Switzerland’s Fabian Cancellara kept his composure to win a third Paris-Roubaix title, outdoing Belgium’s Sep Vanmarcke in a session of track cycling tactics at the end of the 254km ride on Sunday.
Cancellara, who won the Queen of the Classics in 2006 and 2010, entered the Roubaix outdoor velodrome, where the finish line was located, for one-and-a-half laps against a rival who is supposed to be the better sprinter.
However, the RadioShack-Leopard rider, who achieved his second Tour des Flandres and Paris-Roubaix double, forced his opponent to a standstill at the velodrome as both men played mind games for position.
Photo: Reuters
Vanmarcke was tricked into starting the sprint and the Blanco rider was leapfrogged on the home straight.
“There was nothing called instinct at the end, it was just a fight,” Cancellara, who started the day as the overwhelming favorite in the absence of reigning champion and fierce rival Tom Boonen of Belgium, told a press conference. “I went to a level sometimes you don’t know how you can do it. I went beyond my limits. I’m happy, but I was probably more happy that the race was finished. Then I had a minute to lie down on the grass, back to planet Earth. I damaged myself probably more than ever.”
“I know I’m supposed to be happy with second, but right now I’m very frustrated,” Vanmarcke said.
Photo: EPA
Dutchman Niki Terpstra won a four-man sprint for third place after the Omega Pharma-Quick-Step team — who were supposed to ride for Frenchman Sylvain Chavanel — and Thord Hushovd’s BMC outfit failed to mount a proper challenge around their designated leaders.
On a sunny, yet cold day in northern France, the battle started early, but Cancellara, who crashed earlier last week in the Scheldeprijs and again while checking out one of the 27 cobbled sections of the Paris-Roubaix, remained focused all day.
With about 135km left, big guns Edvald Boasson Hagen, Geraint Thomas and Taylor Phinney were in a breakaway group which was quickly chased down by Cancellara’s team.
A group of four, including 2007 winner Stuart O’Grady, had an advantage of 1 minute, 40 seconds entering the much-feared Trouee d’Arenberg, a 2,400m cobbled section 96km from the finish.
The lead was down to just over 30 seconds after Phinney had led the bunch through the trench in impressive fashion, but the American eventually vanished out of contention.
Thomas and Filippo Pozzatto of Lampre crashed on a cobbled section with 72km left, but the Italian, second in the race in 2009, made it back into the peloton, just like Norway’s Hushovd after a third puncture.
Frenchman Mathieu Ladagnous of the FDJ team, who had an outside chance, pulled out after his second crash of the day.
France’s Damien Gaudin of Europcar also joined the leading riders, but the lead shrank when Cancellara himself accelerated in front of the peloton in the Auchy-les-Orchies cobbled sector.
After the Mons-en-Pevele sector, 15 riders emerged in front in three groups close to each other.
Vanmarcke and fellow Belgian Stijn Vandenbergh built up a decent gap in front, but Cancellara made his effort in the Bourghelles-Wannehain cobbled sector with only the Czech Republic’s Zdenek Stybar able to match his pace.
Stybar eventually cracked as Vanmarcke and Cancellara powered away toward their duel on the track to raucous applause from a capacity crowd.
Brazil has four teams, more than any other country, in the expanded Club World Cup that kicked off yesterday in the US, but for SE Palmeiras, the competition holds a special meaning: winning it would provide some redemption. Under coach Abel Ferreira since 2020, Palmeiras lifted two Copa Libertadores titles, plus Brazilian league, cup and state championships. Even before Ferreira, it boasted another South American crown and 11 league titles. The only major trophy missing is a world champions’ title. Other Brazilian clubs like Fluminense FC and Botafogo FR, also in the tournament, have never won it either, but the problem for Palmeiras
Badminton world No. 3 Anders Antonsen clinched his first Indonesia Open title yesterday after beating Taiwan’s Chou Tien-chen, while South Korea’s An Se-young won her second championship in Jakarta. The 28-year-old Dane sank world No. 7 Chou at the Indonesian capital’s Istora Senayan arena, winning 22-20, 21-14 in a 60-minute match to secure the prestigious Super 1000 event. Antonsen came out on top in a tightly contested first game before cruising to victory in the second. In a more closely fought women’s singles final, South Korean ace and world No. 1 An fought back from one game down to beat China’s
‘STILL’: In front of a packed New Jersey arena attended by Donald Trump and Mike Tyson, UFC 316 delivered high drama as Merab Dvalishvili retained his title Georgia’s Merab Dvalishvili scored a second-round submission win over Sean O’Malley to retain his bantamweight title at Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) 316 on Saturday, with Kayla Harrison also winning by submission in the co-main event, tapping out Juliana Pena to claim the women’s bantamweight crown. In front of a packed crowd at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey, which included US President Donald Trump and retired heavyweight great Mike Tyson, Dvalishvili, a 34-year-old from the country of Georgia, won the belt in a convincing, although not aesthetically pleasing, unanimous decision. Dvalishvili (19-4) sat on top of the cage and shouted
Manchester City on Monday completed the signing of left-back Rayan Ait-Nouri from Wolverhampton Wanderers for a reported £31 million (US$41.8 million). The 24-year-old Algeria international has signed a five-year contract and will be available for the FIFA Club World Cup, which begins later this week. Ait-Nouri is expected to be just one of a trio of new City faces for that tournament with deals close to completion for AC Milan midfielder Tijjani Reijnders and Olympique Lyonnais playmaker Rayan Cherki. After missing out on a major trophy in the recently completed season for the first time since 2016-2017, City are hoping