Nobody said Facebook comments were smart, but trashing a 21-year-old for winning the Enduropale du Touquet’s Vintage class because you thought the category’s name referred to the rider’s age and not the bike is a new level of reading incomprehension.

Alas, that’s what Florian Miot got.

Liliea asked, “I don’t understand, are there young people in the vintage event?”

“At 21, it’s not for him,” wrote David. “It’s a vintage.”

Vince felt that “at 21, you don’t race a vintage bike! There are other things to do.”

Jean-Michel was particularly harsh: “It’s a shame for the passionate riders of the ’80s and ’90s with their vintage bikes, only for these young, internationally competitive riders to compete. Soon we’ll see all the top MX1 riders moving to Vintage. Honestly, it’s ridiculous. Absolutely no interest whatsoever, which is a shame in my opinion.”

At least Claude was aware of the misunderstanding. He remarked, “I think many people like myself, and I’m not afraid to say it, have confused vintage and veterans.”

Not that the realization stopped Miot from getting criticism anyway. Others were more displeased that his 1996 Honda 500CR wasn’t air cooled.

“This is ridiculous, I don’t understand why a kid would ride a vintage bike with a non-air-cooled engine,” wrote Charles. “I was looking forward to watching the race tomorrow on track 21. I won’t be watching. It’s a shame, there were some great people there.”

Roger argued, “Call this the Open class instead!”

Can’t please everyone. Miot’s the one with the trophy and the bragging rights, so why’s it matter? He’s not blind to it either, even going as far as to show the middle finger on his way to the podium to taunt his critics.

“Thank you to my family, my friends, and all the haters who criticize me,” Miot proclaimed. “This little finger is for you!

“Next year, I’m back with the big boys to shut them up. Keep criticizing me. You’ve really motivated me!”

Miot previously won the Enduropale’s Espoirs and Junior races in 2017 and 2020, respectively. Although he’s done the main event before, completing three laps at his last start in 2024, he decided to move to the Vintage class.

Tonton JeeWee prepped him his bike, a 1996 500CR that was previously ridden by Nicolas Dercourt to the 2025 French Vintage championship. Dercourt had also finished runner-up to Adrien Van Beveren in the 2025 Enduropale with it.

Van Beveren, coming off a frustrating sixth-place run at the Dakar Rally and a three-time Enduropale Moto champion, looked to add a third Vintage crown on his own ’96 CR500.

Miot pressed the attack from the beginning, quickly catching Van Beveren. It was an aggressive strategy, and one that Miot said was because he “knew very well that I don’t have the fastest bike, so I wanted to put in a lot of effort on the first lap. I really wanted to catch up with the leaders.”

He tried to pass him but overshot a jump and faded a bit. Further compounding matters, he lost the rubber grip on his throttle, making it hard to twist and accelerate; ironically, he found it after crashing, but quickly discarded it since he didn’t have time for reattachment. JeeWee eventually got him a replacement, and Miot recalled him lubricating it with his spit after the piece couldn’t slide on properly.

Getting back into a rhythm, Miot caught back up to Van Beveren. The two traded the lead before Miot found an opening on the last lap, edging him out by just seven seconds.

It was the closest finish of the weekend and one of two in which the margin was less than a minute. Tom Caneele won Junior by 11 seconds over Dean Grégoire, a battle that Caneele wrapped up by sliding into the sand before getting up and celebrating with the crowd.

“The Dakar Rally, the Vintage race, and the Junior race with finishes down to the second,” commented Mathieu Dovèze, who’s done both Dakar and Enduropale.

While Dovèze didn’t take part, Van Beveren wasn’t the only rally raider present. Dakar winners Stéphane Peterhansel and Romain Dumontier also competed in Vintage, the former respectively finishing 75th on his 1996 Yamaha YZ250 and the latter in fifth with his 500CR. Édouard Boulanger, fresh off winning the Dakar as a navigator, completed seven laps in Moto and was classified 1,009th. Two-time Dakar winner Sam Sunderland was supposed to make his Enduropale debut but broke his vertebrae in an accident in late January.

After missing out on the Vintage win, Van Beveren entered the main Moto race as well on his training bike. Despite his prior victories here, which included a three-peat from 2014 to 2016, he had not run the feature since shifting his career focus to rally raid.

While “it’s been many years” since he did the main, he still came home with a solid eighth-place run.

Van Beveren and the field had no answer for Todd Kellett. After running second on Lap 1, he passed Cyril Genot when the latter was hit by a mechanical issue and faced no opposition the rest of the way.

It is Kellett’s fourth straight Enduropale victory. If he wins again in 2027, he would tie Kees van der Ven (1982–1986) for the most in a row. He also moves into a tie for the third most Enduropale victories alongside Jean-Claude Moussé, who won in 1999, 2004, 2012, and 2013.

