At 22, Remco Evenepoel rejuvenated a little more on Sunday the Doyenne of the classic cyclists, Liège-Bastogne-Liège, removed alone the day of the serious injury of his teammate, the world champion Julian Alaphilippe.
The Frenchman, who will be kept under observation in Herentals (northern Belgium) where he was directed, suffers from a fractured scapula and a pneumothorax as well as two broken ribs, after being caught in a big massive fall, according to a statement from his team.
His Belgian teammate Ilan Van Wilder is suffering from a broken jaw.
The Frenchman fell at the same time as part of the peloton about sixty kilometers from the finish, on the descent leading to the Col du Rosier.
Alaphilippe found himself several meters from the road, on the right side.
“I saw Julian 5 or 6 meters below and it was an emotional shock,” said Romain Bardet, the first to rescue the world champion, after the finish.
“No one was coming and he really needed help. It was an emergency. Julian couldn’t move or breathe. He felt conscious but he couldn’t really speak,” added Bardet.
Alaphilippe, 29, fell three times in two months. He rode a spectacular sun during the Strade Bianche at the beginning of March then fell again, without consequence however, in the Brabant Arrow on April 13.
This assessment, which shadows the end of spring and the beginning of the summer of the double world champion (what will happen to the Tour de France?), is the bad news of the day for the Quick-Step team fulfilled by the great performance of Evenepoel.
The young Belgian led a large-scale offensive in the last 30 kilometers. A year after the success of Slovenian Tadej Pogacar (absent on Sunday), the winner of the Tour de France barely a few months older during his victorious sprint in a small committee in 2021.
Evenepoel, to whom an entire country promises a great destiny despite his serious fall in August 2020, took over on the list of Belgian victories from Philippe Gilbert. Eleven years later, Gilbert took part in the Doyenne for the last time, as did the Spanish veteran Alejandro Valverde, four times victorious and again placed on the Quai des Ardennes (7th) on Sunday.
On this festive day for Belgian cycling, two other national riders climbed the podium. Quinten Hermans, a cyclo-cross specialist, settled the sprint for second place, 48 seconds behind the winner, ahead of Belgian champion Wout van Aert, who was making his debut in the Doyenne.
Also a beginner on roads that he knows by heart, Evenepoel got everyone to agree with a violent start at the top of the Côte de la Redoute. Behind him, the pursuit led most often by the hitherto ubiquitous Bahrain team placed the group about forty seconds at the foot of the last hill, Roche-aux-Faucons, where Evenepoel distanced the last survivor of the morning breakaway, Frenchman Bruno Armirail.
Bardet’s gesture
“I had chills on the climb,” said Evenepoel, very moved at the finish, about the ovations of a public who consider him a prodigy since his demonstrations in the junior category and his sensational debut at the age of 19, in the elite, when he won the Clasica San Sebastian.
His memorable crash in a downhill Tour of Lombardy the following summer added to interest in the former footballer, who later came to cycling. His actions and gestures are dissected, his technical weaknesses (especially in the descents) analyzed, at the risk of excessive pressure for him to succeed Lucien Van Impe, the last Belgian winner of the Tour de France in 1976.
For the time being, Evenepoel is relishing the success that saved the hitherto failed spring of its Quick-Step team in the classics. “It’s the race of my dreams”, had repeated the young Belgian before the start of the 257 kilometers, convinced that the Doyenne, by its demanding profile (4500 m of elevation gain) and the repetition of the coasts in the deep valleys of the Ardennes , could suit him.
“I can say today that I have returned to my best level and that I am among the best in the world,” said the winner of the day.
“He was the strongest,” admitted van Aert, satisfied with his third place. Especially after being slightly off the chase group in Roche-aux-Faucons, the ultimate difficulty which sounded the death knell for the hopes of Benoît Cosnefroy (24th) and Valentin Madouas (34th).
But the best French chances had disappeared with Alaphilippe, swept away by the massive fall that occurred downhill 60 kilometers from the finish and rescued initially by Romain Bardet. “We don’t ride a bike for that,” Bardet then reacted. “The last time I saw such a fall was William Bonnet’s fall on the Tour in 2015.”
