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“I don’t know what you’re trying to get at. What went wrong?” Jasper Stuyven takes swipe at media after Belgium accused of underperforming at world championships

“I don’t know why you guys are always looking to put a strong Belgian team in a negative spotlight,” the 31-year-old said after yesterday’s road race

As the postmortem began on yet another silver medal for Wout van Aert at a world championships at the hands of Mathieu van der Poel, Van Aert’s Belgian teammate Jasper Stuyven hit out at what he regarded as the media’s highly critical analysis of the team’s tactics and approach, which the 31-year-old claimed was intent on casting “a strong Belgian team in a negative light”.

As has been the case in recent years, Belgium headed to Scotland with arguably the strongest team in the elite men’s road race, and that strength in depth proved essential as they infiltrated four riders into the decisive split.

While Van Aert couldn’t prevent Van der Poel riding away to glory, he did steal a march on Tadej Pogačar and Mads Pedersen to secure second, and Jasper Stuyven and Tiesj Benoot also took sixth and ninth respectively. Defending champion Remco Evenepoel, however, faded to 25th after several early attacks.

Despite the close but no cigar feel of Belgium’s road race, Lidl-Trek rider Stuyven didn’t take too kindly to being questioned after the race about the national squad’s apparent underperformance, such is the glare of the media scrutiny in his home country.

> “A few corners too many”: Riders react to claims that Glasgow city circuit was a “death race” and “designed in a pub” after Mathieu van der Poel wins epic battle

When asked by a British reporter if the chase behind Van der Poel was hampered due to Belgium’s inability to insert another rider into the decisive final move, despite having numbers in the group, a visibly annoyed Stuyven said: “I wasn’t there, you should ask Wout. I don’t know what you’re trying to get at. What went wrong? We rode a good race, there were four guys in the front. All our leaders were there.

“And then one guy is able to ride away and win by a minute and a half. So, what went wrong? Not much, really. I don’t know why you guys are always looking to put a strong Belgian team in a negative spotlight.”

He continued: “I think we did a good race. And maybe second for Wout is a bigger disappointment for him than it is for others.

“Van der Poel won by a minute and a half, he was stronger than the rest and he’s a champion.”

Belgium at the 2023 world road race championships (Alex Broadway/SWpix.com)

(Alex Broadway/SWpix.com)

Meanwhile, Evenepoel, who criticised Belgium’s tactics at the 2021 worlds, when Julian Alaphilippe soloed to the rainbow jersey in Leuven, also defended his team’s race.

When asked if the Belgian squad had lived up to its hefty billing, the 2022 world champion said: “Of course – out of a group of 20 guys, we were in there with five, I think that’s amazing. We did our best, we tried to take control of the race for as long as possible, and on a course like this it’s not easy at all.

“It would have been better if we’d had two or three guys in the front group, but Wout was there and he did a great race. We tried to control the attacks from behind a few times, which made the gap grow quite quickly.

“I think we did our best, though I wouldn’t say second was the highest place possible for Wout, but when you see Mathieu going off, crashing, and going off after again, it’s pretty amazing, so I think he deserved it.”

After obtaining a PhD, lecturing, and hosting a history podcast at Queen’s University Belfast, Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

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6 comments

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oceandweller | 1 year ago
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& Wiggo's also Belgian - born in Ghent, English mother, Australian father.

Apropos which, nice trick question for a pub quiz: who was the first English rider to win the TdF? Pedant's answer, there hasn't been one!

Avatar
richliv | 1 year ago
1 like

Er, and MvdP was born in.... Belgium. The one that got away, then. But it is really a 1-2 for Belgium.

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Rendel Harris replied to richliv | 1 year ago
1 like

richliv wrote:

Er, and MvdP was born in.... Belgium. The one that got away, then. But it is really a 1-2 for Belgium.

His father's Dutch and his mother's French, not a drop of Belgian blood in him. He happened to be born in Belgium because his father was racing for a Belgian team at the time. No disrespect to Belgium, a country of which I'm very fond and where I spent a considerable part of my childhood, but one is reminded of the Duke of Wellington's remark when somebody said that as he was born in Ireland he must be Irish: "Just because Jesus was born in a stable, it doesn't make him a horse."

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Joe Totale replied to Rendel Harris | 1 year ago
1 like
Rendel Harris wrote:

richliv wrote:

Er, and MvdP was born in.... Belgium. The one that got away, then. But it is really a 1-2 for Belgium.

His father's Dutch and his mother's French, not a drop of Belgian blood in him. He happened to be born in Belgium because his father was racing for a Belgian team at the time. No disrespect to Belgium, a country of which I'm very fond and where I spent a considerable part of my childhood, but one is reminded of the Duke of Wellington's remark when somebody said that as he was born in Ireland he must be Irish: "Just because Jesus was born in a stable, it doesn't make him a horse."

Indeed. Some people make the same argument that the England football team somehow missed out on Erling Haaland as he was born in Leeds. It never would have happened in a million years.

Avatar
joules1975 replied to Rendel Harris | 1 year ago
2 likes

Rendel Harris wrote:

richliv wrote:

Er, and MvdP was born in.... Belgium. The one that got away, then. But it is really a 1-2 for Belgium.

His father's Dutch and his mother's French, not a drop of Belgian blood in him. 

Rubbish. Every white european has DNA from all around europe, and most have DNA from assorted other parts of the world too.

Rendel Harris wrote:

reminded of the Duke of Wellington's remark when somebody said that as he was born in Ireland he must be Irish: "Just because Jesus was born in a stable, it doesn't make him a horse."

Thankfully, and also problematically, nationality is not that simple. Indeed, nationality often tends to be more about cultural identity, as much DNA.

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Paul J replied to richliv | 1 year ago
1 like

Matthieu wasn't just born in Vlaanderen, he's lived there his whole life and still does.

France, Flanders, and the Netherlands (and Flanders was once the centre of the Netherlands  3 ) can all be proud of MvdP.

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