Mathieu Van Der Poel Amazes With Amstel Gold Win
Mathieu Van Der Poel Amazes With Amstel Gold Win
After 266km and 35 leg sapping hills, the 55th edition of the Amstel Gold Race came down to a thrilling and unexpected finale.
Rising star Mathieu van der Poel sprinted to victory in the Amstel Gold on Sunday to give the Dutch a first victory in the sole cycling classic on their soil this century.
"I still can't understand what's happened," said van der Poel after snatching away a victory Frenchman Julian Alaphilippe appeared to have in his grasp.
Alaphilippe, who has been in sparkling form this spring for the dominant Deceuninck-Quick Step team, broke away with Danish Astana rider Jakob Fuglsang with a little more than 35 kilometers to go. With three kilometers left, the two had a lead of 38 seconds.
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But as they started eyeing each other, Pole Michal Kwiatkowski of Sky riding solo, closed the gap. Behind him van der Poel, who rides for Corendon-Circus, launched a frantic pursuit dragging the chasing group with him.
"I was hoping they would look at each other, but I thought it was over, " said van der Poel.
When Kwiatkowski caught the leaders with less than 500 metres to go, van der Poel was not far behind.
"It was only 300 metres from the line that I realised that it was possible to win," said van der Poel.
An exhausted Alaphilippe launched a sprint but was overtaken by the speeding van der Poel, who was far enough ahead by the finish to cradle his face in his hands as he crossed the line. The 24-year old became the first Dutch winner since Michael Boogerd in 1999.
"I started my sprint far too far out because I wanted to win. But I kept going to the line," he said.
Van der Poel, the Dutch prodigy, has begun to deliver on his promise.
He is the son of Adri van der Poel, who won six one-day classics, and the grandson of Raymond Poulidor who won the Vuelta a Espana and finished on the Tour de France podium eight times.
'I Outdid Myself'
The 24-year-old is also a double cyclocross world champion and intends to compete in mountain biking, rather than road racing, at the Tokyo Olympics next year.
"Yes, I outdid myself, above all because I felt I still had energy in my legs," he said. "In such classics, it's very difficult for everyone but, in the end, I do not know how we did it."
Simon Clarke of Education First, who followed van der Poel's wheel in the sprint, was second.
Fugslang, who had at one point been in a two-man race, finished third.
"We made a tactical mistake because we did not get the right information on the gaps," said Fuglsang, who finished third. "But I'm happy to have a podium finish."
Kwiatkowski was swallowed by the pack and finished 11th.
"There was a way I could have won," the Polish rider said.
"I thought it would be impossible to get back to Alaphilippe and Fuglsang," he said. "I was doing my best so that the riders of the group did not catch up but in the end they came back and Mathieu van der Poel was the strongest."