Belgian cycling outfit Quick Step capped a fabulous season by racing to gold in the UCI Road World Championships team time-trial on Sunday, fending off defending champions Sunweb by 18 seconds.
Quick Step came over the final summit behind Sunweb but, led by big guns Bob Jungels, Yves Lampaert and Niki Terpstra, made the difference on the final descent and flat section to triumph on the 62.8km course.
The Belgian outfit specialises in one-day races and stage wins, and won 68 of them in 2018.
Team captain Lampaert said Quick Step had targeted the win and been surprised how tough the race was in the end.
“We went full, full, full gas on the descent to the finish,” he told press after the win.
“To win the Worlds team time trial is really special,” he added .
Terpstra said he used his mobile phone to plan their tactics after training on the route.
“We really trained the downhill very well, we had the video and I played it 100 times yesterday on my phone to watch every corner,” he said.
“After eight years in the team, it’s the best present I can get from and give to the team,” said Terpstra who won two key classics earlier this year.
The 2018 world championships will be the last to feature ‘trade teams’ such as Quick Step and Sky. Although reports are as yet unconfirmed, they look set to be replaced by national teams.
Quick Step completed the dramatic Innsbruck course in 1hr 07min 25.94sec, almost 19 sec ahead of Tom Dumoulin’s Sunweb team and 19.55sec ahead of third-placed Swiss outfit BMC, in their last ever race after the death of their owner.
Team Sky were fourth, another 20 seconds back, with Mitchelton-Scott in fifth 56sec off the winning pace.
Ten world champion rainbow jerseys are up for grabs at the eight-day world championships, which culminate on September 30 with the blue riband event of the men’s road race.


Italian ace Aru pulls out of worlds
Italian rider Fabio Aru announced Sunday he will not compete in the road race world championships.
“Reluctantly, after consulting with coach Davide Cassani, I’ve decided to waive the call-up to the Italian national team for the world championships in Innsbruck,” the 28-year-old said on his Facebook page.
“Unfortunately, my condition is not where I’d like it to be and, in all likelihood, would not allow me to honour my call up,” added the former Tour of Spain winner, who crashed on the stage race earlier this month.
“It’s a difficult choice but I think it is right to leave room for those who can count on a better condition right now,” he added.
Aru had been selected on a provisional 12-man Italy team for the world championships from September 22 to 30.
Veteran Vincenzo Nibali - who has won all the Grand Tours including the Tour de France in 2014 - has been called up for the Italian team but has also been struggling for form.