It’s not all ‘eye test stuff’ though, is it? It’s ’what he actually does’ stuff. It’s 2026 and by now Pogacar wins every race he takes part in. That is objectively unprecedented. That’s evidence item number one. Then, related of course, there’s his consistency and immunity to fatigue. Number three is his ability, in this age of super specific cycling, to ride all race types and be not merely competitive but to destroy all his competitors. Which brings me to number four. An ability to win at will, and in any fashion, with relative ease, in whatever manner he chooses. Seated accelerations that leave everyone else behind as if they were standing still. And I ask again. Why does he not suffer from oxygen debt following brutal accelerations at high altitude? Why can he just keep going at those faster speeds without having to knock off the effort? That doesn’t need numbers, or calculations, it needs an explanation.
What he actually does is indeed spectacular. But so is what, e.g., Newton did. Being by far the best is not and indicator he is cheating.
He does get fatigues, just less than the other because he knows how to train and mentally he is a monster. Just look at the Kwaermont times last week (the third time round was slower than the second for example).
Specialists and super specific cycling has always been spoken about because people found it hard to be consistently good and well prepared throughout the season.
I think there really is a new way the sport is done since the end of the Sky era and the introduction of Jumbo and Pog at the top of the cycling hierarchy. Just to illustrate my point, the Merckx era was full of amateurs and Eddy himself was just a bit more professional and better than the rest and his results were there. Then in the famous 90s people were juiced up to the gills but the way people trained was really bad. People would often fluctuate in form and weight and it was believed that you could peak for one or two months per season. Then with the SKY ere things started to get more professional but still the training was not good as evidenced by G's comments that they would often ride completely empty of nutrition (I guess trying to stimulate fat burning (such nonsense)).
All in all, Pog is an absolute killer on the bike, a pretty good physical specimen but where his true advantage lies is his mentality.
Genetic doping is included on WADA’s list of prohibited methods. In the run-up to the Olympic Games, France has had to pass a law authorising genetic testing as part of anti-doping controls, which naturally raises numerous bioethical questions. This has mobilised the National Assembly, the Senate and the Constitutional Council, which have other things to do with their time (I hope).
Why bother if this method is pure science fiction?
There was a post just below yours which addresses these questions well. I will just add that imho the "traditional" gene doping by using vectors to temporarily introduce new DNA in the cells (let us call it type A gene doping) (this is what the COVID19 vaccine is) has possibly been tried in sports (although I do not believe in high level sports) but as the poster I am referring to explained, we do not know the efficacy of this procedure. In any case, even if type A gene doping is used in the pro peloton why would Pog be the only one? In the 90s EPO and the other things were widely known, even for layman and it was also known that whole teams were using the stuff.
The CRISPR gene doping (let us call it type B gene doping) is a really new method, only done in a few clinical cases and I am quite sure it is not present in sports.
Nothing out of the ordinary...just plain old power numbers that are routinely seen in the pro peloton?
He has excellent numbers not ordinary.
Totally agree.
For decades, cycling was a game of trade offs. But Pogačar is dismantling the specialists at their own game, all year round. He has the punch of a sprinter, the engine of a TT specialist, the lungs of a pure climber, rolling harder on the flats than the classicists who weigh more. Simultaneously...
Yet here we are. He doesn't just win. He chooses where to win, how to win, when to win, and by how much to win. Isn't just dominance, it's a middle finger to the rest of the World Tour. He has engineered away the "bad days".
In 2026, I expect a 100% strike rate. Any "crumb" he leaves behind (a minor stage or a secondary race) would be purely strategic.
Climber and hill specialists are more or lees the same riders and have always been (with some exceptions). These are what we can call the good road cyclists.
TT specialists still exist, but we are seeing evermore that there is a trade off between being big and having a lot of pure power vs aerodynamics (just look at Remco).
Sprinters are still a category of their own and they should be nowhere near a road race imho. They have the track. Btw Pog is not a sprinter.