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Alberto Bettiol takes shock win at Tour of Flanders

EF Education First rider rides away to first pro victory after attacking on Oude Kwaremont

EF Education First’s Alberto Bettiol has pulled off a shock win at the Tour of Flanders today.

The 25-year-old has ridden the race on three previous occasions, his only finish being in 2017 when he was 24th.

Today, however, he attacked a strong group containing several of the pre-race favourites on the Oude Kwaremont, the last but one of the day’s cobbled climbs.

His move came with 17 kilometres of the 267-kilometre race from Antwerp to Oudenarde remaining, and Bettiol was clear at the head of the race as he headed up the final climb.

Behind him, riders including CCC’s Greg van Avermaet and Mathieu van der Poel of Corendon Circus – who had crashed earlier and chased back to the front group – were trying to close the gap.

But with Bettiol’s team mate Sebastian Langeveld working hard to close down any threats and the chasers lacking organisation, he crossed the line 27 seconds ahead of Deceuninck-Quick Step’s Kasper Asgreen, with Alexander Kristoff of UAE Team Emirates third.

After his win, Bettiol said: "My first victory, I just don't believe it. I was feeling really good, my team said, 'If you can, just go,' so I closed my eyes and I just went.

"I looked round at the top and I had a really good gap so the team told me to just keep pushing – the last 14 kilometres was the longest of my life."

Defending champion Niki Terpstra was taken to hospital after an early crash involving multiple riders that appeared to leave the Dutchman unconscious for around a minute.

Bettiol’s victory – his first ever as a professional – is the first  by an Italian in the men’s race since Alessandro Ballan’s win in 2007, but came hours after their compatriot, the Team Virtu Cycling rider Marta Bastianelli, had won the women’s edition of the race.

The 31-year-old former world champion was one of four riders to get away on the Oude Kwaremont and won a three-way sprint from Mitchelton-Scott’s Annemiek van Vleuten, second, and Bigla Pro Cycling’s Cecilie Uttrup Ludwig, who finished third.

"I'm really happy about this incredible result, it was a very hard race but I pulled it off," said Bastianelli. "I've won some big races but this is a very, very important one for me."

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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9 comments

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maviczap | 5 years ago
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Pleased to see a small budget team take the glory from the favourites, wish I'd had a tenner on him.

Classic place for the move he made

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kil0ran | 5 years ago
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DP

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kil0ran | 5 years ago
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Fantastic watch. Was hoping Van der Poel was going to come through after that crash. Serious handling skills later on in the run in too, had the bike completely sideways after hitting a gully.

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CXR94Di2 | 5 years ago
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Stupid tactics by the chasers, if only they worked together to catch him, then fight it out for the win. Kristof took the bunch sprint, so would of likely won

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OnTheRopes replied to CXR94Di2 | 5 years ago
3 likes

CXR94Di2 wrote:

Stupid tactics by the chasers, if only they worked together to catch him, then fight it out for the win. Kristof took the bunch sprint, so would of likely won

Well it's easy to say stupid tactics, but nobody wants to sacrifice themselves to tow others up who will beat you in the sprint, that's how bike racing works sometimes. especially in a large group as it was there will always be those who sit in. Had it been a chase group of 4 then more likely they would have worked together unless one of them was an outstanding sprinter and then it's a similar scenario.

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alotronic replied to OnTheRopes | 5 years ago
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OnTheRopes wrote:

CXR94Di2 wrote:

Stupid tactics by the chasers, if only they worked together to catch him, then fight it out for the win. Kristof took the bunch sprint, so would of likely won

Well it's easy to say stupid tactics, but nobody wants to sacrifice themselves to tow others up who will beat you in the sprint, that's how bike racing works sometimes. especially in a large group as it was there will always be those who sit in. Had it been a chase group of 4 then more likely they would have worked together unless one of them was an outstanding sprinter and then it's a similar scenario.

Indeed - too big a group at the end and a perfect attack from B to make the favourites look tardy. Not enough done to 'force a selection' as Sean kelly would say on the last two climbs by the big guns. Great to watch.

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Eli replied to CXR94Di2 | 5 years ago
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CXR94Di2 wrote:

Stupid tactics by the chasers, if only they worked together to catch him, then fight it out for the win. Kristof took the bunch sprint, so would of likely won

I say it's good tactics by the non sprinters. It was up to the sprinters to oganise a chase as they stood to benefit the most if it all came back together. Or even Quickstep who had I think 3 riders in that group.

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Boss Hogg | 5 years ago
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well desrved, Bettiol's win!

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Jack Osbourne snr | 5 years ago
3 likes

Thoroughly enjoyed that.

Great breakaway by Bettiol and I found myself shouting at the telly encouraging the chasing group to carry on playing cat and mouse with one another and let him get further up the road.

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