“Coming into this weekend, I had a lot of pressure. But I believe in myself, I believe in the bike, and I believe in the team and we went to work,” said Kellett. “I feel emotional, it’s pretty crazy. It was a challenge with the weather, but I warmed up well. We had a good strategy and we trained for this.”

Kellett also secured the inaugural FIM Sand Races World Championship. He had already won the Sand Races World Cup in 2023 and 2024 before it was elevated to world championship status for the 2025–26 season.

2026 was the 50th Enduropale du Touquet Pas-de-Calais. While 2025 was the golden anniversary, there was no 2021 edition due to COVID-19.

Top ten finishers

Moto

FinishNumberRiderManufacturerLapsTotal TimeMargin
11Todd KellettYamaha143:10:21.363Leader
22Cyril GenotHonda143:12:05.658+ 1:44.295
332Milko PotisekYamaha143:21:45.495+ 11:24.132
44Lars van BerkelFantic143:23:30.698+ 13:09.335
527Hakon FredriksenHonda143:24:52.230+ 14:30.867
68Jeremy KnuimanYamaha143:26:16.560+ 15:55.197
718Camille ChapelièreSuzuki143:328:22.102+ 18:00.739
824Adrien Van BeverenHonda133:10:37.342+ 1 Lap
96Tias CallensYamaha133:10:46.472+ 1 Lap
105Jeremy HauquierYamaha133:10:51.332+ 1 Lap
Full results

Vintage

FinishNumberRiderManufacturerLapsTotal TimeMargin
127Florian MiotHonda71:04:01.706Leader
21Adrien Van BeverenHonda71:04:08.608+ 6.902
399Damien PrevotHonda71:05:47.089+ 1:45.383
421Paul Le GonidecHonda71:08:40.111+ 4:38.405
520Romain DumontierHonda71:10:13.458+ 6:11.752
626Hugo StiennesHonda71:10:20.730+ 6:19.024
715Thomas PagesHonda71:10:49.175+ 6:47.469
817Richard FuraKTM71:11:48.614+ 7:46.908
923Cyril LambeauxHonda7112:22.640+ 8:20.934
1025Thibaut RoulierHonda71:12:46.539+ 8:44.833
Full results

Junior

FinishNumberRiderManufacturerLapsTotal TimeMargin
11Tom CaneeleKTM191:32:21.044Leader
288Dean GrégoireKTM191:32:32.431+ 11.387
324Francisco GarciaKawasaki191:33:23.482+ 1:02.438
487Felix CardineauTriumph191:34:35.189+ 2:14.145
53Ryan Bart van HoveGasGas191:34:45.679+ 2:24.635
691Tom DukertsKTM191:34:51.351+ 2:30.307
766Harry SeelKTM181:33:04.271+ 1 Lap
8105Loïc KifferHusqvarna181:34:13.286+ 1 Lap
96Eden MabileauKawasaki181:34:22.690+ 1 Lap
1011Mathis MatteKTM181:34:41.259+ 1 Lap
Full results

Espoirs

FinishNumberRiderManufacturerLapsTotal TimeMargin
110Tim LopesKawasaki131:03:27.948Leader
228Timeo MohringKTM131:06:30.584+ 3:02.636
33Romane TessierHusqvarna131:06:48.957+ 3:21.009
487Arthur AnnelotGasGas131:06:53.821+ 3:25.873
542Youness TahereKTM131:07:30.401+ 4:02.453
640Leny RistucciaKTM131:07:38.747+ 4:10.799
720Nonni per LangeGasGas131:0823.888+ 4:55.940
832Leo MatteKTM121:03:57.226+ 1 Lap
954Timotei CezKTM121:04:03.809+ 1 Lap
1012Aubin CeulemansGasGas121:04:43.221+ 1 Lap
Full results

Quad

FinishNumberRiderManufacturerLapsTotal TimeMargin
16Harry WalkerDrag’on132:41:47.923Leader
226Kevin SaarHandy132:43:19.306+ 1:31.383
33Jeremy ForestierYamaha132:47:08.710+ 5:20.787
421Manfred ZieneckerHonda132:50:49.446+ 9:01.523
522Benoît BeroudiauxTRP132:51:49.653+ 10:01.730
68Pablo VioletYamaha132:53:05.524+ 11:17.601
718Mike VangrinsvenHonda132:54:58.566+ 13:10.643
812Charly RochereauYamaha132:56:22.417+ 14:34.494
9394Mark McLernonLaeger’s132:56:44.977+ 14:57.054
107Antoine CheurlinLaeger’s132:57:42.012+ 15:54.089
Full results

Featured image credit: via Florian Miot

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