Gravel is all about grit and embraces variety. That applies to both race routes and the competitors themselves, where variable conditions and terrain often present unpredictable equipment and fitness challenges to even the most experienced pro riders.

The fourth edition of the UCI Gravel World Championships in Zuid-Limburg this weekend hits the mark for fast, Classics-style competitions this Saturday and Sunday. There is Dutch territory that has been featured in the Amstel Gold Race, which lures the legends of the WorldTour and Women’s WorldTour this year – Lorena Wiebes, Marianne Vos and Tim Merlier (Netherlands), Tim Wellens (Belgium) and Romain Bardet (France).

Riders with long pedigrees on gravel desperately want the rainbow stripes, however, so look for a clash of titans from the likes of gravel ‘veterans’ like Gianni Vermeersch and Greg Van Avermaet (Belgium), Tiffany Cromwell (Australia), Geerike Schreurs (Netherlands) and Rosa Klöser (Germany) to kick up the dust at the front of the elite races.

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Some of the top women not expected to line up are 2023 women’s champion Kasia Niewiadoma-Phinney (Poland), last year’s fourth-place finisher Puck Pieterse (Netherlands) and three-time US women’s gravel champion Lauren Stephens. On the men’s side, last year’s winner Mathieu van der Poel (Netherlands) takes time off from a hectic road and MTB season, so the podium is wide open. While 2023 winner Matej Mohorič (Slovenia) is on the start list, he is questionable to start due to struggles at Road Worlds and European Championships.

Perhaps missing from the action will be many of the gravel stars who have performed consistently on longer and more mountainous courses, such as US riders Keegan Swenson, Alexey Vermeulen, Cole Paton, Cecily Decker and Melisa Rollins. They are expected to race the final two rounds of the Life Time Grand Prix in Arkansas across the next two weeks. Also absent from the Netherlands for the prize-rich Grand Prix are gravel standouts Matthew Beers and Haley Preen of South Africa, Simon Pellaud of Switzerland, Torbjørn Røed of Norway, Cameron Jones and Courtney Sherwell of Australia, Haley Smith and Andrew L’Esperance of Canada – all of them also in Arkansas.

the defending champion, having won last year’s title in Leuven ahead of Belgium’s Lotte Kopecky and her Dutch compatriot Lorena Wiebes.

Vos opted not to compete at the recent Rwanda Road World Championships, citing a personal matter at home, but had had a strong summer season, winning a stage and finishing twice on the podium at the Tour de France and then taking second place at GP Plouay in August.

Although she hasn’t had an extensive amount of gravel racing on her calendar this year, even as the World Champion, she did compete at the UCI’s 3Rides Gravel Race, where she secured the victory ahead of compatriot Larissa Hartog and Germany’s Romy Kasper.

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Vos’ strength and capabilities across multiple disciplines have led to 14 elite world titles: eight in cyclocross, three in road, two in track, and one in gravel.

Still at the top of her game, Vos will be the favourite on the start line in Limburg.

Unbound Gravel 200 last year, and standing on numerous podiums, before signing a two-year deal with the WorldTeam for 2025 and 2026.

Klöser had another successful season this year, competing across 12 top-level gravel races and securing 11 podiums, including victories at Eislek Gravel Luxembourg, Hegau Gravel Race, The Rift, CORE4, Lauf Gravel Worlds, Ranxo Gravel, and the elite women’s title at the German National Championships.

She hasn’t had her best showing at the Gravel World Championships, finishing just outside of the top 20 in Veneto in 2023 and Leuven in 2024, but this year she lines up as a much more experienced racer, having won four consecutive events on the Gravel Earth Series for that overall title. She told Cyclingnews that the course is not super technical or super hard, with lots of punchy climbs. She’s done a recon and liked her chances.

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