2025 Bolero UCI Gravel World Championships: Vermeersch steps up to the rainbow

Two-time silver medallist clinches victory

The 2025 Bolero UCI Gravel World Championships came to a spectacular end on Sunday, crowning Belgium’s Florian Vermeersch after the Men Elite battle held on the roads, paths and tracks of the Netherlands’ South Limburg region to cap off a thrilling weekend of competition around Beek, Beekdaelen and Maastricht.

The Men Elite title was not the only one awarded on Sunday, with rainbow glory also up for grabs in the Men 19-34, 35-39, 40-44 and 45-49 categories. Just like the Women Elite and amateurs from 16 more age categories on Saturday, they took on a demanding course characterised by three parts, with a paved start from Beek, followed by a 50km loop with most of the gravel sections, and the final stretch to Maastricht.

Silver medallist in 2023 and 2024, Vermeersch conquered the rainbow jersey with a solo triumph after 181 kilometres of racing. On home terrain, the Netherlands’ Frits Biesterbos came second and Slovenia’s Matej Mohorič rounded out the podium.

“It’s like the end of a long comeback I would say,” said Vermeersch, who suffered a broken femur in February 2024. “To win again after two difficult years is really amazing. To end the season like this… I have no words. I didn’t see much of the peloton. I was always chasing or in the front. We had very little information so I was focusing on myself and getting to the line.”

Vermeersch starts strong and finishes stronger

Among the 255 starters of the Men Elite race, Vermeersch and Great Britain’s Connor Swift (bronze medallist in 2023) rapidly upped the ante to force early moves. The former eventually made the break with a countryman, Floris Van Tricht, as well as Germany’s Nils Politt and Biesterbos.

After Politt was dropped from the front group due to a mechanical with 69km remaining, he was caught by Mohorič (winner in 2023) and Switzerland’s Felix Stehli, making a three-man chase group behind the three leaders. With Mohorič unleashing his power and skills to try to bridge the gap, Politt dropped back to a second chase group while Great Britain’s Tom Pidcock, another supremely versatile star, accelerated in pursuit. Into the last 50 kilometres, Mohorič and Stehli trailed by 35’’, while the Pidcock group was 1’10’’ adrift.

The lead trio became a duo as Van Tricht was dropped on an uphill section through the forest with 41km to go. Vermeersch maintained high pressure and eventually went solo 19 kilometres from the finish line. His Dutch rival Biesterbos tried to resist but the gap steadily increased past the final climb of the day, Bronsdalweg (1km at 7.2%), summited with 14km to go.

Vermeersch eventually triumphed with a margin of 40 seconds over Biesterbos. Behind them, Mohorič distanced everyone to claim the bronze medal (+1’23’’) ahead of Van Tricht, Stehli and Pidcock.