Could a third time be the true charm for Neilson Powless (EF Education-EasyPost) at the Maryland Cycling Classic? After all, the US rider has been on the podium in the previous two editions and Baltimore is labeled as ‘Charm City’.

“I’m excited to go back. It looks like it might be a little bit less climbing than before it, so it could fall more towards the sprints this year, but they said that about the last course as well, and it ended up being very open,” Powless told Cyclingnews from his home in Houston, Texas.

You may like

The bulk of the season so far has been another stellar showing for the 29-year-old, with a win at Dwars Door Vlaanderen, which he called “a dream come true”, and another at the GP Gippengen. He also scored top 10s at Trofeo Laigueglia, Eschborn-Frankfurt and Liège-Bastogne-Liège.

“Heat plus humidity makes for a nasty combo. I’ve been training in very hot weather and I’ll be ready for it if it’s hot. And if it’s not, then I think the heat training will still help. It’s always a hot one in Baltimore,” he said. The advance weather report for Baltimore calls for a warm 29°C day with rain showers.

Tour to France win stage win, but that was one of the loftier goals I set for myself. The season’s been great so far. Being a part of the Tour de France team when Ben [Healy] went into yellow was really special,” Powless told Cyclingnews.

“And then for myself, being able to win my first cobbled classic at Dwars Door Vlaanderen was a dream come true and a goal I’ve been chasing for quite a while. The last two years, I realized it was a possibility, and I decided that that was going to be my goal as a professional cyclist, to win a cobbled classic or at least one of the main goals. I was able to achieve it this year, so that was incredibly special.”

After the Maryland Cycling Classic, Powless plans to compete at the WorldTour races in Canada, Grand Prix Cycliste de Québec and Montréal, then travel to Italy for the fall Classics, foregoing a spot on Team USA for Road World Championships in Rwanda at the end of September.

“My wife is due with our second child a few weeks after Worlds, and I just didn’t feel a trip to Africa was the wisest choice for me, given the travel time it would take to get there. I did get most of the vaccines that I needed if I was going to go, because I wanted to keep the option open. But with my wife’s pregnancy, the races in Canada and the Italian Classics, it was going to be a very tight schedule to make the long travel down to Africa.”