The post Evenepoel, Reusser Open World Road Championships With Time Trial Wins appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Belgian Remco Evenepoel celebrates and shows the number of his victories, three on a row, on the podium of the Men Elite Individual Time Trial race (40,8km) at the cycling road world championships, in Kigali, Rwanda, Sunday 21 September 2025. The 2025 UCI Road World Championships take place from 21 to 28 September in Kigali, Rwanda. BELGA PHOTO DIRK WAEM (Photo by DIRK WAEM / BELGA MAG / Belga via AFP) (Photo by DIRK WAEM/BELGA MAG/AFP via Getty Images) BELGA MAG/AFP via Getty Images Remco Evenepoel won his third-straight individual time trial at the 2025 UCI World Road Cycling Championships in Kigali, Rwanda, while Marlen Reusser won the first world title of her career in the women’s event. Evenepoel made a statement with his race, finishing the rolling 40.6-kilometer circuit in 49 minutes and 46 seconds. He was the only rider to crack the 50-minute mark, beating Australia’s Jay Vine by one minute and 14 seconds. Belgium put two riders on the podium, as Evenepoel’s teammate Ilan van Wilder put in the performance of his life to take bronze in his first time racing an individual time trial on the World Championship stage. The women’s race was a 31.2-kilometer route that was similarly difficult up-and-down to the men’s edition. A three-time European time trial champion, Reusser claimed her first rainbow jersey by finishing in 43 minutes and nine seconds, winning by 51.89 seconds. Behind her, Dutch teammates Anna van der Breggen and Demi Vollering took silver and bronze. Evenepoel Catches Pogačar In Closing Kilometers KIGALI, RWANDA – SEPTEMBER 21: Remco Evenepoel of Team Belgium competes during 98th UCI Cycling World Championships Kigali 2025 – Men Elite Individual Time Trial a 40.6km race from Kigali to Kigali on September 21, 2025 in Kigali, Rwanda. (Photo by Dario Belingheri/Getty Images) Getty Images… The post Evenepoel, Reusser Open World Road Championships With Time Trial Wins appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Belgian Remco Evenepoel celebrates and shows the number of his victories, three on a row, on the podium of the Men Elite Individual Time Trial race (40,8km) at the cycling road world championships, in Kigali, Rwanda, Sunday 21 September 2025. The 2025 UCI Road World Championships take place from 21 to 28 September in Kigali, Rwanda. BELGA PHOTO DIRK WAEM (Photo by DIRK WAEM / BELGA MAG / Belga via AFP) (Photo by DIRK WAEM/BELGA MAG/AFP via Getty Images) BELGA MAG/AFP via Getty Images Remco Evenepoel won his third-straight individual time trial at the 2025 UCI World Road Cycling Championships in Kigali, Rwanda, while Marlen Reusser won the first world title of her career in the women’s event. Evenepoel made a statement with his race, finishing the rolling 40.6-kilometer circuit in 49 minutes and 46 seconds. He was the only rider to crack the 50-minute mark, beating Australia’s Jay Vine by one minute and 14 seconds. Belgium put two riders on the podium, as Evenepoel’s teammate Ilan van Wilder put in the performance of his life to take bronze in his first time racing an individual time trial on the World Championship stage. The women’s race was a 31.2-kilometer route that was similarly difficult up-and-down to the men’s edition. A three-time European time trial champion, Reusser claimed her first rainbow jersey by finishing in 43 minutes and nine seconds, winning by 51.89 seconds. Behind her, Dutch teammates Anna van der Breggen and Demi Vollering took silver and bronze. Evenepoel Catches Pogačar In Closing Kilometers KIGALI, RWANDA – SEPTEMBER 21: Remco Evenepoel of Team Belgium competes during 98th UCI Cycling World Championships Kigali 2025 – Men Elite Individual Time Trial a 40.6km race from Kigali to Kigali on September 21, 2025 in Kigali, Rwanda. (Photo by Dario Belingheri/Getty Images) Getty Images…

Evenepoel, Reusser Open World Road Championships With Time Trial Wins

2025/09/22 04:16

Belgian Remco Evenepoel celebrates and shows the number of his victories, three on a row, on the podium of the Men Elite Individual Time Trial race (40,8km) at the cycling road world championships, in Kigali, Rwanda, Sunday 21 September 2025. The 2025 UCI Road World Championships take place from 21 to 28 September in Kigali, Rwanda. BELGA PHOTO DIRK WAEM (Photo by DIRK WAEM / BELGA MAG / Belga via AFP) (Photo by DIRK WAEM/BELGA MAG/AFP via Getty Images)

BELGA MAG/AFP via Getty Images

Remco Evenepoel won his third-straight individual time trial at the 2025 UCI World Road Cycling Championships in Kigali, Rwanda, while Marlen Reusser won the first world title of her career in the women’s event.

