Welcome to Escape Collective. Please select your language.
Please note that this is an automated translation and it will not be perfect. All articles have been written in English and if anything appears to not make sense, please double check in English.
There were ‘double rainbows all the way’ in Hamme and Hoogerheide as the UCI Cyclocross World Cup drew to a dramatic close this Sunday; reigning world champions Fem van Empel and Mathieu van der Poel gave themselves the very best launchpad for next week’s World Championships, on paper at least. While their dominance prevailed on this late-season weekend, the racing was far more exciting than it might look on paper.
There’s something about extraordinary talent and dramatic rivalries that have the ability to alter the narrative and context in which they play. Someone like contemporary favourites Tadej Pogačar, Mathieu van der Poel, Wout van Aert, Marianne Vos, Annemiek van Vleuten or Lotte Kopecky turns up and wipes the board of all that came before them – sometimes even including their own previous performances, or lack thereof – such that we begin to lament the entertainment and future of the sport, even while we celebrate their phenomenal achievements.
We keep doing it with the Tour de France – which is perhaps not the best example, but let me run with it – in that we’re apparently already bored of the Pogi-Vingegaard rivalry, just as we sat in stunned silence at Pogačar’s dominant double-up in 2021 when we began to speculate just how soon he could break the all-time Tour victories record. But every year another name arrives in the peloton and at the very least adds promise to a future of entertaining Tours.
In cyclocross, last weekend’s bombastic Benidorm round of the World Cup had fireworks, but came with the bitter aftertaste of knowing that we were witnessing the last battle of the ‘Big Three’ this CX season (on the men’s side), and yet, this weekend there’s been no shortage of competition. And in the evidently always-more-exciting women’s races, it’s not been just the Dutch show, not on Sunday anyway, when Blanka Vas was the best of three young underdogs (Marie Schreiber and Zoe Bäckstedt also got their noses in front) who put the top favourites under pressure all the way to the line in Hoogerheide.
Sure, there’s half a lifetime of what might as well be described as franchise storytelling as far as Van der Poel and Van Aert are concerned, but while there have been some alarming displays of dominance in recent seasons and it would be a futile quest to present a real third man to the ensemble (no offence to young Master Pidcock), there’s always been a creditable adversary or two, or four, waiting in the wings. This season, we’ve seen Pim Ronhaar and Thibau Nys come of age, Joris Nieuwenhuis has found a new gear, while Eli Iserbyt, Michael Vanthourenhout and Lars van der Haar remain stalwarts.
The same can be said of this season among the women: focus too long on Van Empel, Lucinda Brand, Puck Pieterse and Ceylin del Carmen Alvarado, and you’ll be surprised by Vas, Bäckstedt, Schreiber, Manon Bakker, etc …
If these past two weekends in particular have had anything to say, it’s that there’s real depth and potential for drama, even when the result ends up as expected. To use the franchise idea again, it’s like a tentpole blockbuster: we know the hero will prevail, but we watch to find out how they do it, and it’s up to those they face and the conditions they find themselves in to provide the entertainment.
If we’re lucky, we’ll get just that and more next weekend in Tábor.