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  • Do we know if Groves is ok after crashing on sunday?

    Oh, I didn't know he was part of the crashes. I watched a bit of Kuurne-Bruxelles-K last night, but it may have happened earlier than the parts I watched.

    At this time of the day, he hasn't been pulled off start lists yet.


    edit: Are you positive he crashed? The only written bits I could find seem to lean toward the hypotheses that he didn't have the legs and just disappeared as Girmay did.

  • Le Samyn (Tuesday 3/3/2026)

    It appears that Van Aert (🇧🇪 Visma) would finally start his season there, just a couple of days before going to the Strade Bianche.

    It looks like he will be the only 'big name' on the race (or do we count Groves (🇦🇺 Alpecin) or Kubish (🇸🇰 Unibet) as big names?), but former winners Rex (🇧🇪 Soudal-QS) and Hofstetter (🇫🇷 NSN) should be present in the large peloton: 25 teams including 9 WT for a 1.1!

    Official site (in French)

    PCS page

  • Only Décathlon made the big final push on the last 10 km. No one helped them, Q36.5 just showing up in the last mile, more for placement than helping. One may also reproach Décathlon for not helping the other teams before that…

    Earlier, in the 'mountain' part of the race where Skjelmose🇩🇰 attacked, we also saw the sequence where Healy🇮🇪 (EF) was the only man leading the chase, and no one from any team would could come and help him. Behind him were seating 2 Visma and 1 Lidl-Trek, both teams having a man in Skjelmose🇩🇰's trio; the teams which had interest in catching that breakaway were staying behind.

  • I'd say the major fact today is an ode to tactical stupidity, especially in the last 20 km.

    Step 1. Everyone in the front group basically hit the breaks when Jorgensen🇺🇸 (Visma) + Grégoire🇫🇷 (FDJ) attack... There was no FDJ in that group and 2 (?) Visma, the numerous rest should have chased at least a bit. They are given a second chance when Q. Simmons🇺🇸 (Lidl-Trek) and Cepeda (Movistar) come back from a group behind. What do the riders do then? Nothing, they all watch the new duo take them over without a single rider even jumping on their wheel...

    Step 2. Cosnefroy🇫🇷 (UAE) attacks and isolate himself in one of the last walls. Of course alone he would never catch up the front duo. The main consequence is that UAE does not help the peloton chase. There lie the missing seconds in the end. 10 times the missing seconds. If they had not had Cosnefroy🇫🇷 ahead, they would have relayed, and the front duo would have been caught way before the final wall. We can had to this that without *Cosnefroy🇫🇷's attack, the peloton would have been less disturbed by that climb, and the chase would have started a bit earlier in an orderly manner. The worst is that Cosnefroy🇫🇷 had good chances to win on the last wall, considering what he showed before.

    Step 3. Only Décathlon made the big final push on the last 10 km. No one helped them, Q36.5 just showing up in the last mile, more for placement than helping. One may also reproach Décathlon for not helping the other teams before that... Unusually, there was zero wind; Jorgensen🇺🇸 is good at TT and Grégoire🇫🇷 at climbing small walls: what the heck were all teams other than Visma and FDJ waiting for? It is not like we haven't been knowing for a few years that with the aerodynamics changes that occurred in the last 5 years or so, a large group doesn't benefit so much as it used to benefit of the group effect versus a solo/duo.

    Step 4. (more disputable). Jorgensen🇺🇸 kept on passing long relays to Grégoire🇫🇷 until the last 500 m, in spite of the fact that he didn't stand a chance on this type of finish. Depending on whether one thinks that a place of 2nd is good, or that a team like Visma should only aim for victory, one may find that stupid or not. Still, it is strange that he attempted absolutely nothing to get rid of Grégoire🇫🇷 before the end, even if it meant restarting to relay in case it didn't work.


    L. Martinez🇫🇷 (Bahrain) showed his limits when he was following Skjelmose🇩🇰 (Lidl-Trek) in the Dane's breakaway, yet he managed to recover enough after the breakaway was caught, so that he could win the peloton's sprint!

  • They say on TV that after the top of St-Romain, he also did the fastest downhill ever made... 😲

    In fact, that's where the meat of his 1-minute advantage came from: he gained a little bit more on the descent than on the climb.

  • On Sunday we cross over the Rhône for race which is more for punchers and generally more open to varied profiles.

    I don't know what to think about tomorrow, after what we saw today.

