Dominant Pogačar proves he is still king of the road


Imperious Pogacar the man to catch after epic season

Fifth successive Il Lombardia triumph completed his dominance while women’s Tour winner divided opinion

14 Oct 2025 - The Guardian
Jeremy Whittle

Tadej Pogačar’s command of world cycling now seems limitless. The man from Slovenia ended 2025 as he began it, dominating a coveted Italian classic, Il Lombardia, to win the “race of the falling leaves” for the fifth consecutive time.

The 27-year-old started his European season by winning the Tuscan gravel race, Strade Bianche. He closed it having matched Italian icon Fausto Coppi’s record of five Lombardy victories and Eddy Merckx’s achievement of winning three “monument” races, the Tour de France and the world road race title in the same year.

In late July, however, a weary Pogačar talked about early retirement and a sense of burnout, even as he took his fourth yellow jersey. His mid-season low came towards the end of that Tour win, when he seemed withdrawn and disgruntled, as the race closed on Paris. There were whispered rumours that he had been asked to back off a little and resist further stage wins to avoid reducing the Tour to a procession.

After a post-Tour sabbatical, during which he trained in kit bearing the messages “Do Not Disturb” and “No Photography”, he came back, seemingly revitalised, winning the world and European road races titles. Only Remco Evenepoel, the world and Olympic time-trial champion, was able to hang on to his back wheel.

By the end of the season, Pogačar was insatiable. “I always say, seven years in a row, this is my best season,” he said after winning in Lombardy on Saturday. “And again I can say this is the best season so far.”

In comparison, Jonas Vingegaard, second to Pogačar in the Tour, rebooted himself to take victory in a troubled Vuelta a España, where the presence of the Israel Premier-Tech team led to mass pro-Palestinian protests and the cancellation of the final stage in Madrid.

That team is now to undergo a rebrand, after pressure from rival teams, race organisers and even their own star rider, Derek Gee, who cited “serious concerns” which he said “weighed heavily” on his conscience, forced change.

Over the season, the only rider to come close to matching Pogacar’s spring-to-autumn longevity has been a revitalised Tom Pidcock, the Briton who chased him over the Tuscan hills to second place in Siena back in February and was in hot pursuit on Saturday in Lombardy, finishing sixth.

Pidcock’s rebirth, which led to his best-ever finish in a Grand Tour, third in the Vuelta, was mirrored by another Ineos Sport exile and fellow Olympic mountain biking champion, Pauline Ferrand-Prévot, who took the first French win in the Tour de France this century.

Ferrand-Prévot’s climbing performances on the final weekend of the Tour de France Femmes overwhelmed past champions Demi Vollering and Kasia Niewiadoma, and led to jubilation in the Alps.

But her win also sparked a debate about extreme weight loss in the women’s peloton, with even Ferrand-Prévot admitting it was unsustainable and rival rider Marlen Reusser saying “we secretly hoped she wouldn’t be successful.”

Asked by Dutch journalists if she should lose more weight to compete with Ferrand-Prévot, Vollering responded: “I want to set a good example. I hope I can win again and show girls you don’t have to be super-skinny and that if you have the power and you train hard, you can make it.”

There were other breakthrough performances in French cycling, with the most notable coming from the teenager Paul Seixas, whose win in the Tour de l’Avenir, allied to third place behind Pogačar and Evenepoel in the European Championships, led to roadside banners proclaiming “Seixas is better than sex”.

Great things are now expected from the Lyon-based rider, but given the pressures being heaped on him, many are hoping that unlike other French prodigies, he can survive the hype and prosper.

The year however, has belonged to Pogačar, yet again. Some are enthralled by his domination, others are left cold by his long solo attacks. Whichever camp you fall into, it’s an indication of cycling’s inability to ever reconcile itself with its troubled past that some remain sceptical of extraordinary performances.

Commenti

Post popolari in questo blog

I 100 cattivi del calcio

Dalla periferia del continente al Grand Continent

Chi sono Augusto e Giorgio Perfetti, i fratelli nella Top 10 dei più ricchi d’Italia?