Close to the summit of the Alto do Fóia climb, a statue of Remco Evenepoel commemorates his 2020 breakthrough win on the Volta ao Algarve’s toughest ascent, his left arm punching the sky in a timeless reminder of his first-ever victory on a mountaintop finish.
Four years on in the same scenario, as dense mist enshrouded the top of the exposed, treeless climb and a vicious Atlantic wind and occasional heavy rain shower left race followers shivering, the Belgian could not repeat his single-arm victory salute.
Instead, the Soudal-QuickStep rider had to settle for crossing the line in second place behind Dani Martínez (Bora-Hansgrohe), following a two-up sprint duel with the Colombian and defending champion of the Volta ao Algarve.
But despite his defeat, as he talked to journalists while warming down, sheltered from the summit’s gale-force winds and cold by the portico of a local craft shop, Evenepoel singled out the multiple positives of the day. These ranged from a performance where his team made all the running in the final 20 kilometres, and a second place overall, four seconds behind Martínez.
It leaves him excellently placed to bid for the top spot in the weekend’s key stages, a time trial on Sunday and the ascent of the short, sharp Alto de Malhao on Sunday.
“I’m happy with second, I’m pleased. The team did a lot of really good work,” he told journalists.
“With the headwind and this strong breakaway, it all worked out a bit differently to how I’d imagined.” From that breakaway, the last survivor, longstanding 2023 Giro d’Italia Andreas Leknessund (Uno-X Mobility), was only caught seven kilometres from the line.
“The strongest guys were up there at the finish, and the only error I made was launching my final sprint too early, with 300 metres to go. But I wanted to surprise the other guys.
“But losing just a few seconds of time bonus is no catastrophe. The last two stages of the race are both very good for me, and now I just have to get through Friday’s stage so I’m well placed for the weekend.”
Evenepoel paid tribute to how Martínez had played out the finish, putting him in the wind after ‘closing the door’ on him in the sprint. “That wasn’t a problem, it was intelligent of him,” he said.
“If I’d been on [teammate] Mikel’s [Landa] wheel rather than on Sepp Kuss’, maybe I’d have had a better chance today. But that’s the kind of automatism Mikel is going to learn, both for the last stage [also an uphill…
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