“Not everything went according to plan” – Jasper Philipsen overcomes chaos and late scare to deny Alec Segaert at Nokere Koerse

Cycling
Wednesday, 18 March 2026 at 17:44
Jasper Philipsen during stage 2 of the 2026 Tirreno-Adriatico
Jasper Philipsen’s first win of the 2026 season did not come from control or comfort, but from navigating a race that repeatedly slipped away from him before falling back into place at exactly the right moment at Nokere Koerse. After a disrupted build-up, a mid-race mechanical issue and a finale that nearly belonged to a lone attacker, the Alpecin-Deceuninck sprinter still found a way to deliver.
Reflecting on that path after the finish, Philipsen admitted the victory had been far from straightforward. “Not everything went according to plan, and the feeling wasn’t always great. I also had a bit of bad luck, so I’m happy to take my first win,” he said in conversation with Sporza.

Chaotic run-in forces Philipsen to improvise

The finale itself mirrored that sentiment. What had been shaping towards a sprint was disrupted late on by Alec Segaert’s solo move, with the Belgian opening a significant gap while the peloton hesitated behind. Philipsen was not in a position of control during that phase either, having already been forced to react earlier in the race.
Positioning, he explained, had been one of the key challenges. “Positioning was difficult. I was with Jonas (Rickaert), but we had to brake because of a crash.” That moment left him exposed at a critical point, forcing a recovery effort that came at a cost.
“Gerben (Thijssen) brought me back to the front, but that cost energy. I had already spent my best legs getting back after a shoe change and those interruptions. I’m glad I still made it.”
That final line summed up the balance of the race. Philipsen was not dictating the finale. He was surviving it.

Shoe problem adds another layer to difficult day

The turning point earlier in the race came around 20 kilometres from the finish, when Philipsen was seen dropping back to the team car. The reason was not tactical, but mechanical. “I almost crashed and had to use my entire pedal stroke to stay upright. My shoe was broken.”
The fix left him finishing the race in mismatched footwear, one white and one silver shoe, an unusual sight in a race already full of disruption. “It doesn’t really look right,” he said. “But it was efficient. It works, and maybe it brings me luck.”
That moment added to the sense that this was a win built on adaptation rather than control.

Sprint still delivers after late Segaert scare

Despite the setbacks, the race ultimately returned to a scenario Philipsen knows best. Segaert was caught in the final metres, and the uphill run to the line turned into a reduced sprint.
From there, Philipsen’s execution was decisive. After spending much of the finale reacting to events, he timed his effort cleanly on the rising finish to secure victory ahead of Juan Sebastian Molano. “This is very important for confidence,” he said. “I had to wait a bit for it.”

First win of 2026 brings relief after difficult start

That sense of relief was clear in his final reflections. After a run of near-misses and disrupted races, this was not just a win, but a reset. “I’ve always enjoyed racing here in recent years, but today I wanted to play it a bit safer: get a good feeling and take the win. That worked out well.”
In the end, Nokere Koerse delivered exactly that. Not a perfect race, but the right result.
claps 0visitors 0
loading

Just in

Popular news

Latest comments

Loading