Almost 12 months ago to the day, Wout van Aert was left sitting against an anonymous patch of grass against a barrier in Waregem, with all but certain victory in Dwars door Vlaanderen for Visma-Lease a Bike thrown away, and a Visma three-against-one finish with Neilson Powless lost.

Visma-Lease a Bike put on an exhibition to get three riders up the road in the last 71km. With the EF Education-EasyPost rider following, Van Aert told Tiesj Benoot and Matteo Jorgenson not to attack, but to instead wait to lead him out in the sprint.

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Van der Poel (L) and Van Aert (center) ride away from the field

Van Aert just behind Van der Poel at In Flanders Fields last Sunday (Image credit: Getty Images)

Van Aert has impressed so far this spring Classics despite having a delayed start due to a fractured ankle suffered racing cyclo-cross in January.

He recovered from the pre-Cipressa crash that also affected Tadej Pogačar at Milan-San Remo. After having to wait for a slow bike change, he miraculously fought his way through the groups before attacking solo to finish third behind the World Champion and Tom Pidcock.

He then got his cobbled campaign underway at In Flanders Fields (Gent-Wevelgem), launching the key attack which saw him and eternal rival Mathieu van der Poel get away on the second Kemmelberg ascent, before following the Dutchman on the third time and doing the lion’s share of work from the two-man move.

They were ultimately caught in the final 2km, but it was a positive sign for Van Aert with the Tour of Flanders and Paris-Roubaix looming large in the next week and a half. Having changed his calendar back to include San Remo and Strade Bianche after moving his altitude camp to earlier in the season, the refresh seems to be paying off… for now.

“For now, it looks good. He’s in very good shape. He’s very confident. And I think it was the right approach,” said Niermann on Tuesday.

“It’s not about what we did the last few years not working, but it’s also about changing things a little bit every once in a while, because if you do exactly the same for year after year after year, then it also gets a bit worn out, a bit old.

“That was also part of the idea that he would not do E3 because he did that now for five years in a row, with the same approach between E3 and Flanders and Roubaix, and we just wanted to change a few things. There’s no guarantee for success, but it keeps you fresh.”

Whether or not the change has fully worked to reach new heights will be revealed fully on April 5 and April 12, but righting the wrongs at Dwars door Vlaanderen from last year could set him on the perfect path to finally taking out one of the Monuments he so desperately desires, and his first since San Remo in 2020.

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