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2017 Gent–Wevelgem

2017 Gent–Wevelgem
2017 UCI World Tour, race 12 of 38
Race details
Dates 26 March 2017
Stages 1
Distance 249.2 km (154.8 mi)
Winning time 5h 39' 05"
Results
  Winner  Greg Van Avermaet (BEL) (BMC Racing Team)
  Second  Jens Keukeleire (BEL) (Orica–Scott)
  Third  Peter Sagan (SVK) (Bora–Hansgrohe)
← 2016
2018 →
  Winner  Greg Van Avermaet (BEL) (BMC Racing Team)
  Second  Jens Keukeleire (BEL) (Orica–Scott)
  Third  Peter Sagan (SVK) (Bora–Hansgrohe)

The 2017 Gent–Wevelgem – In Flanders Fields was a road cycling one-day race that took place on 26 March. It was the 79th edition of Gent–Wevelgem and the twelfth event of the 2017 UCI World Tour.

After winning E3 Harelbeke two days prior to Gent–Wevelgem, Greg Van Avermaet continued his run of good form with victory for the BMC Racing Team in a two-up sprint finish against his fellow Belgian Jens Keukeleire, riding for the Orica–Scott team. The pairing had broken away from a select group of riders in the run-in towards Wevelgem. The podium was completed by world champion Peter Sagan (Bora–Hansgrohe), as the peloton caught the select group in the closing metres.

The race started in Deinze in East Flanders, 20 kilometres (12 mi) from Ghent. The route took the riders immediately into West Flanders, and after around 90 kilometres (56 mi) of flat roads, they came near the coast at Veurne. After turning inland again, the race continued south towards the French border, and just after halfway, crossed onto French soil at the commune of Boeschepe, with the first of the race's ten climbs coming at the Mont des Cats. This was followed by the Kokereelberg, the Vert Mont, and the two Mont Noir ascents, via the Côte du Ravel Put and the Côte de la Blanchisserie. The riders then returned to Belgium and climbed the Baneberg, the Kemmelberg and the Monteberg.

There was then a flatter section, looping through Mesen, Ploegsteert and . Within this loop was an addition for the 2017 race. On 24 November 2016, it was announced that the 2017 Gent–Wevelgem would honour the victims of World War I in the Flanders region and to commemorate the Christmas truce, by incorporating three semi-paved roads at the Ploegsteert Memorial to the Missing, in Ploegsteert Wood. The final two climbs were a repeat of the Baneberg–Kemmelberg combination; at the top of the final climb, 34 kilometres (21 mi) of fairly flat roads remained to the finish in Wevelgem.


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