“Tadej Pogačar doesn’t need help from a TV moto, he’s already fast enough and already wins enough…”

Before the start of Il Lombardia, the frustrations of a respected sports director were clear when they spoke to Cyclingnews, and not just because Pogačar had won the Tre Valli Varesine with a downhill attack and a little ‘help’ from a TV motorbike and because he was about to win a fifth consecutive Lombardia. The 2025 season was coming to an end, but the impact of television and race motorbikes affecting the outcome of major races is still a major problem.

Pogačar didn’t do anything illegal at Tre Valli Varesine; he just attacked off the front when the motorbike was close to him, dived into the slipstream on a fast downhill section and never looked back.

Angry waving from Afonso Eulálio (Bahrain Victorious) and a chase by Quinn Simmons (Lidl-Trek) were too little and too late. Pogačar got a gap, took advantage of a few more moments of motorbike slipstreaming and was never seen again.

“I don’t think the moto played a part in my victory. I hope not,” Wellens replied. “But if it were the case, Quinn could also have attacked first and taken the help of the moto…”

Milan-San Remo, a pack of television and photographer motorbikes used to sit waiting to capture the moment. Teams and riders knew that the first to attack could get dragged away by the massive motorbike slipstream.

Now, race organisers only allow a so-called ‘pool’ process, of one television camera and one photographer ahead of the riders during key moments of a race, or sometimes not even that. The television motorbike is no longer allowed to shoot the attacks on the final part of the Poggio, and fixed television cameras and helicopter shots are used on major climbs in other races, even if that reduces the quality of the television footage.

However, the problem of slipstreaming remains an issue in other race situations, especially during long breakaway attacks and peloton chases, especially in stage races. Live television coverage has also been extended for the biggest races, with TV motorbikes capturing the action all day long, from start to finish of races, rather than just the last 90 minutes

“When you’re in the middle of the peloton, you can feel when the TV moto is close to the front because the speed goes up like crazy. In the middle of the bunch, you don’t get anything like the same draft,” a rider tells Cyclingnews.

The same rider recalled how a rival attacked him in a breakaway using a motorbike slipstream out of a corner and stayed away to win the race, while on another occasion, a TV motorbike was so close to a break that it helped them stay away from the chasing peloton.

A source, who preferred not to be identified, claimed that a television motorbike had a huge impact during a stage of the 2016 Vuelta a Espana, slipstreaming a major breakaway that included several GC contenders for several hours. Team Sky tried to lead the chase of the peloton but eventually blew up. Half the peloton finished outside the time limit, with the Sky riders, but the race commissaries extended the time limit to allow them to stay in the race.

CESENATICO, ITALY - OCTOBER 15: Rohan Dennis of Australia and Team INEOS Grenadiers / Dylan Sunderland of Australia and NTT Pro Cycling Team / Danilo Wyss of Switzerland and NTT Pro Cycling Team / Peloton / Discussion / Angry / Press Media / Rai TV Motorbike / during the 103rd Giro d'Italia 2020 - Stage Twelve a 204km stage from Cesenatico to Cesenatico / @girodiitalia / #Giro / on October 15, 2020 in Cesenatico, Italy. (Photo by Tim de Waele/Getty Images)

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Sometimes you’ll see riders remonstrating with motorbikes on the road

Belgian researcher Bert Blocken and several colleagues at the Eindhoven University analysed and calculated the aerodynamic benefits of drafting behind a bulky TV motorbike equipped with a camera and the data transmission equipment. They carried out simulations in the wind tunnel and made Computational Fluid Dynamics simulations, publishing their results in the Sports Engineering journal.

“For drafting distances of 2.64, 10, 30 and 50m, the drag reductions were 48, 23, 12 and 7%, respectively. The associated time gains were 12.7, 5.4, 2.7 and 1.6 seconds per km,” Blocken made clear in his research conclusions.

“Because cycling races are sometimes won by a few seconds or less, these time gains can influence the outcome of the races. Therefore, the common concern in the cycling community that drafting behind motorcycles can influence the outcome of races is correct.”

Renaat Schotte is one of the most respected television journalists in professional cycling. He works for Sporza in Belgium and spends hundreds of hours a year commentating on races and reports on the biggest Belgian classics from a Sporza motorbike. He sees the racing in three dimensions from the motorbike; he is inside the race convoy and feels how the wind impacts and changes the racing.

Schotte respects Blocken’s research but thinks the real impact on races is exaggerated.

“It’s easy to calculate the theoretical advantage of a motorbike slipstream in the wind tunnel, but it’s then different out on the open road,” Schotte suggests to Cyclingnews.

“A cross or tail wind changes everything in a race, but a lot of people don’t see that. Out on the road is not like a wind tunnel; it’s real, three-dimensional and is always changing.

“I think the effect of a TV motorbike is more of a placebo effect in the riders’ minds. You can see that when you follow a time trial and the sports director shouts at a rider to follow a motorbike. They do it, but often the motorbike is too far ahead to make a difference.”

The UCI is aware of the problem of TV motorbikes and slipstreams, but struggles to control and regulate it. The UCI guidelines are not very detailed.

“A TV motorcycle at the front of the peloton moves in front of the riders while respecting a safety buffer and filming from ¾ [at an angle, not head on] in front of riders,” the guidelines say.

“They must never interfere with the progress of the race nor allow riders to benefit from their slipstream, especially when the riders’ speed is high.”

Cyclingnews reached out to the governing body for comment on the issue of motorbike slipstreaming, but we’re yet to get a response.

HEIDEN, SWITZERLAND - JUNE 17: A general view of the peloton competing next to the race safety motorbikes during the 88th Tour de Suisse, Stage 3 a 195.6km stage from Aarau to Heiden 809m / #UCIWT / on June 17, 2025 in Heiden, Switzerland. (Photo by Tim de Waele/Getty Images)

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Vast numbers of motorbikes are often part of the race convoy, doing many different jobs

The UCI and SafeR, the dedicated structure created by cycling’s stakeholders to study and improve safety in races, implemented a yellow card system in 2025 to dissuade behaviour in the race convoy that could impact safety. A total of 270 yellow cards were issued this year. Many were for riders deviating from their line in sprints, but 39 yellow cards were issued to photo and TV motorbikes. Some were for slipstreaming, even if the exact information is scarce.

Riders and teams believe that the TV motorbikes in some races and some countries behave worse than others, offering more slipstreaming opportunities. There are even suspicions that a few may act maliciously.

“Sometimes it does seem very blatant and so people get suspicious that there’s some kind of plot to get a certain winner or result,” a rider tells Cyclingnews.

Another source reveals that riders have allegedly given gifts to motorbike pilots in the hope of getting some slipstream help when they attack.