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Penalty points for Mathieu van der Poel

Penalty points for Mathieu van der Poel

The decision not to fully commit to the move has since come under the spotlight. Van der Poel himself admitted post-race that he had ridden with a more measured approach, managing his effort after a demanding block of racing and keeping the wider team picture in mind. With Philipsen positioned behind in a strong sprinting group, the balance of risk shifted.
In the podcast In de Waaier, Thijs Zonneveld pointed to that moment as the key turning point, framing it as a trade-off between spectacle and strategy. “I think he made the right choice not to fully commit for the team,” Zonneveld said. “But for the duel: real penalty points for Mathieu van der Poel that he didn’t just keep riding full gas. I would have loved, really, really, really loved to see them sprint it out together. And that’s what everyone wanted.”

Fatigue and fine margins

The context behind that decision stretched back beyond the race itself. According to Zonneveld, the effort required from Van der Poel at the E3 Saxo Classic two days earlier played a significant role. The Dutchman had produced an extraordinary level there, later sharing data that underlined the intensity of the performance.

That effort appeared to linger. “He was still feeling that,” Zonneveld explained. “He was strong, but the very best was gone. And Van Aert didn’t have that.”

The clearest sign came in the final kilometres. When Alec Segaert attacked late, Van der Poel briefly considered responding, but could not make the move stick, underlining the limits he was riding at.

Mathieu van der Poel and Wout van Aert at In Flanders Fields – From Middelkerke to Wevelgem 2026

A duel deferred

In the end, the race produced a winner, but not the moment many had anticipated.

The Kemmelberg move shaped the race and stripped it back to its strongest protagonists, yet the finale unfolded in a different direction. The sprint that had seemed inevitable between Van der Poel and Van Aert never materialised. “What a shame. It didn’t happen. We really wanted to see it. Now we’ll have to wait for the Tour of Flanders,” Zonneveld said.

That sense of what might have been lingers. The decision made sense in the context of the race and the strength of the Alpecin-Premier Tech team, but it left behind a lingering question. When the opportunity presents itself again, will instinct win out over calculation, or will the bigger picture once again take priority?

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