I’m old enough to remember the first aero bars, and also how all the cyclists thought it was hilarious that I was riding a bike with them. Then Greg Lemond won the Tour de France because of his Scott DH handlebars that all of us had been using for years. Suddenly cyclists got interested.
When it comes to the UCI World Championship Individual Time Trial, even the slightest aero advantage can make a difference, which is why Belgium’s Remco Evenepoel adopted a trick we’ve started to see on a regular basis with the triathlon’s top pros – he stuffed a water bottle down his skin suit.
Remco Evenepoel is the first elite men’s time trial world champion from Belgium
Who knows if the water bottle was the difference, but Evenepoel became the first Belgian to win an elite time trial world champion, finishing 12 seconds ahead of two-time world champ Filippo Ganna (ITA) by 12 seconds. Great Britain’s Joshua Tarling took third, 48 seconds behind the Belgian champ. (Canada’s Derek Gee finished in 18th, 2:57 back, with Nick Zukowsky taking 45th, 6:50 behind.) Evenepoel finished the 47.8 km course in 55:19 – an average of 51.84 kph.
Iden blasts to Kona win
We couldn’t figure out why Gustav Iden seemed to be carrying a water bottle down the front of his suit at last year’s Ironman World Championship, but it obviously didn’t hurt his record-setting performance for the day. Turns out Iden isn’t the only one who’s been experimenting with putting a water bottle down the front of his (or her) suit – according to Jim Manton from ERO Sports in California. Manton posted this video outlining the benefits he was able to find when he tested a group of athletes.
Iden is now just one of many pros who are adopting the technique – at last weekend’s Professional Triathletes Organisation (PTO) US Open many of the pros were using either a water bottle or a Camelback bladder down their tops to gain an aerodynamic advantage.
Frank Schleck’s Camelback
Before us triathletes get too smug about all this and head off to the bike store to rail against the roadies stealing another of our great ideas, there is some cycling history to the trend. In 2011 Luxembourg’s Frank Schleck strapped a Camelback hydration bladder under his skin suit for the final time trial at the Criterium International. His 12th-place finish was enough to earn him the overall win, but the UCI didn’t like his new approach to Camelback fashion and mandated that the water systems had to be worn on the back starting in 2012.
It will be interesting to see if the UCI, and eventually triathlon, bans the process any time in the future.
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