On the opening day of the BinckBank Tour, Fabio Jakobsen (Quick-Step Floors) took his fourth victory of the year, after the ones scored in Nokere Koerse, Scheldeprijs and Tour des Fjords, underlining the Dutchman’s reputation as one of the most impressive neo-pros of the year.

“It’s my biggest victory since turning pro and I’m really proud of myself and the team, who put their confidence in me this morning and did a perfect job. We had bad weather and the peloton was really nervous as we approached the line, but the team was flawless and starting the race in this manner gives us great confidence”, said Jakobsen.

Monday’s stage featured six men in the breakaway, who forged out a four-minute gap, before the sprinters’ teams took the initiative in the peloton and began the chase. Jakobsen’s Quick Step Floors’ team-mate Tim Declercq played a major role in the leaders having their advantage trimmed and being brought back after the Golden Kilometre, as he set a relentless pace at the head of the bunch, despite the pouring rain, cold temperatures and howling wind of Friesland.

In the last kilometre, a crash disrupted the sprint trains of several teams, taking several riders to the ground, but fortunately, the Quick-Step Floors boys escaped unscathed and expertly brought Jakobsen to the front, who opened the sprint with 250 metres to go after a superb lead-out of Florian Sénéchal and fended off the efforts of Marcel Kittel (Katusha-Alpecin) and Caleb Ewan (Mitchelton-Scott).

The victory netted several visits to the podium for Jakobsen, who leads the overall standings and the points classification at the 14th BinckBank Tour; the 21-year-old – who was full of praise for his teammates after the stages – is confident the squad will build on the result.

“Tim was again amazing, showing it’s not for nothing that he is called ‘The Tractor’, while Max, Niki and Styby did a perfect job, keeping Yves, Florian and myself in front. In the final kilometre, I just took Florian’s wheel, who did an incredible lead-out from 600 meters out, and I opened my sprint inside the closing 250 metres. I could feel the others were close, but I managed to come on top and this gives me great joy. We don’t want to stop here and hopefully we will get other strong results, in both stages and the general classification, over the next days.”

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