The rider also stressed his roadmap, focused on other targets. “I think I can win more there than in Flanders,” he told Het Laatste Nieuws, referring to the Ardennes classics, which remain his early-season priority.
A recon that changes the picture
Despite that stance, events have moved on. The team plans to recon the course with a group of seven riders, including the Olympic champion. It is not definitive, but it significantly raises the odds of seeing him race on Sunday.
It would not be the first time Evenepoel has tested the race’s key sectors. Last winter he was already spotted training on the Oude Kwaremont and the Paterberg alongside Gianni Vermeersch. “It was just a training session. Remco lives near Geraardsbergen and we went to meet up,” his teammate explained at the time.
That recon was no improvisation: both riders had support from directors Sven Vanthourenhout and Klaas Lodewyck, even repeating the climbs several times.
A plan that seemed set
Until recently, the internal view looked clear. Zak Dempster had ruled out his presence in Flanders on sporting grounds.
“Of course, as a Belgian, he has always wanted to ride the Tour of Flanders. Whether or not he’s a cobbles specialist, it’s a special race. But the main reason Evenepoel joined this team is because he wants to race Tadej Pogacar at the Tour de France and try to beat him. It’s our job now to build the best plan, one we all believe can make that happen. We don’t think riding the Tour of Flanders contributes to that at this moment.”
With this new context, everything hinges on the coming days. Thursday’s recon will be the key test before a final decision. If the sensations are good, Evenepoel could pivot and debut in one of the most demanding races on the calendar.
The outcome will be known shortly, but what seemed ruled out is taking shape as one of the weekend’s big question marks.