Monday, 4 April 2016

Wanty-Groupe Gobert honour Antoine Demoitie with aggressive Tour of Flanders

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The Tour of Flanders is a special race for any Belgian team but it took on an extra meaning this year for Wanty-Groupe Gobert. The Belgian team raced for the first time since the death of Antoine Demoitié -the 25-year-old neo-pro who died of the injuries he sustained during a crash at last Sunday's Gent-Wevelgem.

It had been an emotional week for the riders and staff as they come to terms with what happened. Demoitié's family had given their blessing for the team to ride at the Three Days of De Panne earlier in the week but the riders decided that it had been too early. It was a sombre mood at the team's bus by the start line in Bruges and the riders rode to sign on wearing t-shirts bearing his face and the words 'Ride for Antoine.' Riding in memory of Demoitie is what they set out to do at the Tour of Flanders.

"I am very proud of this team and everybody worked really hard," Wanty-Groupe Gobert directeur sportif Hilaire Van Der Schueren told Cyclingnews post race. "In the beginning, it was very hard because you think about this a lot of time. We made a good plan yesterday that we must be in the first break. We were not and we were all disappointed a little bit, but we said, ok, the race is not finished. We still have five or six riders who can do make a result."

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To their dismay, they missed out on the initial break that went after 50 kilometres of racing. As the race progressed, Wanty-Groupe Gobert continued to put riders off the front of the bunch. Tour of Flanders rookie Dimitri Claeys broke free along with Astana's Dmitriy Gruzdev just before the Kaperij and they joined a group of riders up the road. Claeys held on when the favourites joined the party, eventually finishing ninth after finally being dropped by race winner Peter Sagan on the Koppenberg.

"I knew I was capable of this. Early on I wasn't feeling great. That's why I anticipated. It turned out to be a good move. In the finale I showed that I was good," said Claeys. "I'm really pleased. Finishing ninth in the Ronde as a debutant, that's nice."

"It was very emotional. I lost two very good friends [Antoine Demoitié and Daan Myngheer –ed]. The only thing we could do was showing ourselves in the race. We all have to go on, even though it's so hard. There's not much more we can do… I was keen to show myself at the classics. It was an extra motivation but it doesn't make you ride faster, in contrary. It's very sad."

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



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