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Mathieu van der Poel defends Paris-Roubaix title with another long-range attack

Mathieu van der Poel defends Paris-Roubaix title with another long-range attack

Incroyable. This spring Mathieu van der Poel attacked 44 km out to win E3 Saxo Bank, 45 km out in take a hat trick of Tour of Flanders titles, and in Sunday’s 121st Paris-Roubaix he made the winning move on a three-star sector of cobbles almost 60 km from the famous velodrome. Only Andrei Tchmil’s famous 1994 Hell of the North winning attack was longer, and marginally at that. The Dutchman has two consecutive Paris-Roubaix titles and six Monument victories.

The winning move on the Orchies sector.

The Course

Over brutal 257.6 km, the 121st Paris-Roubaix featured 55 km of cobbled roads spread out over 30 sectors starting at the 97-km mark. The five-star sectors were infamous: number 20 Trouée d’Arenberg (with its neato new chicane), 2.3 km long; number 12 Mons-en-Pévèle, 3 km; and number 4 Carrefour de l’Arbre, 2.1 km. The race ended in the famous Roubaix velodrome.

The daunting route. Profile by La Flamme Rouge

The Canadian contingent was Guillaume Boivin and Riley Pickrell making his Monument debut.

Pickrell in the Tour de la Provence in February. Photo: Sirotti

There were crashes in the frantic opening 97 km, a pace that ensured a record winning time. An octet of breakaways got clear and made it through the first four sectors of cobbles before being swallowed up, the peloton having been split by echelons heading into *** Viesly à Briastre. Alpecin-Deceuninck powered the first 30-strong group onto ***Vertain à Saint-Martin-sur-Écaillon with Mads Pedersen, Stefan Küng and late addition Tom Pidcock in the fold. Boivin was in Group 3.

Josh Tarling of Ineos was disqualified for hanging onto a team car. He held onto the commissaires’ car to remonstrate.

Tarling gets the boot and then gets to vent.

Alpecin kept marshalling the race a minute ahead of larger chase group, bumping over two and three-star sectors. An Alpecin near-disaster at the business end of the lead group on ****Haveluy à Wallers meant that Lidl-Trek was able to take the reins.

Trouée d’Arenberg

The chicane brought some riders almost to a standstill. Pedersen led into the trench. Van der Poel attacked with his teammate Jasper Philipsen, Pedersen and Mick van Dijke on his tail.

Van der Poel drills in on the Arenberg.

Philipsen was lost to a flat. Ten chasers including Pidcock and Küng clawed back the MvdP trio. Philipsen then returned. Pedersen punctured on ***Wallers à Hélesmes. A trio of Nils Politt, Küng and van der Poel’s teammate Gianni Vermeersch dashed…

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