Evenepoel made a statement with his race, finishing the rolling 40.6-kilometer circuit in 49 minutes and 46 seconds. He was the only rider to crack the 50-minute mark, beating Australia’s Jay Vine by one minute and 14 seconds. Belgium put two riders on the podium, as Evenepoel’s teammate Ilan van Wilder put in the performance of his life to take bronze in his first time racing an individual time trial on the World Championship stage.

The women’s race was a 31.2-kilometer route that was similarly difficult up-and-down to the men’s edition. A three-time European time trial champion, Reusser claimed her first rainbow jersey by finishing in 43 minutes and nine seconds, winning by 51.89 seconds. Behind her, Dutch teammates Anna van der Breggen and Demi Vollering took silver and bronze.

Evenepoel Catches Pogačar In Closing Kilometers

KIGALI, RWANDA – SEPTEMBER 21: Remco Evenepoel of Team Belgium competes during 98th UCI Cycling World Championships Kigali 2025 – Men Elite Individual Time Trial a 40.6km race from Kigali to Kigali on September 21, 2025 in Kigali, Rwanda. (Photo by Dario Belingheri/Getty Images)

Getty Images

Heading into Sunday’s race, four-time Tour de France winner Tadej Pogačar was seen as Evenepoel’s main challenger for the world title. Pogačar typically excels at the time trials that come in the middle of Grand Tour fatigue—he earned his first Tour de France title by overtaking Primož Roglič in an individual time trial on the race’s penultimate day. He has not been as successful in one day time trials, but the combination of the hilly route, the competition field, and Evenpoel’s struggles this season made Pogačar a real contender in the race.

Instead, the enduring image from this event will be Evenepoel passing Pogačar on the cobbled climb up the Côte de Kimihurura about a kilometer from the finish. Pogačar started the race two minutes and thirty seconds ahead of the defending champion, but Evenepoel consistently ate into Pogačar’s advantage, flying through the checkpoints well ahead of Pogačar’s pace.

“The first climb was quite hard, together with the last two, but I really pushed it there and after that saw I had quite a big gap, so I just wanted to keep a pace that I could hold onto until I went flat out on the last climb,” said Evenepoel. “It was so hard to really push through [the cobbles] at the end, but to win is the most important.”

The image is the inverse of what spectators saw during the second time trial of this year’s Tour de France, when two-time winner Jonas Vingegaard overtook the struggling Evenepoel in the final meters. Evenepoel finished third at the 2024 Tour de France but his training this season was derailed after crashes in December and April. He won the stage five individual time trial before abandoning on stage 14, revealing later he had been riding with a broken rib.

Evenepoel also made headlines this summer as his current trade team, Soudal-Quickstep, released him from his contract a year early to allow his transfer to Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe for next season.

Pogačar tried to follow Evenepoel’s final push but was unable to keep contact with the Belgian. He finished two minutes and 37 seconds behind Evenepoel in fourth place, a second off the podium.

Pogačar and the rest of the riders will now shift focus to next Sunday’s elite men’s road race. Pogačar is eyeing a second consecutive title and another year in the rainbow jersey. Evenepoel will also take the start, looking to win the road race world title for the first time since 2022. Last summer, Evenepoel became the first male cyclist to win the road race and time trial at a single Olympic Games.

Reusser Overcomes Illness For First World Title

KIGALI, RWANDA – SEPTEMBER 21: Gold medalist Marlen Reusser of Team Switzerland celebrates winning during the medal ceremony after the 98th UCI Cycling World Championships Kigali 2025 – Women Elite Individual Time Trial a 31.2km race from Kigali to Kigali on September 21, 2025 in Kigali, Rwanda. (Photo by Alex Whitehead – Pool/Getty Images)

Getty Images

Reusser, 34, began her season strong, winning the women’s Giro d’Italia—one of the three Grand Tours—along the Tour de Suisse and Vuelta a Burgos stage races. The Swiss rider arrived at the 2025 Tour de France Femmes as a pre-race favorite but abandoned during first stage after suffering with a stomach bug.

