Monumental Pogacar wins Tour of Flanders for record-equaling third time
LONE RANGER: Slovenian Tadej Pogacar of UAE Team Emirates in action on Oude Kwaremont during the menâs race of the Tour of Flandersâ UCI WorldTour one day race, 278km from Antwerp to Oudenaarde. Pic: David Pintens/Getty
Tadej Pogacar added another prestigious victory Sunday by winning the Tour of Flanders for a record-equaling third time with a dominant solo effort against a world-class field, further cementing his place in cycling lore.
Pogacar, from the UAE Team Emirates-XRG team, and his great one-day classic rival Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Premier Tech) were the strongest in the pack. They rode together at the front having dropped all other contenders along the grueling route with about 18km remaining when the world champion launched an attack in the final ascent of the Oude Kwaremont.
Pogacar âs move last year on the same climb had proved decisive, but this time van der Poel was not immediately dropped and managed to limit the gap to just a few seconds at the top of the hill.
Van der Poel, however, could not close the gap and Pogacar gradually extended his lead, redoubling his effort on the Paterberg, a short but brutal cobbled climb with gradients exceeding 20%. That proved too much for van der Poel, a three-time winner of the race, who lagged 15 seconds behind at the summit.
Once he realised he would not be caught, the four-time Tour de France winner sat up, raising his arms in triumph and punching the air as he crossed the line 34 seconds ahead of van der Poel.
"It was really a crazy race today,â Pogacar said. âIt was super hard and then a bit of a waiting game.âÂ
On his Tour of Flanders debut, Remco Evenepoel (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) finished third, 1 minute, 11 seconds off the pace, ahead of Wout Van Aert (Visma-Lease a Bike).
Pogacar and van der Poel were mobbed by photographers and warmly hugged each other after the finish.
FDJ Suez rider Demi Vollering won the womenâs race for the first time. Like Pogacar , she attacked in the Oude Kwaremont and finished 42 seconds ahead of Tour de France champion Pauline Ferrand-PrĂ©vot, with Puck Pieterse completing the podium.
Also known as De Ronde (The Tour), the Tour of Flanders is one of cyclingâs most challenging one-day races and was first held in 1913. This yearâs 278km route featured 16 short but punishing climbs and several cobblestone sections.
The race is one of the âmonumentsâ of cycling â the five most prestigious one-day events in the sport â along with Milan-San Remo, Paris-Roubaix, Liege-Bastogne-Liege and the Giro di Lombardia.
Pogacar triumphed at Milan-San Remo for the first time earlier this year and could win all five this year. The only Monument missing in his impressive trophy cabinet is Paris-Roubaix, which takes place next weekend.
Pogacar has won all three races he competed in this year, also claiming the Strade Bianche last month.
âI donât race too much, when I race there is pressure to win,â Pogacar said. âSo far, everything went perfect for me. I can be more than happy, coming next week to Roubaix, Iâll try to enjoy the cobbles.â





