The under-23 men’s road race at the Road World Championships in Rwanda is upon us, and things will look a little different this year.

The peloton of 123 riders set to tackle the 164.6km course in Kigali will be run without any professional riders for the first time since 2015, after which rules were introduced to allow any WorldTour or ProTeam rider under the age of 23 to participate

This year, following another rule change, only non-professional riders will be racing, meaning that 21-year-old reigning champion and Visma-Lease A Bike pro Niklas Behrens won’t be lining up. The rule change also counts out a wealth of other well-known riders, including Isaac del Toro, Matthew Brennan, Romain Grégoire, Giulio Pelizzari, and Jan Christen.

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However, several familiar names will still be taking part in the race, including a host of the next big things in road racing – riders already working their way through the development and Continental racing programmes of top-tier teams.

Here’s our pick of the top riders to watch at this year’s Road World Championships under-23 men’s road race.

Jarno Widar, comes into the race with the biggest reputation of the riders taking the start on Friday. The 19-year-old already has one under-23 road race under his belt. He finished seventh at last year’s race in Zurich, having smashed the race apart from the front before cramping late on.

He won the Alpes Isère Tour, Giro d’Italia Next Gen, and Giro della Valle d’Aosta as an 18-year-old, and this year added a swathe more titles to his palmarès. Wins at the U23 Liège-Bastogne-Liège, La Flèche Ardennaise, the Ronde de l’Isard, and another Valle d’Aosta title came this season, while he finished runner-up at the Tour de l’Avenir, winning two mountain stages along the way.

The rainbow jersey is his main goal of the season, even if he recently missed the Worlds time trial after suffering a leg injury last month. His demonstrable strength in the hills and mountains makes him the top favourite in this race before he steps up to the pros next season.

Lorenzo Finn leads Italy, having won the junior men’s road race in Zurich last time out. The youngest rider in the race has taken to the under-23 level with ease at Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe Rookies, putting in a string of impressive results in spite of his young age.

Back in the spring, he narrowly missed out to Widar at La Flèche Ardennaise, won the Giro del Belvedere, and finished top five in the U23 Liège-Bastogne-Liège. At his Giro Next Gen debut, he finished sixth overall and won the mountains classification, while he missed the podium by just three seconds at the Tour de l’Avenir.

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He’s in good form in this late-season period, too, having finished fourth in the under-23 time trial at the weekend. Finn looks set to feature among the favourites at the weekend, even if he isn’t the outright tip for success.

Jakob Söderqvist already had plenty of experience with the senior team with 32 race days, including the Volta ao Algarve, Kuurne-Brussel-Kuurne, and Scheldeprijs. He’s already won the elite Swedish time trial title as well as a time trial stage win at the Tour of Denmark.

However, as his time trial prowess – and a second place at Paris-Roubaix espoirs – show, he’s more of a racer for the flat lands than the 3,500 metres of climbing which fill the course in Kigali. He may not be in the mix at the finish, but he’s still one to watch this week and beyond.

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