Last year’s return of the women’s version of Milan-San Remo, after a 20-year absence, was a rowdy rush of a dozen usual suspects for the 5.4-kilometre finale from the top of the Poggio to the line on Via Roma.

A surprise attack was made by Elisa Longo Borghini (UAE Team ADQ), but sprinters ruled the day with Lorena Wiebes (SD Worx-Protime) punching past Marianne Vos (Visma-Lease a Bike) in the final 10 metres for the win.

A first glance at this year’s Monument reveals a replica of the 2025 course, the same 156.9 kilometres hugging the Mediterranean coast from Genoa to San Remo. The pair of climbs of the Cipressa and the Poggio propel the action in the final 30km. Factoring in the start list full of puncheurs, sprinters and powerful one-day riders, there may be a different blueprint about to unfold in this year’s race.

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Will podium spots be filled by sprinters Wiebes and Vos again? They both return as well as a cavalcade of challengers, while top finishers Demi Vollering (FDJ United-SUEZ) and Pauline Ferrand-Prévot (Visma-Lease a Bike) will be absent. The final start lists were still to be released by teams at the time of this writing, so we look at the riders we expect to contend for the first women’s Monument of the season.

Italian champion looked to be on her way to victory last year on Via Roma when she launched a solo attack at the bottom of the Poggio. A clear view of the finish line vanished with just 250 metres remaining, as Longo Borghini was swept away by a swarm of riders, led by Vos and then eventual winner Wiebes, to finish 11th. She will lead the UAE Team ADQ squad on a quest for a fourth career Monument win.

Longo Borghini fell one spot short of the podium at Strade Bianche to begin her Italian Classics campaign, but the following day made a statement by winning Trofeo Oro in Euro. She started the year with a victory on the Queen stage at the UAE Tour, which secured her second career GC title at that race. Experience and racing on home soil give her an edge if she can escape the sprinters.

Balsamo took second on a punchy stage 2 at Vuelta a Extremadura to show the legs were coming around.

At San Remo last year she finished in the bunch finish in seventh, so look for her show her love for one-day races and make a statement in Italy.

Amstel Gold Race was a big goal as well as opening stages of the Giro d’Italia. Race day situations are unpredictable, but SD Worx goes in with formidable options with Wiebes and Kopecky.

Marianne Vos returns in a quest to add just a second Monument to her expansive palmares, having won Tour of Flanders in 2013. She proved last year that the late climbs weren’t too menacing and the technical run into San Remo was suited to her finishing speed, as long as she can hold off a rival like Wiebes.

Vos started her 21st season in Italy, going seventh at Strade Bianche and sixth at Trofeo Alfredo Binda. She’s the team’s leader should the race unfold again with a bunch sprint.

Lotte Kopecky returned to her winning ways at the Wednesday’s Nokere Koerse, adding the Belgian race to her calendar between Italian races. She didn’t factor into top results at Omloop Nieuwsblad or Strade Bianche, but found a spark to finish seventh at Trofeo Alfredo Binda.

Always aggressive and hungry to hit top form at Spring Classics, Kopecky made the trip to the mid-week one-day race to gain confidence headed into Milan-San Remo.

Last year the two-time World Champion ultimately positioned her teammate Wiebes for the win. With a victory notched in Belgium, her third at Nokere Koerse, she may be the SD Worx rider to go for glory this time on Via Roma.

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