    • L. Martinez🇫🇷 and Christen🇨🇭 did a lot today; will they be tired tomorrow?
    • Among riders who only finished 20-something today, we have Scaroni🇮🇹, Grégoire🇫🇷 and Healy🇮🇪. Was one of them rehearsing / saving energy for tomorrow? I am not sure.
      • Scaroni🇮🇹 has raced quite a lot already, he can be on an end of cycle, on a diminishing form.
      • Grégoire🇫🇷 couldn't follow the top guys, and then blew up for good trying to follow non-top guys, and he wasn't great either on the previous week. The climb are shorter tomorrow, and we know he can hurt himself a while on such efforts, but his present level is still worrying.
      • remains Healy🇮🇪, I haven't followed his race at all today, so I don't know what his 20th place today means.
    • Skjelmose🇩🇰 always did well in Drôme, and he finished well today. Perhaps tomorrow will be his day.
    • I have a hard time believing that Lapeira🇫🇷 can win tomorrow. Anyhow, if he wants to have a chance, his team must not disappear 45 km away from the line, like they did today: he is no Tadeï Seixas.
  • Seixas🇫🇷 chose the Pogatchar option and pogatchared the race.

    This is in fact exactly what happened, he climbed St-Romain de Lerps at the exact same speed as Pogatchar did at the European Championship last Autumn to drop everyone including Evenepoel:

  • Saturday we’ll have the Omloop Nieuwsblad for both men and women, the first cobbles of the year, and usually a fun race. A race which usually favours heavier cobble-specialists and flandriens, the new crop of semi-sprinters also stand a chance.

    This year it will be hard to look past Mathieu van der Poel, Paul Magnier, and Tim Wellens who’ve shown excellent form. But others - like Brennan, Pidcock, van Aer, de Lie, Turner, and Philipsen - will surely also be in the mix.

    The favourite won in his standard manner, but otherwise, it has been half cycling, half bowling game... (Van Aert was lucky not to come!) The Tudor rider who fell at the beginning of the cobblestone wall kept his hands on his bike instead of using them for protection, so he attempted to eat the cobbles with his face and left his teeth on the ground.

    Kudos to Renard (Cofidis) who was part of the breakaway who was caught by Van der Poel and his 2 followers: after he and 2 other breakawaymen followed the VdP trio for a while, they were in big trouble when cobbled mounts came and they were dropped; and the Cofidis rider looked more in trouble than the others. Yet they all managed to stay in the group which caught them and Renard produce an honest sprint after 160 km at the front, which made him enter the top-10.

    F. Vermeersch (UAE) is a good comrade, the Bora rider not quite. Vermeersch relayed everyone without complaining; does it explain his collection of podium places with (almost) no victory?


    This race was a complete failure for many teams (due to crashes or not):

    • first FDJ rider : 28th,
    • first Lidl-Trek rider : 36th,
    • first Ineos rider : 37th,
    • and several other teams with similarly crappy results.
  • The long awaited Prophecy is finally coming true! He is THE ONE!

    While at the EC Pogatchar took off in the St-Romain de Lerps climb (IIRC), the rest of the classification was determined by accelerations in the successives ascensions of the Hell’s Vale or at its treacherous summit.

    Seixas🇫🇷 chose the Pogatchar option and pogatchared the race.

    The peloton delayed the race until that last climb of St-Romain de Lerps. With 95 km, there were already trains at the front of the peloton, but in fact they were riding like they sometime do on Belgian races: pushing on the flat before a climb, and then climbing very slowly. So everyone's goal was to neutralise the race.

    In the breakaway, there were a lot of misunderstanding and disagreements between the riders, perhaps even more with the two Total riders.

    When Décathlon's last teammate stopped after a mile or so in the climb (45 km from the line), I thought Seixas🇫🇷 was going to be in trouble for the rest of the race, as there were teams like Visma with a strong presence. But the young Frenchman simply took the lead of the peloton and pressed the pedals. And little by little, riders dropped like flies at the back, and then there was no back, just 10 riders, and then 4, and then there was only Jorgenson🇺🇸 with him, and then, as L. Martinez🇫🇷 and the UAE loony🇨🇭 were closing the gap, Seixas🇫🇷 accelerated again and dropped the American. There were 40 km to go solo at that time.

    But winds were favourable, terrain was favourable to the EC bronze medallist, and gaps between groups only increased.


    Last animation on the race was Mariault🇫🇷 and Pacher🇫🇷 insulting each other during the sprint for 10th place 😆

    Yes, Pacher🇫🇷 was the first FDJ, Grégoire🇫🇷 having disappeared after blowing up while trying to stay with the last group of 6? 8? riders when Seixas climbed St-Romain de Lerps.

  • Seixas🇫🇷 and Riccitello🇺🇸 for Decathlon;

    Nope, no Riccitello🇺🇸 this week-end, his presence was cancelled.

  • I don't know about Van Aert and Philipsen: the first one will only be coming back after his new cyclocross injury 2 months ago (after being beaten on each CX race he rode before the crash), and the second one didn't have a good start last week.

