Over 400 drivers from 25 countries were registered. 44 titles were awarded, 22 each in the U23 and junior areas.
The team of the Association of German Cyclists dominated these junior European championships. In total, she won 24 medals, 13 of them gold; an unprecedented success of the German national team in the history of the junior and U23 championships, which have been held annually since 2010. Great Britain (7, 5 and 2) and Russia in third place (6.3 and 7) followed in second place in the medal table. In the Italian team, the women with six endurance titles stood out in particular. In the juniors, the Greek talent Konstantinos Livanos surprised with two gold medals. The German junior Julien Jäger also secured two gold medals in the team sprint and in the keirin . In the sprint he lost to the Greek. The British Emma Finucane won three medals among the juniors in the short-term category , while the German Alessa Pröpster again won Keirin and Sprint . Three bronze medals went to the junior sprinter Marie-Divine Kouamé Taky from France, while the Irish junior Lara Gillespie won three silver medals in the endurance category. The strong Italian Letizia Paternoster convinced again with three gold medals in the endurance category. In the short-term category of the U23 men, the Dutchman Harrie Lavreysen and the Frenchman Sébastien Vigier dominated .
Drivers from Switzerland won a total of three medals: Robin Froidevaux , Valère Thiébaud and Mauro Schmid each won two medals (in individual and team competitions). The Austrian junior Tim Wafler won silver, the only medal for his country.
On the fourth day of the competition, the Italian driver Lorenzo Gobbo fell during the speed race as part of the juniors' omnium. A piece of wood about 40 centimeters long bored into his upper body and injured his lungs and one thigh. The 17-year-old Gobbo was operated on for three hours, but his life was not in danger. After about a week he was able to leave the hospital in Ghent and return to Italy to his parents.