An early five-man break carried the race through its opening phase, but the second passage of the Eikenberg fractured the peloton decisively. Crashes removed several riders, while mechanical problems struck at the worst possible moment for key contenders. Paul Magnier was forced into two bike changes. Jasper Philipsen punctured. Tom Pidcock was distanced on the climb.
The Molenberg then created the first elite selection. Florian Vermeersch accelerated hard on the cobbles, with Van der Poel reacting instantly and bridging across after narrowly avoiding a crash behind him. Tim van Dijke joined to form a powerful trio as the early break was absorbed.
Through the Berendries and Leberg the leading group consolidated and briefly extended its advantage beyond one minute. Behind them, however, the chase reorganised. Team Visma | Lease a Bike and Soudal - Quick-Step contributed to the pursuit, and Magnier, Philipsen and Pidcock all managed to regain contact with the main peloton.
The gap fell toward fifty seconds approaching the Muur.
A heavy crash in the chasing group, with Matthew Brennan among those involved, disrupted momentum at a critical juncture and further reduced the cohesion required to close the leaders.
Van der Poel makes the difference
The front group reached Geraardsbergen first. Florian Vermeersch led onto the Muur, but Van der Poel took control between the Vesten and the steepest slopes of the Kapelmuur.
His acceleration was immediate and decisive.
The remaining early escapees were dropped. Vermeersch attempted to respond but appeared hampered by a mechanical issue. Van Dijke fought to limit the damage, yet Van der Poel crested alone with a clear advantage.
By the Bosberg, his lead stood at roughly thirty seconds.
From there, it was a measured 12-kilometre effort into Ninove. The chase behind lacked full organisation. Matteo Trentin attempted to slip clear in pursuit of fourth place, while Christophe Laporte also tried to animate the remnants of the peloton. Jordi Meeus, having climbed strongly over the Muur, remained active in the group behind.
Up the road, however, the outcome was no longer in doubt.
Van der Poel extended his advantage toward forty seconds as Vermeersch and Van Dijke fought to secure the remaining podium positions. The Dutchman rode the final kilometres with composure rather than urgency, sealing victory at the first attempt in the Flemish opener.
Omloop Het Nieuwsblad 2026 delivered crosswinds, crashes and repeated reshuffling of contenders. But in the end, it was decided in the most traditional fashion: a perfectly judged acceleration on the Muur van Geraardsbergen, from which no one could recover.