  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Race thread: 🇫🇷 Boucles Drôme–Ardèche 2026, Feb 28 & 29

    boucles-drome-ardeche.fr
  • Stage 4 (10/2/2026)

    Damien Touzé (🇫🇷 Cofidis) crashed on that day. I didn't see it. However, he suffered internal injuries, and as a result he won't ride again this year, and this may also be the end of his pro carrier. 😨

  • I couldn’t watch it

    And that was a pity, for it was some good racing yesterday, the complete opposite of the Var race the day before. The last 50-60 km were ridden like a good classic, I'd say.

    There was an attempt on the 'flat' before the Gourdon climb by 4 riders who managed to break away after a few failures. One of them, Chamberlain (🇦🇺 Décathlon) tried to avoid the climb by staying on the valley road 😆 instead of turning right towards Gourdon. He was soon caught up as they had never created much of a gap, a strong pursuit lead by Asatan made sure of it.

    Meanwhile, Barguil (🇫🇷 Picnic) managed to crash inside the peloton in the beginning of the climb, in a weird manner: it looked like his bike was 20 yards up the road compared to the location he was lying, like the bike had kept on climbing, carried away by other riders. Broken collarbone, apparently? Another rider went to the ground at the same time.

    Strangely, attacks didn't happen in the first, hardest part of the climb (BTW, it was ridden in the opposite direction from last year). The main, decisive attack was by L. Martinez (🇫🇷 Bahrain) with 3 other riders: Brenner (🇩🇪 Tudor), Costiou (🇫🇷 FDJ) and A. Paret-Peintre (🇫🇷 Decathlon). Q. Simmons (🇺🇸 Lidl-Trek) had caught up the previous attempt, but when he tried to join this group just a few dozen yards before the front of the peloton, he blew up and then couldn't even stay with the first group of the peloton.

    L. Martinez🇫🇷 and Brenner🇩🇪 were pushing too hard for the other two which were dropped after a while.

    Their gap never grew much, perhaps 45 seconds top (?). At no point did they fool around, but the pursuit group behind them wasn't either. They did the climb, the descent, and the following 25 km (I slept trough some of this part) of rolling terrain ahead, but they were caught by the small group of chaser something like 1 mile from the line. They still managed to finish 4th and 5th and Brenner even attempted an attack from that group: they were really going strong on that Sunday.

    Lapeira (🇫🇷 Decathlon) managed to attack and beat Scaroni (🇮🇹 Astana), followed a surprisingly reborn S. Carr (🇬🇧 Cofidis) (well, I think –but I ain't sure–, that he wasn't participating in the chase) and the aforementioned Brenner🇩🇪.

    Champoussin (🇫🇷 Astana) worked hard for Scaroni🇮🇹 but he had the strange idea to finish his work by an attack which may have taken part in Scaroni🇮🇹's defeat.

    I note that A. Mifsud (🇲🇹🇫🇷 Polti) was once more in that group for victory. He's really having a good early season! Same for the Conti rider A. Mariault (🇫🇷 CIC)!


    FDJ had been active earlier in the day, but in the end, only Costiou🇫🇷 managed to stay in the group and finish 6th. See, even him was dropped by the 🇫🇷🇩🇪 duo in the climb, and in the finish again, despite those two guys having ridden 40 km alone ahead. G. Martin🇫🇷 is still out of shape.

    Hirshi (🇨🇭 Tudor) didn't do well, pretty much like Q. Simmons🇺🇸, perhaps without even attempting like the American.

  • Tour of Algarve (final stage, 22/2/2026)

    Well, Ayuso🇪🇸 wasn't annoyed by Almeida🇵🇹's train, he didn't suffer from Ricitello🇺🇸's acceleration, he wasn't dropped by Seixas🇫🇷's attack, and he won the stage, consolidating his final victory, while no difference could be made between the leaders. Earlier, Ayuso🇪🇸 had put all chances on his side by scoring another 1 second bonus: he took the race really seriously.

    Who is that Gloag🇬🇧 within these 6 best riders???

  • On Sunday will be the Tour des Alpes Maritimes.

    I couldn't watch it because the bloody public service TV who was supposed to broadcast it never broadcasted it. 🤬 So I will have to wait tonight to watch it on a pirate site...

    Yesterday, they claimed they were 'broadcasting' only over Internet and not on one of their regular TV channels because there were the Olympics, except that they do not broadcast the Olympics on the channel they use for cycling... And today they announced the race on a regular TV channel but it never showed up.

    This year, they gave all the "Coupe de France" races to a private (free) channel, yet they cannot be arsed to announce and broadcast properly the rare races on which they still spend money to produce.

  • Indeed it was a non-race, with everyone waiting for the sprint and the expected conclusion: a big crash in the fences.

    The sort-of-favourites for the sprint didn't succeed: no Unibet, no Cofidis in top-10. There are 3 Conti riders (CIC, Nice, Roubaix) in top-6, 2 PT (Total, Tudor) and only 1 WT (Decathlon). Tesson scores a victory after a couple of rather difficult years.


