Walter Vargas wins historic gold at Montería Panamerican Road Championships

Colombian cyclist Walter Vargas secured his seventh gold medal, the fourth consecutive, in the elite time trial at the Panamerican Road Championships in Montería. Jerónimo Calderón added bronze in under-23. Colombia leads the medal table with two golds, one silver, and two bronzes.

During the second day of the Panamerican Road Championships in Montería, 33-year-old Walter Vargas dominated the elite men's time trial over 43.1 km on Avenida Circunvalar. Averaging 52.8 km/h, he finished in 48 minutes, 56 seconds, and 03 hundredths, ahead of Mexico's Eder Frayre (49:50:41) and Uruguay's Antonio Fagundez (50:08:11). “I expected stronger wind on the outbound leg, but the conditions I found allowed me to push harder and win again at the Panamerican. This result brings me closer to the World Championships in Canada, where I hope to compete in good shape,” said Vargas, eyeing the September Worlds in Canada. Antioquian Jerónimo Calderón from Copacabana, Vuelta al Porvenir champion, earned bronze in under-23 over 36 km with 43:10:22, behind Mexicans Sebastián Ruiz (42:02:05) and José Juan Prieto (42:46:33). Fellow Colombian Juan Diego Quintero placed sixth at 43:55.86. Colombia tallies two golds (Vargas in elite men and José Manuel Posada in junior men), one silver (Estefanía Castillo in junior women), and two bronzes (Lineth García in junior women and Calderón in under-23), topping the medal table. Road races move to Cereté on Friday, March 20: junior women 67 km (5 laps of 13.4 km) and men 120.6 km (9 laps). The event ends Sunday.

Related Articles

Jonas Vingegaard celebrates solo victory at Coll de Pal, taking leader's jersey in Volta a Catalunya queen stage.
Image generated by AI

Vingegaard wins solo the queen stage of Volta a Catalunya

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Jonas Vingegaard won solo the fifth stage of Volta Ciclista a Catalunya, finishing at Coll de Pal, and took the leader's jersey with a 57-second lead over Felix Gall. Remco Evenepoel, his main rival, finished 1:38 behind the Dane. The 153.1 km stage featured demanding climbs in the Pyrenees.

Danish cyclist Jonas Vingegaard won the sixth stage of the Volta a Catalunya from Berga to Queralt with a decisive attack 2.4 km from the finish. This secures him the overall victory with one stage remaining. Lenny Martínez and Florian Lipowitz complete the podium.

Reported by AI

Colombian cyclist Harold Tejada claimed victory in the sixth stage of the Paris-Nice race, securing his second professional win in Europe. From Pitalito and riding for the Astana Qazaqstan Team, Tejada broke away from the peloton with an attack in the final five kilometers to finish first in Apt, France.

Marco Odermatt led a Swiss clean sweep in the men's downhill at the Alpine Ski World Cup in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, on February 28, 2026. The victory, his first since the Milan Cortina Olympics, extended his lead in the season standings. Teammates Alexis Monney and Stefan Rogentin finished second and third, respectively.

Reported by AI

France's Victor Haghighat won gold in the men's super-G at the 2026 FIS Alpine Junior World Ski Championships in Narvik, Norway, on March 9, clocking 40.36 seconds. Canada's Jake Kertesz-Knight secured bronze with a time of 40.57 seconds, becoming the first Canadian man to medal in the event since James Crawford in 2016. Switzerland's Sandro Manser took silver, finishing 0.03 seconds behind Haghighat.

Norway's Filip Skari won the men's sprint free gold at the FIS U23 World Ski Championships in Lillehammer after favorite Oskar Opstad Vike crashed in the final. Sweden's Elin Henriksson took the women's title ahead of two Norwegians, while France's Margot Tirloy and Léonie Perry finished just off the podium.

Reported by AI

Norway's Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo won the men's 10km freestyle interval start cross-country skiing race at the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics, with France's Mathis Desloges taking silver and Norway's Einar Hedegart bronze. Canadian skier Max Hollmann finished 23rd in 21:56, while Ireland's Thomas Maloney Westgård placed 54th amid warm conditions and soft snow. The event tested endurance on a 10km course with uphill, downhill and flat sections.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline