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“I saw death right in front of me!” Lotte Kopecky sobbed after nearly hitting a truck at Strade Bianche, misled toward a dead end by a mysterious person. Demi Vollering cried in shock as the UCI launched an emergency probe into possible sabotage.

“I saw death right in front of me!” Lotte Kopecky sobbed after nearly hitting a truck at Strade Bianche, misled toward a dead end by a mysterious person. Demi Vollering cried in shock as the UCI launched an emergency probe into possible sabotage.

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When Lotte Kopecky emerges from a cloud of white dust during the Strade Bianche, she believes the race is coming to an end. Instead, she suddenly faced a truck just meters away, a moment she later tearfully described as seeing death before her eyes.

The Belgian champion was descending a narrow gravel section when confusion broke out among the riders. Visibility was poor, speeds were high and the route ahead seemed blurry, turning a prestigious race into a scene of terrifying uncertainty for everyone involved.

Kopecky later revealed that seconds before the incident, a person standing near an intersection began waving frantically. According to several riders, the gestures appeared to direct the peloton toward a side road that ended abruptly right in front of them all.

Trusting the signal, in the chaos of the race, a few cyclists drifted slightly in the wrong direction. Kopecky was among the first to accelerate onto gravel before realizing that a heavy vehicle was suddenly approaching the intersection at frightening speed.

For a split second, the world seemed to stop. Kopecky braked suddenly, his tires skidding on chalky gravel as the truck driver honked his horn. Dust exploded in the air as riders behind them shouted urgent, panicked warnings nearby.

Television cameras briefly lost the moment inside the swirling dust cloud, leaving commentators confused. When the footage returned, Kopecky had abruptly veered aside, narrowly avoiding disaster as the truck rolled through the crossing seconds later while the stunned bikers huddled together in silence.

Behind her, the peloton burst into panic and disbelief. Several cyclists slowed down considerably, fearing another vehicle would appear. Racing bikes rushed by and team radios crackled with urgent messages asking what had just happened today on the dangerous gravel section.

Among the most shaken was Dutch star Demi Vollering, who was riding just a few meters from Kopecky. Witnesses said she began crying while still pedaling, overwhelmed by how close the peloton came to tragedy on the chaotic gravel descent.

I really thought someone was going to die, Vollering allegedly told the team staff after the stage. His voice shook as mechanics and trainers tried to calm the riders who were still on the verge of frightening disaster moments earlier in today’s chaotic sector.

Kopecky herself struggled to continue running normally after the scare. Television footage later showed her wiping away tears with dusty gloves while speaking on the radio, repeatedly asking race officials how such a dangerous situation had occurred at the iconic Italian race.

In a few minutes, the organizers of the Strade Bianche alerted the officials of the Union Cycliste Internationale. The governing body quickly opened lines of communication with race directors’ safety personnel and local authorities to determine whether the misdirection was accidental or intentional during the race.

An emergency meeting was reportedly called the same evening, bringing together race commissioners and UCI security representatives. Their main question was simple but frightening: who was the person signaling the runners toward the dangerous dead end at the critical moment of the race.

Several amateur videos filmed by spectators quickly surfaced on the Internet. In the clips, a shadowed individual can be seen gesturing forcefully as runners approach the intersection, although the footage remains too distant to clearly identify the person responsible that day.

Investigators are now analyzing these recordings frame by frame. Officials hope enhanced footage could reveal whether the individual was a confused spectator, a misguided volunteer or someone who was deliberately interfering with the race and risking the lives of runners on the gravel course.

The possibility of sabotage has shaken the cycling community. The Strade Bianche is widely considered one of the most spectacular and dangerous one-day races, where narrow roads and dust already test the riders’ nerves and concentration throughout the brutal Tuscan route.

Former professionals speaking on television expressed shock that an uncontrolled person could stand so close to a critical crossroads. Many have demanded stronger barriers, clearer signage and better coordination between volunteers and race safety teams to protect runners at future events.

Team leaders also raised concerns about communication failures. Some have argued that radio warnings about the road layout could have avoided confusion, especially in dusty conditions where riders cannot clearly see road arrows or signals ahead during today’s intense racing situations.

Meanwhile, Kopecky attempted to finish the race despite shaking nerves. Her teammates surrounded her protectively within the peloton, aware that the psychological shock can be as destabilizing as an accident on the brutal white gravel roads that stretch across rural Tuscany that day.

Later interviews revealed how deeply that moment affected her. Kopecky described the truck’s grille filling her vision as dust blinded her eyes, a nightmare image that will likely linger long after in her memories of racing for the world champion.

Race organizers insisted safety protocols had been followed, but admitted the incident exposed vulnerabilities. Large, open-country courses often rely on volunteers and local coordination, creating unpredictable situations when crowds gather near intersections during today’s popular international cycling events.

As speculation spread online, some fans warned against premature accusations. They noted that chaotic racing environments can easily create misunderstandings, especially when dust noise and adrenaline blur runners’ perception of given directions along narrow gravel roads during competitions like this.

The board nevertheless promised a thorough investigation. Officials confirmed they are reviewing communications systems on marshal placement and spectator control measures to ensure no rider ever faces such a terrifying moment again at elite professional cycling races anywhere in the world today.

For many competitors, this episode overshadowed the sporting battle of the day. Conversations on the team buses were less about tactics and results and more about gratitude that everyone had emerged unscathed after the terrifying roadside mix-up at the Strade Bianche earlier.

Cycling has always balanced beauty and danger, especially in historic gravel races. Yet moments like this remind drivers how thin the margin is between thrilling competition and irreversible tragedy on unpredictable roads shared with vehicles and spectators every season.

As the investigation continues, Kopecky’s moving words resonate throughout the cycling world. I saw death before my eyes, she said softly, a stark reminder that even champions can become victims of chaos in a single unpredictable second on race day.