    First FDJ rider comes in 21st place...

  • On Saturday, we have the Var classic. Last year, everything was played on the final wall, but this year the profile is different: the end is flat but the main course is more hilly.

    Hearing interviews, it appears that there is not much to expect from this race, as even small Conti teams announce that they will ride for their tier-5 sprinter.

  • It depends what 'doing well' means, but I reckon he can already do well on a Tour of Spain this year. If they put him on the Tour de France, it will be much more uncertain of course.

    Last year he already did very well on the 8-day long Dauphiné (had he not fallen on the last climb of the last day, he would have finished 6th!). Then he was the best Frenchman on the 270 km WC race in Rwanda despite not being the chosen leader, and got the bronze medal behind Pogatchar and Evenepoel on the 200 km EC race on the following week. Oh, and looking at the stats, I had forgotten that less than a week later, he was in the tiny group for 5th place in the Tour of Lombardia, with Del Toro, Vine and Pidcock.

    I mean: long, hard stages/races (battling with big names on top of that) do not seem to be a problem for him; and neither does a large week of continuous stage racing (it doesn't get much longer than that on a GT before the first rest day). Very unlike Lenny Martinez who has shown his limits many times as soon as racing days start pile up, if you will.


    Despite his good 2025 year, it's the first time he crosses a line first on a pro race (and that's a .Pro race which is fashionable for good climbers to start a season, not a .1 or a race which is a bit scorned these days).

    His own video debrief of Stage 2 final climb, subtitled in English, and with excerpts from the race:

    https://twitter.com/decathloncmacgm/status/2024584478895612384

    It is quite different from mine, because I saw it in the middle of the night and I most certainly fell asleep in the last miles 😜 So trust him, the video, and not my account!

  • Tour of Algarve (stage 3 ITT, 20/2/2026)

    Seixas🇫🇷 again showed a very good TT, 4th at only 13 seconds behind the winner Ganna (🇮🇹 Ineos), better than Vauquelin, Küng and especially Almeida🇵🇹 who came only 30 seconds later. Onley🇬🇧 and Ricitello🇺🇸 are pushed back 1 mn away.

    Unfortunately for him, the second best today is Ayuso🇪🇸, therefore the Spaniard consolidates his first place in GC (for only 7 seconds though, I think, so the final GC is still open between those two riders).

  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Race thread: 🇫🇷 Var & Alpes-Maritimes 2026, Feb 21 & 22

  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Race thread: 🇫🇷 Tour de la Provence 2026, Feb 13–15

    www.tourdelaprovence.fr
  • procycling @lemmy.world

    2026 UEC Track European championship, 1-5 Feb.

    www.uec.ch /en/event/268/championnats-deurope-piste-elite-2026
  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Race thread: 🇫🇷 Paris–Tours, Oct 12

    www.paris-tours.fr /en
  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Event thread: 🇫🇷 European Championship (road) 2025, Oct 1–5

    www.europeroute2025.com
  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Event thread: 🇷🇼 Road World Championship 2025, Sep 21–28

    ucikigali2025.rw
  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Race thread: 🇱🇺 Tour of Luxembourg 2025, Sep 17–21

    skodatour.lu
  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Race thread: 🇨🇦 Québec & Montréal (Sep 12 & 14)

    gpcqm.ca /en/gp-quebec/
  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Race thread: 🇪🇸 Tour of Spain 2025; last block, Sep 9 – 14

  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Race thread: 🇬🇧 Tour of Britain, Sep 2–7

    www.britishcycling.org.uk /tourofbritain/men
  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Race thread: 🇪🇸 Tour of Spain 2025; third block, Sep 2 – 7

  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Race thread: 🇫🇷 Grand-Prix de Plouay, Aug 30 & 31 (Women & Men)

    www.pco.bzh
  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Race thread: 🇪🇸 Tour of Spain 2025; second block, Aug 27–31

  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Race thread: 🇪🇸🇮🇹 Tour of Spain 2025; first, Italian block, Aug 23–26

    www.lavuelta.es /en
  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Races thread of the week: Poland, Burgos, Ain, Arctic, Portugal 2025, August

  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Race thread: 🇪🇸 San Sebastian classic, Aug 2 (+ Getxo, Aug 3)

    klasikoa.eus /en/
  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Race thread: 🇫🇷 Tour de France 2025 - Stage 21 (last)

    www.letour.fr /en/stage-21
  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Race thread: 🇫🇷 Tour de France WOMEN 2025 (July 26 – Aug 3)

    www.letourfemmes.fr /en
  • procycling @lemmy.world

    Race thread: 🇫🇷 Tour de France 2025 - Stage 20

    www.letour.fr /en/stage-20