Widespread descriptions of Kigali’s Road World Championships course as the ‘hardest ever’ were seemingly confirmed by the results sheet for the elite men on Sunday, as just 30 riders completed the course, the lowest total since 1995.
The last time so few riders were able to finish an elite men’s road race was in Duitama, Colombia, in 1995, when just 20 riders crossed the final line, with Spain’s Abraham Olano overcoming a late puncture to somehow stay upright in the closing kilometres and take the victory.
Prior to that, the lowest total came in one of the hardest-fought World Championships in history in 1980 in Sallanches, when Bernard Hinault’s triumph on a very hilly Alpine circuit saw just 14 riders finish.
Kigali’s total of 5,475 metres of vertical gain and 33 climbs has only been surpassed in the Worlds by the all-time record of 5,844 metres of vertical climbing in Nurburgring, Germany in 1966, and it is slightly higher than Duitama (5,460 metres), too.
Only nine Worlds circuits have ever had more than 5,000 metres of vertical gain, according to L’Équipe: Apart from Duitama, Nurburgring and Kigali, there’s also: Chambéry, France (5,439 metres, 1989); Solingen, Germany (5,280m, 1954); Montréal, Canada (5,187m, 1974); Lugano, Switzerland, (5,145m, 1996); Utsunomiya, Japan (5,130m, 1991) and Benidorm, Spain (5,112m, 1992).
The cliché that ‘it’s the riders, not the course, that makes it hard can’t be forgotten either, and another factor that could have been important was the high speed throughout the race. The opening early break of seven gained a scant three minutes at most before the chase behind in earnest, far less than usual and contributing to the high average.
Then, after Tadej Pogačar first attacked so far from the finish, 107 kilometres out, there was no let-up all the way to the line, with an average speed…
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