Milan San Remo, March 21, 2026, 298 km monument

Page 58 - Get up to date with the latest news, scores & standings from the Cycling News Community.

What way will the race be won?


  • Total voters
    98
Jul 10, 2012
2,283
2,038
14,680
But he is more tired and the others are more fresh before Poggio.

It would not have been good and that would have been unwise of him to do.

Him being solo over Cipressa is trickier. Maybe he expand himself too much in the headwind and gets caught. We will never know.
He did what he had to do and it worked. I'm only responding to the weird remark that the others would have improved their chances by letting him go.
 
Jul 10, 2012
2,283
2,038
14,680
I'm not sold on that.
In fact, I think if Pogacar was solo, he would have been caught. But we will never know it that's true.
You can see the chase group making huge gains right before the poggio and the finish line, both places where Pog was prepping his attacks. And he pulled like 80% of the way, at least. Not sure how much more obvious it could be that he was not riding at an optimal pace i.e. what you'd do in a TT.
 
  • Like
Reactions: P4rthen0n
Apr 12, 2025
233
422
1,630
I'm not sold on that.
In fact, I think if Pogacar was solo, he would have been caught. But we will never know it that's true.
If the chasing group would have enough quality domestiques to put in the work, then fine, Pog might have been in trouble alone.
But if group 2 was something like Pidcock, MVDP, Wout, Ganna, there's a very high chance for group 2 syndrome happening. They may even lose time looking at each other instead of working with each other.

The last time i remember Pog being caught during a solo effort was in Amstel Gold race last year and that only happened because Remco had super fresh legs and buried himself for 40km chasing him. But Remco is one of the TT goats ever, he's a prodigy.
 
Jun 19, 2009
6,320
1,369
20,680
You can see the chase group making huge gains right before the poggio and the finish line, both places where Pog was prepping his attacks. And he pulled like 80% of the way, at least. Not sure how much more obvious it could be that he was not riding at an optimal pace i.e. what you'd do in a TT.
He paces and rides to win. It's what drives anti-Pog analysts crazy: he doesn't waste a kilojoule of energy until it's required. That sprint was all-in and, IMO Pidcock is a better finisher but rode to assist in keeping the pack from closing. Excellent ride by both, tactially.
 
  • Like
Reactions: proffate
Jul 27, 2023
256
337
2,730
we will never know if different racing by MVDP / Pidcock would have produced a different winner. I think you can make a case either way, given the very close gaps at the finish and on the Poggio.
For sure Pogacar did not do 80% of the pulling after Cipressa, at least not in the coverage I watched.
 
  • Like
Reactions: jono
Jul 24, 2025
70
118
380
Remember when Pogacar handed McNulty the win last year?

Just rewatched MSR and, honestly, McNulty was just a beast and huge part of Pogacar comeback.
I guess he did his job, but in MSR he definitely found an extra 10% to drive it for his leader. Every little detail really counted in the end.
 
  • Like
Reactions: SHAD0W93
Apr 12, 2025
233
422
1,630
Remember when Pogacar handed McNulty the win last year?

Just rewatched MSR and, honestly, McNulty was just a beast and huge part of Pogacar comeback.
I guess he did his job, but in MSR he definitely found an extra 10% to drive it for his leader. Every little detail really counted in the end.
McNulty did a great job in MSR for Pogacar.
He did more for him in those 10 minutes than he did for Del Toro in the whole Giro 2025.
 
  • Like
Reactions: SHAD0W93
Jun 19, 2009
6,320
1,369
20,680
we will never know if different racing by MVDP / Pidcock would have produced a different winner. I think you can make a case either way, given the very close gaps at the finish and on the Poggio.
For sure Pogacar did not do 80% of the pulling after Cipressa, at least not in the coverage I watched.
The only guy in this mix not to crash was Pidcock. Everything that happened to each of them could've gone another way by a finish that close. I still haven't seen enough broadcast to see Tadej's crash through to him passing the pack, uphill. That's the kind of all-in effort any rider would do after a crash to stay in the action and there were many on the pathway that could've affected the outcome.
Honestly; they were all seriously lucky to be in the finale.