Pauline Ferrand-Prévot is Cycling Weekly’s international rider of 2025. This feature originally appeared in Cycling Weekly magazine on 4th December 2025. Subscribe now and never miss an issue.

Everyone knew that Pauline Ferrand-Prévot – a world champion in four different disciplines – was an exceptional bike rider. As such, very few doubted that her return to the road scene in 2025 after a six-year hiatus would be a success. But no-one could have foreseen the comprehensive glory that the French superstar enjoyed this year.

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Podium finishes at Strade Bianche and the Tour of Flanders were perhaps to be expected – after all, short, punchy climbs were what she excelled on during her mountain bike years – but a 58-second victory at Paris-Roubaix Femmes, a flat brute of a race devoid of any significant climbing challenges, was not.

Pauline Ferrand-Prévot

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Even more unexpected was winning the Tour on debut, especially in so crushing a manner. Ferrand-Prévot triumphed on the Col de la Madeleine by a huge 1:45 margin, making sure of her victory the following day at Châtel to win the race overall by 3:42.

It was an exhibition, and it’s why Ferrand-Prévot is deservedly Cycling Weekly’s international rider of the year. “I can’t say I really like racing, but I like winning,” she recently said. “If I want to race, it’s because I want to win.”

Vuelta a España Femenina after four stages.

“She was doing the Vuelta in Classics shape, and we needed to transform her into a GC rider,” he continues. “We both believe that everything is trainable, and if you put your mind to it, anything is achievable.”

Pauline Ferrand-Prévot

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Demi Vollering and Kasia Niewiadoma rode various races to prepare for the Tour, it was Ferrand-Prévot’s approach that eventually paid off.

In describing how it did so, the Visma man mixes his baking metaphors deliciously. “The cherry on the cake was the Madeleine, because everything she did there was trained and planned for: the aerodynamics, her power and cadence on the flat roads, and being patient when Sarah Gigante attacked. Everything was talked about beforehand.”

Ferrand-Prévot has already declared her intention to defend her Tour glory in 2026, while also setting her sights on Flanders and Liège-Bastogne-Liège. On the evidence of 2025, she’ll have little trouble excelling across those very different races.

“Once she has a goal, that focus and discipline comes naturally to her,” Tijssen says. “What she did this year should not really happen, but she showed that the impossible is possible.”