• The Cycling News forum is still looking to add volunteer moderators with. If you're interested in helping keep our discussions on track, send a direct message to @SHaines here on the forum, or use the Contact Us form to message the Community Team.

    In the meanwhile, please use the Report option if you see a post that doesn't fit within the forum rules.

    Thanks!

Teams & Riders Tadej Pogačar discussion thread

Page 1166 - Get up to date with the latest news, scores & standings from the Cycling News Community.
Everybody calm down.....this is what makes bike racing so interesting.

He has been a bit overconfident in the one day races and he will learn from this and improve (just like he learned from his TDF defeats).

When I saw that he was the only one on the podium to chug his beer, I thought for sure he is skipping FW but I guess he is doing it. Hopefully he will prove everyone wrong again just like he did when everyone said doing the Giro-Tour double was too much.

His classics teammates have been a big disappointment this season.
I am sure someone said the beer they are given is the 0.0.% alcohol version anyway.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Sandisfan
A classic theory says that one can only maintain top shape as long as six weeks. The Amstel comes six weeks and one day after the Strade Bianche, so it’s normal if the winner of the Strade is past his peak during the climbing classics in April, especially if he’s also done the cobbled classics.

However Pogacar isn’t normal, so he’s still a favorite for the Ardennes, but he doesn’t look invincible anymore. He could ride the Flèche wallonne conservatively: let his team control the race and only go full in the final km. After Wednesday he can draw conclusions for his chances in Liège.
 
A classic theory says that one can only maintain top shape as long as six weeks. The Amstel comes six weeks and one day after the Strade Bianche, so it’s normal if the winner of the Strade is past his peak during the climbing classics in April, especially if he’s also done the cobbled classics.

However Pogacar isn’t normal, so he’s still a favorite for the Ardennes, but he doesn’t look invincible anymore. He could ride the Flèche wallonne conservatively: let his team control the race and only go full in the final km. After Wednesday he can draw conclusions for his chances in Liège.
His team can't control anything. They are so cooked! I hope Christen is in great shape, if not, Pogacar will be alone
 
Thanks I never watch the autumn races, after the tour I always feel fed up with it. Is it in everyone’s opinion that he has lost his sprint compared to early in his career?
Imo, not really. Or if he did lose some sprint, it's probably not that much. We're just so used to seeing him solo or sprinting against the big boys like MVDP. I think his sprint is still probably the best out of the GC contenders.
 
Thanks I never watch the autumn races, after the tour I always feel fed up with it. Is it in everyone’s opinion that he has lost his sprint compared to early in his career?
Possibly a little bit but when up against fellow climbers you saw at the top of Prato di Tivo in the Giro last year that he won the sprint with ease.

Often he is sprinting in small groups against Green Jersey winner types don’t is normal that he will lose plenty of those clashes.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Sandisfan
Apr 21, 2025
10
18
60
On a bit of a tangent, I hope that this year's classics season might do something to change the narrative that a race is automatically boring if Pogacar is on the start line. He's done five 1-day races so far this year, and "only" won two. However, he's been instrumental in making each of those races as entertaining as it was. Strade was arguably the least exciting, but even that was more suspenseful than usual because of the crash. San Remo was one of the most exciting races I've ever seen, because of the insane way Pogacar decided to race it. Flanders was great fun, with a lot of top tier contenders. Roubaix wasn't as good as it could have been had Pogacar not crashed, but it was still more entertaining because Pogacar was there (imagine, if you will, the same edition, with Ganna and Mads puncturing and no Pogacar). And of course Amstel was great: the image of Remco and Skjelmose gradually hunting down one of Pogacar's YOLO attacks will stay with me for a long time.

It sort of confirms what I thought a lot last year when people were complaining about Pogacar's dominance. Like yes, it wasn't always super exciting, but it was also caused by quite a unique set of circumstances: Pogacar going to the Giro meant he skipped a lot of the classics; Remco was injured and therefore absent from Liege; none of the top GC guys rode the Giro; Vingegaard wasn't on top form for the Tour; Pog skipping the Olympics meant he was perhaps fresher towards the end of the season and better able to carry his WC form through Emilia and Lombardy than, say, Remco.

This year has been quite different already: Pogacar and MdvP have come face to face more often; Remco is at the Ardennes in what looks like very good shape; and Vingegaard will hopefully come into the Tour in top shape. Pog might win Liege and the Tour regardless, but hopefully it will put an end to the ridiculous "Pogacar kills cycling" narrative that I kept seeing last year.
 
Possibly a little bit but when up against fellow climbers you saw at the top of Prato di Tivo in the Giro last year that he won the sprint with ease.

Often he is sprinting in small groups against Green Jersey winner types don’t is normal that he will lose plenty of those clashes.
I think a sprint in a tour is different, but it would be interesting if he just followed Remco when he attacks and trusts his sprint. It would be an interesting psychological scenario if he decides to just follow.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Sandisfan