Modern Adventure surrendered its first European race leader’s jersey after Ben Oliver was caught in a crash and could not contest the final sprint.
Modern Adventure Pro Cycling lost its first European leader’s jersey Wednesday after a pileup late at the Tour de Wallonie. (Photo: Getty Images)
Updated June 3, 2026 01:39PM
Modern Adventure Pro Cycling surrendered its first European race leader’s jersey Wednesday after Ben Oliver was caught behind a late crash and lost the lead despite being awarded the same finishing time.
A massive crash inside the final 1.8km in stage 3 cost Oliver the lead at the five-stage Tour de Wallonie, one day after the new American cycling team claimed its first professional win in Europe.
Riders at the front of the peloton crossed wheels in the fight for position and triggered a massive pileup. Bikes and bodies blocked the entire width of the road, and only about a dozen riders made it through.
Laurence Pithie (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) sprinted to victory, but Oliver was trapped behind the crash and forced to pick his way through the wreckage before eventually crossing the line in 41st place.
The team appeared firmly in control of the stage to at least give Oliver a chance to defend yellow.
Now they’ll never know.
“Bittersweet stage 3 of Tour de Wallonie. The boys were in control all day and were positioning Oliver perfectly into the final climb, only to be taken out of contention by a crash with 1.8km to go,” the team posted on Instagram.
“The good news is, everyone’s home safe, and there are two more to go.”
How Oliver lost the jersey without losing time

The loss of the leader’s jersey came not from the crash itself, but from the way cycling’s rules handle crashes inside the final “safe zone” with 3km to go.
Because the accident occurred within the race’s designated safety zone, Oliver and the other riders delayed by the crash were awarded the same finishing time as the front group.
But finish-line time bonuses still counted.
Kim Heiduk (Netcompany-Ineos) started the day fourth overall at three seconds behind Oliver. He avoided the crash, sprinted to second, and collected a six-second time bonus at the finish.
That bonus was enough to slot him into yellow.
Oliver slipped from first to third overall, now three seconds behind the new race leader.
Oliver did not lose time because of the crash. He lost the leader’s jersey because he missed the opportunity to contest the bonus seconds.
Why this matters for Modern Adventure Pro Cycling
The setback particularly stings because of what the team pulled off just 24 hours earlier.
Modern Adventure Pro Cycling — founded by ex-pro George Hincapie and others — is the first new American professional team racing a European calendar in more than a decade.
After a string of high-profile race invitations and close calls, Oliver’s victory in a rain-soaked stage 2 marked the squad’s first professional win in Europe.
And with it came the team’s first major leader’s jersey against established WorldTour and ProTeam squads.
Wednesday’s hilly profile across the Belgian Ardennes was challenging, and the team worked all day to put Oliver into position for the final sprint to defend yellow.
He never got the chance.
Odd twist on the 3km rule
The 3km rule both saved Oliver and cost him the jersey at the same time.
The rule was introduced to prevent GC riders from losing time to crashes or mechanicals in nervous sprint finishes.
In that sense, it worked exactly as intended Wednesday.
After the jury adjusted the finishing times, Oliver did not lose any time in the standings.
However, the rule does not eliminate bonus seconds when they’re in play.
Riders delayed by crashes receive the same finishing time as the lead group, but they do not get the opportunity to contest the time bonuses awarded at the finish line.
Two stages remain
The good news for Modern Adventure Pro Cycling is that there are two stages left. The bad news is they won’t be easy.
Thursday’s 166.7km stage 4 from Dison to Eupen features three hard climbs in the middle of the stage before what could be another sprint finale.
The race will be decided Friday in the grueling 176.5km fifth stage from Bassenge to Aubel. The hilly course features four first-category climbs in the first half of the stage before a rollercoaster finale, with a sharp unrated climb within 2km of the downhill finish.
The margins remain razor-thin, and the general classification is still very much in play.
But to have any hope, the team will need to keep Oliver out of trouble and in contention to claw back bonus seconds on both remaining stages.
One day in yellow. Two more days to get it back.
