Remco Evenepoel

The Lost Boys: Simmons and Evenepoel, a tale of two prodigies

From Velo.com

Ever since Quinn Simmons won the 2019 world junior road championship in Yorkshire, England—taking over the under-19s rainbow jersey won by Remco Evenepoel the previous year—the American prodigy has promised more than he has produced.

It was a partial surprise when Evenepoel turned pro at age 19, but he overcame that seeming premature step-up by soon winning classics and one-week stage races and clocking up more than 30 victories in his first three pro seasons. Perhaps his example was one that Simmons hoped to repeat.

But now, midway through his fourth season in the UCI ProTour, the American has won just four times, at lesser races, and his hopes of winning a stage at this Tour de France ended on Sunday when his Lidl-Trek team decided he should not start stage 9. Simmons sustained extensive wounds to his left shoulder and hip in a heavy crash 30 kilometers into the first Pyrenean stage, stage 5.

After he finished with the gruppetto for the following three days, he said online: “Together with my doctor, coaches and team, we have made the decision not to start today. Disappointed doesn’t even begin to describe the feeling. I built my whole season around arriving here in peak form but I guess that’s how the sport goes.”

At just over 6 feet tall and just under 160 pounds, Simmons is much bigger than the average Tour rider; but his power numbers are also bigger than the average. That’s why the Trek team first became interested in his capabilities four years ago.

“I had signed the contract with Trek-Segafredo before Yorkshire, so I knew I had a future in the sport,” he said. “I knew I was the best junior that year, and Yorkshire was just the way to prove it.”

 

Image Courtesy of Hoebele, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

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The in-depth story of Remco Evenepoel the footballer, as told by teammates and coaches

From CyclingWeekly.com

BY

Remco Evenepoel has won the 2022 Vuelta a España. In this coming Thursday’s Cycling Weekly magazine (Sept 15), we are publishing an in-depth feature exploring untold stories of his final years as a footballer and his first two years as a cyclist. Before he turned pro as a cyclist, he played football in his youth, playing for Belgium’s U15 and U16 teams.

Here is an extended version of an extract from the article, focusing solely on Evenepoel’s years as a footballer.

You can read the Making of Remco in Cycling Weekly, on sale September 15.

There’s one thing you ought to know about Remco Evenepoel the footballer: he was not a world-beater. “I don’t really have a recollection of Remco being a man of the match because he was not the most decisive player,” his longtime coach Stéphane Stassin reveals. “He was technically gifted but not one of the most technically gifted.”

That’s not to say, however, that Evenepoel – a defensive midfielder who could also operate at left-back – was a expendable figure. In fact, it was quite the opposite – he was the first name on the team sheet, whether turning out for the youth teams of RSC Anderlecht, PSV Eindhoven or the Belgian national team from the ages of 5 to 16.

Zorhan Bassong, who was part of the same youth team set-up at Anderlecht as Evenepoel, recalls how, aged 15 or 16, Evenepoel was sidelined with a knee injury. “When he was out, you could see directly that the team weren’t playing as well on the field,” the Canadian, now playing for CF Montréal in the MLS, tells Cycling Weekly.

“That wasn’t because of his talent – he was talented, but there were better guys – but because of the energy he brought to the field, his voice, his leadership. The team was more confident when he was around.

“He wouldn’t shout ‘do this, do that’ to his teammates, but he brought this positive energy. He had this natural confidence of just standing on the pitch and making everyone around him feel secure, more safe. From his body language people would see a naturally confident guy. The whole team knew that when he was there, it would be different.”

Photo by Thomas Serer on Unsplash

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