumph on Sunday, Alaphilippe will return to the site of his first victory next week when he lines out at the Tour de l’Ain for the first time in eight years. As a callow 22-year-old, he beat Dan Martin to the line on the final stage in Arbent in 2014 to land the maiden win of his professional career.
“It’s strange to come back, but I’m also happy to do so because I don’t always have the chance to ride French races close to where I’m from,” Alaphilippe said. “It’s nice to come back to my roots, but it will be three intense days of racing too.”
Intensity is precisely what Alaphilippe is lacking after a staccato 2022 campaign….
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