2019 UCI Road World Championships

Annemiek van Vleuten Goes Solo From 100km To Win World Title

Annemiek van Vleuten Goes Solo From 100km To Win World Title

The 149.4km run from Bradford to Harrogate was largely free of the rain that has dogged these UCI world championships in Yorkshire, England.

Sep 28, 2019 by FloBikes Staff
Annemiek van Vleuten Goes Solo From 100km To Win World Title

Dutch ace Annemiek van Vleuten pulled off a major gamble Saturday launching a solo attack from 100km out to win the women's road race world title as a huge, festive crowds cheered her home at Harrogate.

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The vast crowds Yorkshire has become known for at cycling events, cheered van Vleuten home to her first world road race title as she beat her compatriot Anna van der Breggen by 2min 15sec with Australia's Amanda Spratt taking third a few second farther adrift.

The 36-year-old van Vleuten attacked on a steep climb at Lofthouse early in the 149.4km (92.8miles) run from Bradford, which was largely free of the rain that has dogged these UCI world championships in Yorkshire, England.

Cresting the summit of the day's toughest climb just an hour into the race van Vleuten had pulled almost a minute clear of a select group of rivals.

Her pursuers appeared bamboozled by the depth of the attack as the Dutch veteran ripped up the rule book as she unleashed a towering performance from 104km away from the finish line

Even as the best of the rest took it in turns to lead up the pursuit, van Vleuten slowly but surely stretched her lead.

Eventually, the American Chloe Dygert, winner of the time-trial in midweek, set off on a doomed solo chase some 40km out.

Dygert, a 22-year-old powerhouse in pink shoes, might have been better served working a deal with the other pursuers as she never truly got clear of them and eventually cracked to finish fourth.

With the rain holding off over the latter part of the race, crowds packed the hilly and town-centre sections along the roads used when the Tour de France spent four days here in 2014 and during the subsequent Tour de Yorkshire, established in its wake.

"Everyone was cheering for me along the way it was so exciting," said the sunny van Vleuten with a broad smile.

"I wanted to go hard all the time. It was crazy, I must be a little crazy to attack from that far," she said.

"I trained a lot of hours, I had so many emotions

"My mother is here and my father is here with me in the form of these ear-rings he bought me at the Rio Olympics," said the new world champion.

At the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro van Vleuten was on course for the road race title before being knocked unconscious when hitting a concrete slab on a descent.

She recovered to win the time-trial world title in 2017 and 2018 at Bergen and Innsbruck.