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Where Paris-Roubaix 2024 will be decided, part 3: Carrefour de l’Arbre
Cyclist Where Paris-Roubaix 2024 will be decided, part 3: Carrefour de l’Arbre ‘The Tree Junction’ – or ‘Crossroads’ – really does sound so much better in French, doesn’t it? But banish all thoughts of barreling your way around the similarly named French supermarket by bike. Just as with the Arenberg, at the Carrefour de l’Arbre it’s a case of eat or be eaten, hold on or be damned as, with just 17km left to race at this point, whatever’s left of the Roubaix pelotons will thunder through here at as high a speed as their by-now beaten and broken bodies will allow. ‘The pavé at the Carrefour is so bad,’ says Dutchman Tristan Hoffman, who finished second to Swede Magnus Bäckstedt in the 2004 race. Kevin Faingnaert ‘The cobbles are brutal – really brutal. The road’s 30cm higher in the middle than on the left or right side! Now, as a sports director [for Jayco-AlUla], it’s hard for me not to smash the car, but for the riders, you’re tired. If you have anything left in the legs, it makes sense to try something there.’ It was at the Carrefour de l’Arbre sector that the main selection of riders was made in 2004, Hoffman points out: Bäckstedt, Johan Museeuw, Fabian Cancellara, Roger Hammond, Hoffman and, for a short time, George Hincapie, before he dropped off the pace. ‘I knew from the start that day that I needed to gamble,’ remembers Hoffman. ‘Well, it was more of a tactic actually, knowing that with a headwind it’s more difficult to stay at the front.’ Related Posts The edge of glory: Does history predict a win for Mathieu van der Poel at Paris-Roubaix 2024? Where Paris-Roubaix 2024 will be decided, part 2: Mons-en-Pévèle Where Paris-Roubaix 2024 will be decided, part 4: Roubaix Velodrome Where Paris-Roubaix 2024 will be decided, part 1: The Arenberg Forest Paris-Roubaix 2024: Routes, start lists, history and all you need to know Paris-Roubaix: ‘Stay calm and wait’ ASO/Pauline Ballet He continues: ‘I decided to stay calm and wait, and wait. Suddenly we were approaching the finish, and Museeuw had a puncture [with 6km to go], I knew it was the moment in my career to win Paris-Roubaix… but it didn’t happen! That day, Bäckstedt was a little bit stronger. Looking at our previous results however, I think I was a bit of a better rider in the Classics. ‘Twice before I’d been fourth, so I just lacked that little bit to put my name to that Monument. But he was better that day, and I was second, and that is how it is,’ he shrugs. ‘At the Carrefour de l’Arbre, you either have it or you don’t have it – or somebody has “it” a little bit more than you,’ adds Hoffman’s former CSC teammate Lars Michaelsen, who was 10th at Roubaix in 1999, and fifth in both 2002 and 2005. ‘The cobbles are seemingly placed at random and they seem to get worse and worse every year.’ After the Arenberg and Mons-en-Pévèle, the Carrefour de l’Arbre is the third of Roubaix’s three sectors of cobbles rated as five-star – the toughest to ride, with the gnarliest stones. And coming so close to the end of the race, it’s really no coincidence that they are the most storied. Read our full Paris-Roubaix guide for course details, start lists and more The post Where Paris-Roubaix 2024 will be decided, part 3: Carrefour de l’Arbre appeared first on Cyclist.
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