It all kicked off around the Forest of Arenberg. It often does at Paris-Roubaix.
There, or rather just before, with the suspense of the race’s most perilous cobbled sector intensifying, a move finally went. And it stayed away. It was Mathieu van der Poel who led into the forest. 100km later, it was Mathieu van der Poel who led alone into the velodrome.
“For sure, this was my strongest Classics season,” he told Cycling Weekly and other outlets in his post-race press conference. “The power output I could do in the last 50km is something I was not able to do in the past.”
It's unusual to see the winning-move go so early in the Monument, but under the baking Roubaix sun, it wasn't surprising. For Van der Poel, the racing’s best when it’s done at full tilt. His 11 breakaway companions, among them Wout van Aert, Mads Pedersen and Stefan Küng, were happy to oblige.
“We just raced like juniors from start to finish,” the Dutchman said. “It was quite crazy. But for me, it was not bad actually, because the harder the race, the better it is for me, the final especially.”
“It’s strange to see [in] the last years that we’ve just gone all out from the beginning to the end. I think it was the fastest edition as well today. I don’t know for sure. It was incredible.”
Van der Poel was right. Straight from the flag drop, the bunch rode quicker than the fastest time forecast in the road book. Fans dashed between dusty sectors, only to be told the riders had already sailed past.
For just one year, Dylan van Baarle held the record for the fastest-ever Paris Roubaix, until his compatriot came along and bettered it by one kilometre per hour. The benchmark now stands at 46.8km/h.