Rider Profile

Remco Evenepoel

Soudal-Quickstep

Remco Evenepoel

Personal Details:

Nationality Belgium
Date of birth 25/01/2000

Biography:

Two-time road World Champion Remco Evenepoel, born January 25, 2000 in Aalst, Belgium, turned professional with QuickStep in 2019, moving directly from the junior ranks to the WorldTour. His dominance at junior level rapidly transferred to the pro ranks. In his debut season, Evenepoel won the Clásica San Sebastián and the European time trial title, as well as a silver medal in the time trial at the UCI Road World Championships.
Evenepoel continued in a similar vein in 2020, winning the Vuelta a San Juan, Volta ao Algarve, Vuelta a Burgos and Tour de Pologne, but his season was cut short by a dramatic crash at Il Lombardia that left him with a fractured pelvis.
After a long rehabilitation, Evenepoel made his return to competition at the 2021 Giro d’Italia, where he jousted with eventual winner Egan Bernal in the opening half of the race before abandoning in the third week. He bounced back from the chastening experience with a string of solo successes, including when he lapped the field on a stage of the Tour of Denmark.
It was a sign of things to come in 2022. Evenepoel scored a remarkable solo victory at Liège-Bastogne-Liège in April before building steadily towards the Vuelta a España, where he became Belgium’s first Grand Tour winner in 44 years. Two weeks after riding into Madrid in red, Evenepoel added the rainbow jersey to his collection with a remarkable lone effort to win the World Championships in Wollongong.
In 2023 Evenepoel continued to showcase his versatility with a second world title, this time in the individual time trial. He also added a second victory at Liège-Bastogne-Liège, won the overall at the UAE Tour and won five stages across two Grand Tours, including the mountains classification at the Vuelta a España. For his achievements, he won a third 'Crystal Bike' award as the best male Belgian cyclist for the 2023 season.

Evenepoel's focus turned to his Tour de France debut in 2024 with the Olympic Games a second major goal for the year. He began the season with a bang, winning the Figueira Champions Classic with a 55km solo breakaway, then went on to win the overall Volta ao Algarve thanks to his time trial on stage 4. Evenepoel lost Paris-Nice to Matteo Jorgenson by 30 seconds but won the final stage and the points and mountains classifications. He crashed during the Itzulia Basque Country and broke his collarbone.

He returned to win the time trial at the Critérium du Dauphiné before making his Tour de France debut. He won the stage 7 time trial and was as high as second overall, but was passed by defending champion Jonas Vingegaard in the final week, and finished third behind Tadej Pogačar.

At the Olympics in Paris, Evenepoel dominated the individual time trial and then soloed to the win in the road race, overcoming a late puncture to celebrate his second gold medal. He defended his rainbow jersey in the time trial at the UCI Road World Championships in Zurich.


Key results

2024

🥇 Olympic Games ITT

🥇 Olympic Games RR

🥇 UCI Road World Championships ITT

🥇 Tour de France stage 7 ITT

🥇 Paris-Nice stage 8, 2nd overall

🥇 Volta ao Algarve overall, stage 4 ITT

🥇 Critérium du Dauphiné stage 4 ITT

2023

🥇 UCI World Championships time trial

🥇 Liège-Bastogne-Liège

🥇 UAE Tour

🥇 Clásica San Sebastián

🥇 two stages at Giro d'Italia

🥇 three stages at Vuelta a España

2022

🥇 UCI World Championships road race

🥇 GC and two stages at Vuelta a España

🥇 Liège-Bastogne-Liège

🥇 Clásica San Sebastián

🥇 Tour de Pologne

🥇 Volta ao Algarve

🥉 World Championships time trial

2021

🥇 Brussels Cycling Classic

🥉 World Championships time trial

2020

🥇 Volta ao Algarve

2019

🥇 European Championships time trial

🥇 Clásica San Sebastián

🥈 World Championships time trial

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