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2016 Gent–Wevelgem

2016 Gent–Wevelgem
2016 UCI World Tour, race 7 of 28
Race details
Dates 27 March 2016
Stages 1
Distance 243 km (151.0 mi)
Winning time 5h 55' 16"
Results
  Winner  Peter Sagan (SVK) (Tinkoff)
  Second  Sep Vanmarcke (BEL) (LottoNL–Jumbo)
  Third  Vyacheslav Kuznetsov (RUS) (Team Katusha)
← 2015
2017 →
  Winner  Peter Sagan (SVK) (Tinkoff)
  Second  Sep Vanmarcke (BEL) (LottoNL–Jumbo)
  Third  Vyacheslav Kuznetsov (RUS) (Team Katusha)

The 2016 Gent–Wevelgem, (officially Gent–Wevelgem – In Flanders Fields) was a one-day cycling classic that took place on 27 March 2016. It was the 78th edition of the Gent–Wevelgem race and the seventh event of the 2016 UCI World Tour. The race followed a 243-kilometre (151 mi) course that started in Deinze and ended in Wevelgem in Belgium, with a portion of the race spent in northern France. The race included ten climbs, several of them cobbled, which provided the principal difficulty in the race. The last and most difficult climb was the Kemmelberg. The favourites for the race included Alexander Kristoff (Team Katusha), Fabian Cancellara (Trek–Segafredo) and Peter Sagan (Tinkoff).

The race was won by Sagan, who escaped with Cancellara and Sep Vanmarcke (LottoNL–Jumbo) on the Kemmelberg after a series of splits and had occurred in the first half of the race. They were joined by Vyacheslav Kuznetsov (Team Katusha), who had been in the day's early breakaway, and the four-man group came to the finish together. Sagan won the sprint, with Vanmarcke second and Kuznetsov third.

During the French portion of the race, the Belgian rider Antoine Demoitié (Wanty–Groupe Gobert) crashed and was then hit by a race motorbike. He died that evening.

The route of the 2016 Gent–Wevelgem was significantly changed from 2015 edition and from previous editions. Several different climbs were used. Central among these was the decision to use a different side of the core climb in the race, the Kemmelberg. In previous years, the route chosen had a maximum gradient of 17%, but the 2016 edition used a road that had a section at 23%, described by Cycling Weekly as "excruciating". The race director, Hans De Clercq, gave three reasons for the change: the cobblestones had recently been relaid; the 2016 edition marked the 60th anniversary of the inclusion of the Kemmelberg, with the difficult side used on that occasion; and there was a desire to give the race more of a balance between sprinters and attackers.COTACOL (), a Belgian work that lists and grades all the climbs in the country, rated the side of the Kemmelberg used in 2016 as the most difficult climb in Flanders: its grading of 183 points was more than the Koppenberg (172), the Muur van Geraardsbergen (171) or the traditional route up the Kemmelberg (152).


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