Tom Pidcock is a doubt for the upcoming cobbled classics after the British rider suffered stomach problems during Milan-San Remo on Saturday.
The cyclocross world champion, who also missed Strade Bianche two weeks ago due to similar digestive issues, was dropped on the small capi climbs that precede the Cipressa and Poggio at Milan-San Remo, before the racing had truly ignited.
Pidcock failed to finish the first monument of the season and was later fined by the UCI after he was forced to stop for an emergency toilet break by the side of the road.
The Ineos rider’s coach Kurt Bogaerts told Het Laatste Nieuws that Pidcock won’t race until his stomach problems are resolved.
The 22-year-old wasn’t scheduled to race Friday’s E3-Saxo Bank Classic or Sunday’s Gent-Wevelgem but is now a doubt for next Wednesday’s Dwars door Vlaanderen, which itself is only four days before the Tour of Flanders, one of Pidcock’s main spring objectives.
“It wasn't a stomach bug, but Tom had to go to the toilet seriously. Even afterwards, his stomach did not feel one hundred percent healthy. There was no point in racing any further,” Bogaerts said.
After failing to start Strade Bianche, Bogaerts claimed that Pidcock felt fine while training at altitude in Andorra before the issues suddenly and dramatically resurfaced at Milan-San Remo.
“The strange thing is that he doesn't really feel sick,” Bogaerts said.
“We are going to investigate this. Tom had a blood test on Wednesday and we hope that based on those results we can find a cause.
“We are not going to make a race schedule until this problem is solved.”
After De Ronde, Pidcock is pencilled in to race the Ardennes Classics later in April. He was also due to make his debut at the Giro d’Italia in May, though recent reports suggest he could be on his way to the Tour de France as Ineos Grenadiers recalibrate their plans in the wake of Egan Bernal’s training crash.