After she revealed before the race that another illness affected her preparation for the UCI Road World Championships, it seemed like it would be the latest addition to a string of bad luck that has kept one of the best time trialists in the women’s World Tour peloton that has prevented her from winning the world title.

“It’s up and down, but it’s not unique with me,” she said. “Some have even lower downs, and they get stuck in a down and you don’t hear anything from them anymore. So that’s why you’re aware, because I go also over my highs and you see me performing well.”

Reusser reversed the script during the individual time trial, peaking at the right moment to overcome Dutch rivals van der Breggen and Vollering by over 50 seconds.

“Of course this is super special for me,” she said after the race. “I came into the sport as a super talent time trialist, I won so many time trials, I actually beat many of the rider who were world champ in other races, but never in the World Championships or the Olympic Games, so for me this was a knacknuss we say in German – a nut you have to open hard. So I’m happy I opened it today.”

Van der Breggen, who came out of retirement and returned World Tour racing this season, was the first of the three medalists to start. She completed the course in 44 minutes and one second, which made her the clubhouse leader by over two minutes.

When it was Reusser’s turn she was the fastest to the first checkpoint by nine seconds and was 28 seconds ahead of van der Breggen at the second time check. She gave back about five seconds at the penultimate time check but powered through with a sensational close that exploded her advantage.

Vollering was only a second down on Reusser at the first time check but was 29 seconds slower at the second. Reusser had just crossed the finish line and that check on Vollering swung the momentum heavily in her favor. Vollering took bronze one minute and five seconds behind Reusser.

The women’s elite road race will take place Saturday, September 27, the day before the men’s race caps off Africa’s first time hosting the senior UCI World Road Championships.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/sophiekaufman/2025/09/21/evenepoel-reusser-open-world-road-championships-with-time-trial-wins/

Piyasa Fırsatı
Seed.Photo Logosu
Seed.Photo Fiyatı(PHOTO)
$0.36099
$0.36099$0.36099
-1.97%
USD
Seed.Photo (PHOTO) Canlı Fiyat Grafiği
Sorumluluk Reddi: Bu sitede yeniden yayınlanan makaleler, halka açık platformlardan alınmıştır ve yalnızca bilgilendirme amaçlıdır. MEXC'nin görüşlerini yansıtmayabilir. Tüm hakları telif sahiplerine aittir. Herhangi bir içeriğin üçüncü taraf haklarını ihlal ettiğini düşünüyorsanız, kaldırılması için lütfen service@support.mexc.com ile iletişime geçin. MEXC, içeriğin doğruluğu, eksiksizliği veya güncelliği konusunda hiçbir garanti vermez ve sağlanan bilgilere dayalı olarak alınan herhangi bir eylemden sorumlu değildir. İçerik, finansal, yasal veya diğer profesyonel tavsiye niteliğinde değildir ve MEXC tarafından bir tavsiye veya onay olarak değerlendirilmemelidir.

