It is easy to declare that Tadej Pogačar or Pauline Ferrand-Prévot is the rider of the year, or Lorena Wiebes, or another big name. Well, what about those people who get less attention, or have done something a bit different in 2025?

We thought it was high time some less heralded names – although some of the people below are pretty heralded, to be fair, whatever heralded means – some praise. Whether that’s because they’re a good teammate, or they’ve done something mad, here are the team’s alternative riders of the year.

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Tadej Pogačar was there, front and centre, of course. As were Pauline Ferrand-Prévot and Mathieu van der Poel.

One rider who may not have won as much as them, but deserved their place on the cover all the same was Ben Healy. Riding in his fourth year with EF Education-EasyPost, the Irishman continues to be the fearless, swash-buckling racer he always promised to be. In 2025, his breakaway antics brought him the sport’s biggest prize: two days in the Tour de France’s yellow jersey.

Not content with that, he then went on to finish second on the stage to Mont Ventoux, before scoring a bronze medal at the UCI Road World Championships in Rwanda. Is Healy a breakaway artist? A puncheur? A climber? Who cares, just enjoy the show.

Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift. The Belgian champion was on hand to help her AG Insurance-Soudal teammate Sarah Gigante catch up with the lead group on stage seven, a move that helped the Australian to second on the stage. The help was visible, even audible at times, and is well worth recognising.

Molly Weaver’s lap of the British Coast in the fastest ever time recorded by a supported cyclist was awe-inspiring. It started with just the occasional check-in on her progress, but by the end, we were glued to our screens, dot-watching her, with others lining the road to cheer her on in her epic attempt.

Weaver spent three weeks in mostly torrential rain and high winds and even beat a previous record, set by Nick Sanders in 1984, by a whopping 17 hours. Riding the 7,730 kilometers/4,803 miles in less than 22 days, meaning she covered around 370 km/ 230miles a day over 18 hours. It’s an incomprehensible feat, one that we mere mortals couldn’t even dream of doing.

Zoe Backstedt and others absent from domestic races. But she sees these races as “stepping stones” to the rider she’s aiming to become, while revelling in her – very deserved – success.

world title in gravel or her dominance on the track.

Wiebes is not only the fastest sprinter in the women’s peloton; she is a multi-discipline phenomenon. She wins with brute power, but also with timing, positioning and raw instinct. Race after race, she turns chaotic finales into inevitabilities, making victories look almost routine. And I mentioned her on this list instead of our Riders of the Year feature because I think her performances don’t get enough credit.

Grand Tour winners get two-to-three weeks of legend-making; climbers get dramatic monologues on mountain roads; even male sprinters with fewer wins are elevated by exposure. Wiebes, meanwhile, exists in a strange space where her palmarès screams generational talent while her public profile lags far behind. And that’s an injustice.

Tiffany Cromwell.

Together, through their social media, events, and brands, they are given cycling a global platform that even Tour winners cannot match (Valterri has twice Tadej’s Instagram following).