Michael Goolaerts | |
Birth Date: | 24 July 1994 |
Birth Place: | Lier, Belgium |
Death Place: | Lille, France |
Height: | 1.86 m |
Weight: | 80 kg |
Discipline: | Road |
Role: | Rider |
Amateuryears1: | 2013 |
Amateurteam1: | (stagiaire) |
Amateuryears2: | 2015–2016 |
Amateurteam2: | Lotto–Soudal U23 |
Amateuryears3: | 2016 |
Amateurteam3: | (stagiaire) |
Proyears1: | 2014 |
Proyears2: | 2017–2018 |
Michael Goolaerts (in Dutch; Flemish ˈɣoːlaːrts/; 24 July 1994 – 8 April 2018) was a Belgian cyclist who rode for .[1] During the 2018 Paris–Roubaix, Goolaerts suffered a cardiac arrest. He was airlifted to a hospital in Lille, where he died hours later.[2] [3]
Goolaerts was born in Lier and grew up in Hallaar, Heist-op-den-Berg, where he became a member of the Balen Bicycle Club.[4] He won the provincial individual time trial championship title of Antwerp in the newcomers category in 2010.[5] He also won the individual time trial championship title in the juniors category in 2011.[6] In 2012, he was part of the teams that won Belgian national junior championship titles in the team pursuit[7] and the team sprint.[8] That year he also finished eighth in the junior version of the Tour of Flanders.
He joined the Verandas Willems team as a stagiaire in the second half of 2013, and went on to secure a full-time contract with the team the following year. In 2015 he joined Lotto-Soudal's development team.
Goolaerts joined as a stagiaire, starting on 1 August 2016, before rejoining the now UCI Professional Continental team for the 2017 season. He made his debut in the Étoile de Bessèges,[9] and had a top-10 position in the GP Briek Schotte.[10] That year he also made the early breakaways in the Tour of Flanders, where he remained in the front group for over 200 km, Halle–Ingooigem, where his performance earned the praise of Tom Boonen, and Paris-Tours.[11] At the start of the 2018 season he placed ninth in Dwars door West–Vlaanderen.[12]
On 8 April 2018, Goolaerts started in his first Paris–Roubaix. On the second cobbled sector, at Briastre, after 109 km of racing, he suffered cardiorespiratory arrest and lay unresponsive on the ground.[2] He was resuscitated by paramedics and transferred by helicopter to CHRU-Hospital in Lille.[13] [14] He died later that evening.[3] An autopsy concluded that he had suffered a cardiac arrest before he fell from his bike.[15]
In May 2018 it was announced that the cobbled section where he crashed would be renamed the "Secteur Pavé Michael Goolaerts" in his honour, and that his family would be invited to unveil a monument at the site of his fall the following month.
As of April 2018[1]