The elite men’s time trial at the UCI Road World Championships is held a few hours after the elite women’s time trial on Sunday, September 22, launching the world championships with two big ticket world titles up for grabs.

The men race on a similar course to the women in central Kigali, covering 40.6km rather than 31.2km. The men’s course includes several rolling climbs, mostly on wide roads, explaining why the likes of Filippo Ganna (Italy) opted not to ride this year.

The course starts inside the 10,000-seat BK Arena in central Kigali, so on an indoor start ramp. The route heads south to climb the so-called Côte de Nyanza on the out-and-back sector, then the two-kilometre Côte de Peage with just seven kilometres to go. There is also a climb to the finish via the Côte de Kimihurura, with the line outside the Kigali Convention Centre, as for all the races.

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Remco Evenepoel (Belgium) and Tadej Pogačar (Slovenia) are expected to fight for the rainbow jersey but could be challenged by riders who raced the Vielta a España.

Evenepoel is the defending champion and arguably the favourite to win his third consecutive world title in Rwanda.

He beat Ganna by 12 seconds in Zurich last year and has finished on the podium on three other occasions, becoming junior world champion in Innsbruck in 2018.

Evenepoel also won this year’s early time trial stage at the Tour de France beating an on-form Pogačar by 16 seconds on a flat 33km course. He suffered in the mountain time trial stage and then quit the Tour with fatigue.

He returned to racing at the Tour of Britain after an altitude camp in Livigno and confirmed his transfer from Soudal-QuickStep to Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe for 2026. Evenepoel won the hardest stage of the Tour of Britain in Wales but doubts remain about how good his form really is.

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The time trial will be the first indication if Evenepoel has a real shot at winning both the time trial and road race titles in Rwanda.

Pogačar wants a world title double, too, and he would not have opted to ride the time trial if he did not believe in his chances. He only returned to racing in Canada, and admitted he has been riding his time trial bike during his summer break from racing.

His best world champion time trial result was sixth in Wollongong in 2022. However, the hilly Kigali course changes everything and means Pogačar is Evenepoel’s biggest rival.

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