Ayrıca Şunları da Beğenebilirsiniz

Trump-Backed WLFI Plunges 58% – Buyback Plan Announced to Halt Freefall

Trump-Backed WLFI Plunges 58% – Buyback Plan Announced to Halt Freefall

World Liberty Financial (WLFI), the Trump-linked DeFi project, is scrambling to stop a market collapse after its token lost over 50% of its value in September. On Friday, the project unveiled a full buyback-and-burn program, directing all treasury liquidity fees to absorb selling pressure. According to a governance post on X, the community approved the plan overwhelmingly, with WLFI pledging full transparency for every burn. The urgency of the move reflects WLFI’s steep losses in recent weeks. WLFI is trading Friday at $0.19, down from its September 1 peak of $0.46, according to CoinMarketCap, a 58% drop in less than a month. Weekly losses stand at 12.85%, with a 15.45% decline for the month. This isn’t the project’s first attempt at intervention. Just days after launch, WLFI burned 47 million tokens on September 3 to counter a 31% sell-off, sending the supply to a verified burn address. For World Liberty Financial, the buyback-and-burn program represents both a damage-control measure and a test of community faith. While tokenomics adjustments can provide short-term relief, the project will need to convince investors that WLFI has staying power beyond interventions. WLFI Launches Buyback-and-Burn Plan, Linking Token Scarcity to Platform Growth According to the governance proposal, WLFI will use fees generated from its protocol-owned liquidity (POL) pools on Ethereum, BNB Chain, and Solana to repurchase tokens from the open market. Once bought back, the tokens will be sent to a burn address, permanently removing them from circulation.WLFI Proposal Source: WLFI The project stressed that this system ties supply reduction directly to platform growth. As trading activity rises, more liquidity fees are generated, fueling larger buybacks and burns. This seeks to create a feedback loop where adoption drives scarcity, and scarcity strengthens token value. Importantly, the plan applies only to WLFI’s protocol-controlled liquidity pools. Community and third-party liquidity pools remain unaffected, ensuring the mechanism doesn’t interfere with external ecosystem contributions. In its proposal, the WLFI team argued that the strategy aligns long-term holders with the project’s future by systematically reducing supply and discouraging short-term speculation. Each burn increases the relative stake of committed investors, reinforcing confidence in WLFI’s tokenomics. To bolster credibility, WLFI has pledged full transparency: every buyback and burn will be verifiable on-chain and reported to the community in real time. WLFI Joins Hyperliquid, Jupiter, and Sky as Buyback Craze Spills Into Wall Street WLFI’s decision to adopt a full buyback-and-burn strategy places it among the most ambitious tokenomic models in crypto. While partly a response to its sharp September price decline, the move also reflects a trend of DeFi protocols leveraging revenue streams to cut supply, align incentives, and strengthen token value. Hyperliquid illustrates the model at scale. Nearly all of its platform fees are funneled into automated $HYPE buybacks via its Assistance Fund, creating sustained demand. By mid-2025, more than 20 million tokens had been repurchased, with nearly 30 million held by Q3, worth over $1.5 billion. This consistency both increased scarcity and cemented Hyperliquid’s dominance in decentralized derivatives. Other protocols have adopted variations. Jupiter directs half its fees into $JUP repurchases, locking tokens for three years. Raydium earmarks 12% of fees for $RAY buybacks, already removing 71 million tokens, roughly a quarter of the circulating supply. Burn-based models push further, as seen with Sky, which has spent $75 million since February 2025 to permanently erase $SKY tokens, boosting scarcity and governance influence. But the buyback phenomenon isn’t limited to DeFi. Increasingly, listed companies with crypto treasuries are adopting aggressive repurchase programs, sometimes to offset losses as their digital assets decline. According to a report, at least seven firms, ranging from gaming to biotech, have turned to buybacks, often funded by debt, to prop up falling stock prices. One of the latest is Thumzup Media, a digital advertising company with a growing Web3 footprint. On Thursday, it launched a $10 million share repurchase plan, extending its capital return strategy through 2026, after completing a $1 million program that saw 212,432 shares bought at an average of $4.71. DeFi Development Corp, the first public company built around a Solana-based treasury strategy, also recently expanded its buyback program to $100 million, up from $1 million, making it one of the largest stock repurchase initiatives in the digital asset sector. Together, these cases show how buybacks, whether in tokenomics or equities, are emerging as a key mechanism for stabilizing value and signaling confidence, even as motivations and execution vary widely
Paylaş
CryptoNews2025/09/26 19:12
Son of filmmaker Rob Reiner charged with homicide for death of his parents

Son of filmmaker Rob Reiner charged with homicide for death of his parents

FILE PHOTO: Rob Reiner, director of "The Princess Bride," arrives for a special 25th anniversary viewing of the film during the New York Film Festival in New York
Paylaş
Rappler2025/12/16 09:59
Bitcoin Peak Coming in 45 Days? BTC Price To Reach $150K

Bitcoin Peak Coming in 45 Days? BTC Price To Reach $150K

The post Bitcoin Peak Coming in 45 Days? BTC Price To Reach $150K appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News Bitcoin has delivered one of its strongest performances in recent months, jumping from September lows of $108K to over $117K today. But while excitement is high, market watchers warn the clock is ticking.  History shows Bitcoin peaks don’t last forever, and analysts now believe the next major top could arrive within just 45 days, with …
Paylaş
CoinPedia2025/09/18 15:49