
Stewart XXX (Photo: Luc Claessen/Getty Images)
Jake Stewart is about much more than “that” incident with Nacer Bouhanni, and he wants you to know it.
The young Brit shot into the headlines last month when he was forced into the barriers in the Cholet-Pays de la Loire bunch-kick by Bouhanni’s wayward line. In the fallout of the incident, Stewart remained front-and-center for his robust criticism of the Frenchman via Twitter, and his subsequent condemnation of the surge of racism directed toward his rival.
It’s clear that Stewart is not nervous of vocalizing his opinions on the topics that count.
Yet after being left sidelined with a broken hand by the Pays de la Loire incident just as he was emerging as one of the most promising tough-guy sprinters in the bunch, the 21-year-old is itching to getting back to making statements on the scoresheet rather than on social media.
Also read: Who is Jake Stewart? Young Brit finishes fourth overall at Bessèges
“I’ve had a couple of interviews about Bouhanni but, yeh … “ Stewart said cautiously. “When people are ringing me to just get a story about Bouhanni for clicks, it’s frustrating, definitely.
“I see it’s a big talking point and everyone wants an opinion on it, but I made my opinion pretty clear on it when it happened and then afterward in the last week or so with the stuff around racism,” Stewart told VeloNews. “I just hope when I’m racing again people will be calling about that.”
Also read: Stewart calls out Bouhanni for wayward sprint
Stewart certainly has the potential to hit the headlines for his results rather than his online profile.
For Stewart, kicking to second-place at the hotly-contested Omloop sprint has come with a repercussion – being shoe-horned into an easily identifiable category.
“I’d say I’m probably a classics, punchy sprinter,” he said. “I’ve said it so many times, I’m by no means a pure sprinter and that’s what a lot of people have kind of lazily pigeonholing me as in the past few months. I’m definitely a classics punchy kind of rider – I get my best results when I’m sprinting from a smaller group. But I’m still discovering my strengths and what kind of rider I’ll be in the future. It’s quite hard to put my finger on it now still being so young.”
Stewart stepped up from the team’s continental squad in the fall of 2020 and immediately impressed in the fall classics. After continuing the upward trajectory this winter, Groupama-FDJ is giving Stewart the freedom to move and its full support when he returns from injury at the Tour de Romandie this month.
Whether you see it on a scoresheet or in your social feed, it seems likely that you’ll be seeing Stewart’s name again sometime soon.
Speaking the same day that news broke that his former conti squad teammate Théo Nonnez was calling time on his career due to burnout despite being just 21-years-old, Stewart was also upfront in asserting that many reports of the Frenchman’s retirement “only told half the story for clicks.”