Kuurne-Brussel-Kuurne

The Belgian opener that rewards positioning, nerve, and the ability to survive a day of attrition before the sprint.
WhenFirst Sunday in March
CourseOne Day
SinceTBA
CategoryProSeries
Why watch?

Kuurne-Brussel-Kuurne is the second half of Belgium's Opening Weekend, a race that looks like a sprinter's day but rarely unfolds like one.

Overview

Kuurne-Brussel-Kuurne

Kuurne-Brussel-Kuurne is a men's one-day race held in Belgium the day after Omloop Het Nieuwsblad. It skirts the Flemish Ardennes rather than diving into them, but the route still includes enough bergs, cobbles, and crosswind exposure to thin the field before the finish.

Held since 1946, Kuurne has long served as the proving ground for sprinters with Classics ambitions.

Race Notes
UpdatedMarch 5, 2026
MarketUnited States

Race hubs are the canonical route for evergreen context, route notes, and current watch destinations. Broadcast rights can move by market, and edition-level details stay current when race week approaches.

Why this race matters

This is the race where fast finishers learn whether they can handle a full day of Belgian racing. The route is less severe than Omloop, but it still delivers crashes, mechanicals, positioning battles, and repeated accelerations that leave sprinters isolated or exhausted. When it comes together, the finale rewards whoever survived the chaos with their legs and their team intact. When it doesn't, the race belongs to whoever read the wind or the breakaway correctly.

Route DNA

The course loops west from Kuurne toward the coast before turning back through a series of short climbs and cobbled sections in the Flemish Ardennes. The bergs are less numerous and less severe than those in Omloop or the Tour of Flanders, but they arrive in quick succession during the middle hours, and teams use them to launch attacks, split the field, or burn matches from rival sprinters. Crosswinds along the exposed western roads can fracture the peloton before the climbs even begin. The final 30 kilometers are relatively flat, but by then the field is often reduced, lead-out trains are incomplete, and positioning becomes a high-stakes problem. The race is usually won in a reduced bunch sprint, but the winner is rarely the fastest sprinter on paper. It's the one who survived the longest day with the fewest compromises.

Race type

One-day classic on the second day of Belgium's Opening Weekend, following Omloop Het Nieuwsblad.

Opening Weekend identity

The second leg of Belgian cycling's spring opening. Less severe than Omloop, but the cumulative fatigue from Saturday matters.

Typical winner

A fast finisher who survives the Flemish hills and crosswinds, or an attacker who reads the breakaway correctly.

Wind factor

Exposed roads toward the coast create echelon risk before the Flemish bergs even begin.

Iconic Moments

Most recent winner: Matthew Brennan

Memorable Editions

2024

Van Aert returns to form

Wout van Aert won from a reduced group, a statement victory early in the Belgian spring.

2023

Benoot solos

Tiesj Benoot attacked from distance and held off the sprint, proving the race rewards aggression.

2001

Tom Steels wins the sprint

Tom Steels won from a large reduced group, the kind of messy, tactical finish that defines this race.

Iconic Victories

Peter Sagan

Won in 2017 and 2019, using his all-round ability to handle whatever the race delivered.

Wout van Aert

Won in 2024 from a reduced group, combining Classics power with sprint speed.

Tom Boonen

Won in 2014, adding KBK to his extensive Belgian palmares.

Jasper Philipsen

Won in 2025 in a sprint finish, the kind of fast finisher the race sometimes rewards.

Signature Landmarks

From the coast to the Flemish Ardennes and back to Kuurne.

Climb

Oude Kwaremont

The cobbled climb that features in many editions, testing legs and positioning.

Terrain

Coastal crosswinds

The western loop toward the coast creates echelon opportunities before the bergs.

Finish

Kuurne finish

The race starts and finishes in Kuurne, a fast, flat run-in for whoever survived the day.

Terrain

Flemish Ardennes bergs

A series of short, steep climbs through the Flemish Ardennes that thin the field in the middle hours.