"Has the 'Alpine Mafia' won its battle with this rejection?": Flemish press erupts as cyclocross is officially banned from the 2030 Winter Olympics

Cyclocross
Sunday, 10 May 2026 at 09:00
Wout van Aert leads Mathieu van der Poel in the snow at the 2026 Exact Cross Mol, before crashing once again
The ongoing quest to elevate cyclocross to the grandest stage in winter sports has hit a definitive and bitter dead end, as the International Olympic Committee officially announced a few days ago. While the IOC's official explanation points to a strict categorization of sports, prominent voices in Belgium are crying foul. They accuse a deeply entrenched winter sports lobby of deliberately crushing the discipline's Olympic dreams to protect their own fading relevance on the world stage.

The IOC's verdict versus the "Alpine Mafia"

The tempting prospect of seeing Wout van Aert or Mathieu van der Poel battling for a gold medal on the snow and mud at the 2030 Winter Games in the French Alps has been permanently shelved. The International Olympic Committee recently pulled the plug on the idea, with IOC executive Kirsty Coventry leaving no room for interpretation: "There is no place for summer sports at the Winter Games."
However, that bureaucratic explanation about a lack of snow and ice is being dismissed by some. Writing for the Belgian newspaper Het Nieuwsblad, sports journalist Marc Vermeiren pointed the finger directly at a conservative power block within the winter sports establishment. "Has the 'Alpine Mafia' won its battle with this rejection?"
CyclocrossWoutVanAertTiborDelGrosso
Cyclocross will not be an olympic sport
According to Vermeiren, traditional snow sports are terrified of being overshadowed by the much more engaging spectacle of cyclocross (and cross-country running). He argued that classic winter disciplines have been struggling with international appeal for years, noting that compared to its massive summer counterpart, the Winter Olympics suffers from an "acute lack of star power."
Vermeiren was ruthless in his assessment of what this means for the future of the sport, calling the decision a fatal blow. "The refusal by the IOC also immediately means the death knell for all international ambitions of cyclocross," he wrote.
The Flemish journalist drew a parallel to 1996, the year mountain biking was granted Olympic status. That singular decision caused a mass exodus of international talent toward mountain biking, rapidly shrinking the global footprint of cyclocross and turning it into the heavily Belgian-Dutch dominated sport it is today. "The historical debt of the IOC remains unpaid," he concluded.
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