Description
March 18, 2026
80th Danilith Nokere Koerse 2026 🇧🇪 (1.Pro) ME – Deinze – Nokere : 186,4 km
Nokere Koerse is a significant Belgian one-day cycling race that serves as a vital fixture in the spring classics season,
Show more...
March 18, 2026
80th Danilith Nokere Koerse 2026 🇧🇪 (1.Pro) ME – Deinze – Nokere : 186,4 km
Nokere Koerse is a significant Belgian one-day cycling race that serves as a vital fixture in the spring classics season, often categorized as a prestigious semi-classic. The event traditionally begins in a neighboring town before traversing a demanding route through the Flemish Ardennes to conclude in the village of Nokere. Its character is defined by a relentless series of cobbled sectors and short, punchy climbs that test the technical skills and endurance of the professional peloton. A central feature of the race is the repeated ascent of a historic cobbled hill, which frequently plays a decisive role in the tactical maneuvers of the day.
Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Premier Tech) powered to his first victory of 2026 at Nokere Koerse, breaking the heart of solo attacker Alec Segaert (Bahrain Victorious), who was caught in sight of the line.
Philipsen, who was held up by crashes and had to change his shoe during the chaotic race, was expertly positioned on the wheel of Juan Sebastián Molano (UAE Team Emirates-XRG). He opened the sprint, and leapt clear, passing a fading Segaert along the way, to take the victory.
Jordi Meeus (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) also got past Molano for second place, with the Colombian having to settle for third.
For much of the final 10 kilometres, the peloton seemingly underestimated Segaert’s time-trial strength, leaving the chase to a single Lotto-Intermarché rider until the closing metres.
It was the deceptively difficult alternate ascent of the Nokereberg and a headwind that proved to be the undoing of the young Belgian, and a patient Philipsen capitalised on the situation, staying sheltered on Molano’s wheel until just the right moment.
“I’m really happy to take the win,” Philipsen said after having to endure the longest wait for his first victory of the season since 2021, saying his year so far “didn’t go according to plan – or I just didn’t have the great feeling yet. But I’m happy to win here, and hopefully it’s the first of many to come.”
How it unfolded
Nokere Koerse hardly ever ends with a successful breakaway – the last time was in 2021 when Ludovic Robeet won – but that never stops riders from trying. After an active first 20km, four riders were allowed to go clear for what would eventually be a futile effort to steal the victory.
Lionel Taminiaux (Lotto-Intermarché), Sean Christian (Modern Adventure), Jelle Harteel and Jonah Killy (Tarteletto-Isorex) enjoyed the mild temperatures and sunshine as they gained nearly four minutes on the bunch in the first half of the lumpy 186.4km race from Deinze to Nokere, but that began to fall rapidly as the race entered the large closing circuit.
Although there was a brief acceleration with 75km to go that slashed the breakaway’s advantage to 1:27, the peloton came through the finish line for the second time shortly after, spread wide across the road in a general slowdown that gave the escapees another 30 seconds.
The quartet had just under two minutes in hand with 46.5km to go when a multi-rider crash in the peloton brought down sprinter Pascal Ackermann (Jayco AlUla) and several other riders just as the chase began to kick off in earnest.
XDS-Astana and Soudal-QuickStep took charge as the penultimate ascent of the Lange Ast climb approached, and with 40km to go, the surge halved the breakaway’s gap to 1:05.
There was another crash at the back of the peloton as they headed up the Nokereberg for the second-to-last time, taking down Timothy Dupont (Tarteletto-Isorex) and Javier Ibáñez (Caja Rural-Seguros RGA), as the pace heated up.
The breakaway was really struggling to hold on as a turn of pace from Soudal-QuickStep, Lidl-Trek and UAE Team Emirates-XRG brought their lead down to 30 seconds with 34km to go. Even though the effort was on again, off again, the breakaway’s spirit seemed broken as the team cars flew by.
Killy was the last man standing, putting in a surge with 30km to go that the peloton was more than happy to let go for a while to discourage further aggression.
After opening up a 30-second lead, Killy was back in the fold, finally, with 21km to go, and the race was on, but Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Premier Tech) was at the team car getting a shoe change.
Tudor lit up the Lange Ast for the final time, but were reeled in and countered by UAE Team Emirates-XRG, who were then attacked by Lidl-Trek’s Kristian Egholm, joined by Cerial Desal (Soudal-QuickStep), Gianni Vermeersch (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), Matevz Govekar (Bahrain Victorious) and Roel van Sintmaartensdijk (Lotto-Intermarché). It was, however, a short-lived move, and with 16km to go, the peloton was intact.
Alec Segaert (Bahrain Victorious) capitalised on a series of twists and turns leading into the Doorn cobbles with 14km to go, launching an attack that opened up an impressive gap. In a strong tailwind, his lead approached 30 seconds with 7km to go, marking another key race transition.
Segaert encountered the headwind coming into the final 3km but still had 20 seconds as Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe called Vermeersch back from the pointy end of the peloton. It wasn’t until just outside the red kite that Soudal-QuickStep began pitching in, leaving a nail-biting final minute of racing.
Segaert still had a solid lead as he started up the final climb, but you could almost see his heart sink as Philipsen blasted past with just metres to go.
Results :











