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Remco Evenepoel retains his time trial title

Despite a big scare at the start and a power meter failure, Remco Evenepoel retained his world title in the time trial on Sunday in Zurich less than two months after his triumph at the Olympics.

Virtually invincible in the solo exercise for two years, the Belgian became the first runner in history to win the Olympic and world time trial titles in the same year, a feat also achieved three hours earlier by the Australian Grace Brown in the women’s event.

On a 46.1 km course that suited him perfectly, he beat two Italians by six and 54 seconds respectively: Filippo Ganna, already second at the Paris Olympics, and the surprising Edoardo Affini who proved superior to favourites like the Briton Josh Tarling (4th) and the Swiss Stefan Küng (8th).

“It’s crazy, I got back into shape just in time,” commented Evenepoel, who managed to remobilise after his fantastic double this summer at the Paris Olympics, in the time trial and the road race.

But it wasn’t all that easy. The 24-year-old Flemish prodigy even called his time trial “the most complicated of (his) life” after he had a big scare in the starting gate when he blew his chain a few seconds before the countdown.

Although his team had already brought him a spare bike, he finally managed to set off on time on his planned gold-painted machine and take the lead from the first intermediate time.

But that was not all. Deprived of a power sensor, broken down, he had to do the entire course without this tool that has become indispensable to the modern cyclist and which allows him, especially in a time trial, to follow a performance plan established in advance.

“My chain fell off a minute before the start and the power meter wasn’t working. I had to go by feel. It was difficult to keep the right pace because I was going a bit blindly,” commented the Belgian, who gained up to 19 seconds at the second intermediate time before faltering slightly towards the end.

– Grace Brown’s Dream Final Season –

“I struggled in the last 2/3 kilometres. But in a championship you don’t care about the gaps. In the end it was another good day,” stressed the Belgian who raised both arms, a rare gesture in a time trial, as he crossed the line before falling into the arms of his wife, Oumi.

With this new rainbow jersey, the Soudal-Quick Step prodigy continues to fill his trophy cabinet during a season that also saw him take third place in the Tour de .

He can still push the limits next Sunday during the road race, where he will be one of the main favourites with Tadej Pogacar.

In the women’s category, Australian Grace Brown achieved the Olympic-World Championship double, finishing 16 seconds ahead of Dutchwoman Demi Vollering and 56 seconds ahead of American Chloe Dygert.

Long a regular in places of honour, the Australian, who will retire at the end of the season at the age of 32, is having a dream final year which also saw her win the great Belgian classic Liège-Bastogne-Liège.

“A lot of people tell me I can’t stop after this. But no, it’s always been planned. I feel blessed to have had such a career and to end it in such a way,” said Brown, eager to return to her continent that she misses so much.

jk/jde

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