- Jun 1, 2015
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Yes, Pogi is by far the best rider in the world. Remco is second even though he’s not the best GT rider, nor the best classics rider (MVdP is better at his discipline than Remco at his).
I strongly disagree with this take. In 2024, he was right there with Remco clear of the rest before crashing out, then he dominated the Vuelta. In 2025, he dominated Catalunya and wore pink before bad luck struck, which rendered his Giro (crashed out) and Tour (8th but top 3 climber in multiple stages) irrelevant. Unless you want to remove the “(without bad luck)” qualifier, we have no evidence that this is not true of Roglic, but we do have evidence that it is true. That might change next year.If he is in good shape, I'm pretty sure he wins any important hilly classic (this year - LBL, GdL, WC) without Pogacar.
For me it's all about this:
Originally, we had a big 6 so we need to look if any of them can win easily specific races without all the other 5.
Roglic, without WVA, Pogi, Remco, MVP, Vingegaard, would win any GT he enters (without bad luck)? The answer is no IMO. So Roglic is out of the Big 6. Reduced to big 5.
WVA, without all other 5, can dominate cobbled classics? The answer is no right now. Reduced to big 4.
Remco, without all other 5, can dominate hilly classics (GdL, LBL and WC - when the route is for puncheurs/climbers). The answer is yes.
Pogacar - For sure.
MVP - For sure in cobbled classics and MSR + WC when the route is for puncheurs.
IMO, it's a big 4 but if we don't exclude "aliens", there is only a Big 2 but with Pogacar miles ahead of MVP.
