
CHIUSDINO, ITALY - MARCH 11: Arrival / Julian Alaphilippe of France & Mathieu Van Der Poel of Netherlands and Team Alpecin-Fenix Celebration, during the 56th Tirreno-Adriatico 2021, Stage 2 a 202km stage from Camaiore to Chiusdino 522m / #TirrenoAdriatico / on March 11, 2021 in Chiusdino, Italy. (Photo by Dario Belingheri - Pool/Getty Images)
Everyone expected Tirreno-Adriatico to deliver the sparks with its world-class start list. The opening two stages have certainly lived up to expectations in the weeklong “Race of Two Seas.”
It’s impossible to have a race packed with so many stars, and not have some crackling action. Thursday’s stage 2 throw down in the long, grinding finale saw an immaculate preview of what’s in store not only for the upcoming spring classics, but also for this week’s GC tussle in what is shaping up to be a battle of the stars.
“Alapanache” uncorked a perfectly timed acceleration to come off the wheel of Ineos Grenadiers’ Geraint Thomas with 350m to go to reel in his attacking teammate João Almeida and fend off a fast-charging Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix). Magnifique.
Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma) kicked to third 24 hours after blasting to victory in his second day of racing. In his third day of racing in 2021, he finished where he needed to in order to defend his race leader’s jersey. Van Aert holds a slim lead of 4 seconds to Alaphilippe, and 8 seconds to third-place van der Poel.
The 2020 Tour de France winner showed good signs of form on the first hilly test of Tirreno-Adriatico, claiming fourth place in an uphill sprint. UAE Team Emirates was present in numbers on the final 7km climb to the line, keeping the gap to a group of four escapees within reach. Pogačar, who won the UAE Tour last month in his season debut and rode into the winning group a Strade Bianche, reconfirmed his versatility to punch close to the podium, and moved up to ninth overall at 14 seconds back.
“Golden” Greg Van Avermaet continues to simmer near the favorites in every race he starts. The 2016 Olympic champion had his new Ag2r-Citroën teammate drape him with protection, and powered in with the leaders for eighth on the stage. The veteran Belgian has five top-10s so for in 2021, and hopes to be hitting full boil in time for the northern classics. A win along the way wouldn’t hurt, either.
“A top-10 here is a good result. It was a nice stage with a final climb that suited me,” Van Avermaet said. “Michael Schär did a great job to place me perfectly in the last kilometer. Then, it played-out à la pédale. I am satisfied with this eighth place; it’s encouraging for the future.”