Evenepoel wins third consecutive time trial world title

3 hours ago 5

Remco Evenepoel with his gold medalImage source, Getty Images

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Evenepoel won his third consecutive individual time trial world title

ByKatie Stafford

BBC Sport journalist

Remco Evenepoel won his third consecutive individual time trial world title at the Road World Cycling Championships in Rwanda.

The 25-year-old Belgian retained the rainbow jersey by crossing the line in 49 minutes 46.03 seconds after a completely dominant display in the nation's capital Kigali.

Australia's Jay Vine finished one minute 14.80secs behind Evenepoel and Ilan van Wilder clinched third, two minutes 36.07secs down.

"It felt pretty good straight away on the first flat part," Evenepoel told BBC Sport. "I was holding my pace without going over the limit, and then the first climb was actually quite hard along with the last two ones.

"I really pushed it there, and after I tried to keep a pace I could hold.

"I hated the cobbles. It was so, so hard to push through them but in the end I won and that is the most important thing.

"My team-mate Ilan [van Wilder] came third so it is a phenomenal day for us."

Evenepoel, who won Olympic golds in the time trial and the road race at the Paris Games last summer, was the favourite going into the race and it was his to lose after such an impressive first climb.

His pace was so strong that he passed Slovenia's Tour de France winner Tadej Pogacar on the course despite starting a couple of minutes after him.

The championships are being held in Africa for the first time and have been described as the toughest ever because of the steep ascents and high altitude.

There was no representative from Great Britain in the men's race.

Switzerland's Reusser wins women's title

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Brilliant Reusser wins world time trial title

However, Olympic silver medallist Anna Henderson was the sole British entrant in the women's time trial, and finished eighth.

Henderson, 26, crossed the line one minute 37.72secs after Switzerland's Marlen Reusser, who secured her first world championship rainbow jersey.

"I almost can't believe it," Reusser told BBC Sport. "I know it's real and it happened, but I've tried so many times and it didn't work out and now I've made it.

"I went really hard on the climbs, and on the final climb I think I went too hard in the beginning so I was full of lactic acid, but I think it was the right way to pace it."

Anna van der Breggen of the Netherlands took second (+51.89secs), and compatriot Demi Vollering (+1:04.73) finished in third.

The course featured 460m of climbing across 31.2km, but it was the steep cobbled climb of Cote de Kimihurura in the final stage that troubled the riders the most.

Henderson looked set to challenge for a podium finish but struggled to keep her pace on the cobbled climb and could not regain any time with a sprint finish.

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