Another year, another Tadej Pogačar exhibition at Strade Bianche. The World Champion delivered on his favourite status on the Tuscan gravel on Saturday and, in almost choreographed fashion, soloed from range to a record-breaking fourth title.

After his 50km solo in 2022 and his 19km effort last year, this was a throwback to the 2024 edition, when Pogačar rode alone from all of 81km out. This was a shade shorter, at 79km, but the move was made on that same critical gravel sector of the Monte Sante Marie, and the result was the same – he was never seen again.

Paul Seixas (Decathlon CMA CGM) could not quite provide the competition for Pogačar that the race has arguably lacked in recent years, but the 19-year-old nevertheless confirmed his status as the next great rival to the Slovenian’s dominance of world cycling with a stunning second place on debut.

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Seixas was agonisingly close to being able to follow Pogačar on Sante Marie, only to be dropped by a vicious secondary acceleration, but he recovered to stand out in the chase group and then drop fellow young phenom Isaac Del Toro (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) on the steep final kicker of the Via Santa Caterina in the final kilometre. He rode into the Piazza del Campo a minute after Pogačar had crossed the line and dismounted his bike to celebrate.

Del Toro couldn’t make it a one-two for UAE but he did make it two on the podium with his third place, while Jan Christen, who’d split the bunch initially on Sante Marie, made it three in the top six. The presence of those two in the chase effectively locked the race up for Pogačar.

But the day belonged to Pogačar, who marked his season debut with a win and now, with four Strade Bianche titles, surpasses the record of three he shared with Fabian Cancellara until today.

“I always say this but chapeau to my teammates today, everybody did an incredibly job. It was an honour to ride with such a team today and deliver the win,” said Pogačar, who also spoke about the moment he dropped Seixas.

“I saw he was chasing really hard on the steepest part of the climb on Sante Marie, and I said to myself ‘I’ll go all-out to the top then I’ll see. Either he can come to my wheel or there’ll be a gap. In the end it was enough, and I saw Isaac and Jan were there behind so this was enough to go alone.”

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