
Mathieu van der Poel and Tadej Pogacar resume hostilities in Spring Classics duel for supremacy
Mathieu van der Poel is one-third of his way to making history. Only 269km of cobbles, circuitous, narrow streets, and leg-sapping climbs, at one of cycling's most brutal races, stand in the way of him and an outright record of four Tour of Flanders titles. Victory in Oudenaarde on Sunday would put him two-thirds of the way to an unprecedented achievement: winning all of the year's first three Monuments in a row.
There's only the small matter of one man: Tadej Pogacar.
Between them Van der Poel and Pogacar have won 13 of the last 18 Monuments, and four of the last five editions of the Ronde van Vlaanderen. Van der Poel is yet to finish off the podium so far this decade.
The pair have a stranglehold on the sport's toughest, most gruelling one-day races, and the tactical nous, physical strength, and killer instinct required to win them. In 2023 and 2024 they equally split four of the five; you have to go back to 2019 – when Pogacar was in his first year out of the under-23 ranks – to find a season without a Monument trophy for either of them.
Now both are tied on seven apiece, and hostilities resume this weekend in Bruges. There will be 173 other riders on the start line but, beside the Belgian pair of Wout van Aert and last week's winner in Gent-Wevelgem, Mads Pedersen, it's hard to see anyone able to disrupt this from being an all-out duel.
Both are in something approaching the form of their life: Van der Poel swept the field in the winter cyclo-cross season to win his seventh world title in the discipline, and carried that into the spring road races, winning Milan-San Remo – the year's first Monument – for the second time.
After Pogacar's glorious 2024 season, it seems he's always in the form of his life, but for good measure, so far this year he's lifted the UAE Tour and Strade Bianche trophies, the latter despite coming back from a bruising crash.
For both it's something worth fighting for: for Van der Poel, the outright Tour of Flanders record, and to move ever-closer to the historic straight hat-trick of Monuments in the same season. The 30-year-old has come the closest to achieving it, along with Sean Kelly and Eddy Merckx. Kelly, by a strange twist of fate, was runner-up to Van der Poel's father Adrie in Flanders in 1986. The junior van der Poel won Milan-San Remo and Paris-Roubaix – the third in the trilogy – in 2023, and finished runner-up in the Tour of Flanders that year.
The winner? Pogacar, of course.
For Pogacar, it would be a second Ronde title, but crucially it would edge him ahead of his rival on eight Monuments to seven, levelling the series for 2025. And it would be revenge for his Milan-San Remo defeat; for a man unaccustomed to losing, and now twice a bridesmaid at the Italian race, that must sting. The bear has been poked.
The Slovenian's racecraft and ability on the sharp, steep climbs – 2,300m of climbing in total – of the Flemish Ardennes makes him the marginal favourite on Sunday. But Van der Poel proved he was more than his match on the climbs of Milan-San Remo, as he glued himself to the 26-year-old's wheel and even launched an uphill dig of his own on the infamous Poggio. If the Alpecin-Deceuninck rider can do the same tomorrow, he would once again have the beating of Pogacar in a sprint, as he did in San Remo. Out of all of the Monuments, this is the most finely balanced between the pair.
For both men it would nudge them ahead of Gino Bartali, Tom Boonen, and Fabian Cancellara, those Classics legends who also hold seven Monument titles each. It would cement a legacy, and a rivalry, between two of the best of all time. That we're witnessing an all-time contest between two stage racing greats, in Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard, at the same time as the never-ending battle for supremacy between the Slovenian and van der Poel, is something to behold.
Should Pogacar draw level at the finish line in Oudenaarde, we'll get the climax to the trilogy at Paris-Roubaix next Sunday. Should Van der Poel edge out his great rival tomorrow, the 'Hell of the North' will not just be a personal duel: history will be on the line. Whatever happens, there will be fireworks in Flanders.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
2 days ago
- The Independent
Nine injured as storm causes violent turbulence on Ryanair flight over Europe
A Ryanair flight from Berlin to Milan was forced to make an emergency landing in southern Germany on Wednesday night after severe turbulence injured nine people, police have said. The flight, carrying 179 passengers and six crew members, encountered extreme turbulence around 8:30 pm, leading the pilot to land at Memmingen Airport in Bavaria. Eight passengers and one crew member were injured during the incident. Three people were taken to the hospital in Memmingen for treatment; the other injured people were released after receiving outpatient treatment. As a precaution, all passengers were checked for injuries by the emergency services. Authorities did not permit the plane to continue flying, and the airline arranged bus transport for passengers. Milan is about 380 kilometers (236 miles) south of Memmingen. Germany's national weather service has warned of the risk of storms, high winds and hail. Elsewhere in the region, storms damaged several homes in Ulm, Baden-Württemberg, according to the German news agency dpa. In the Donaustetten district, strong winds tore roofs off multiple row houses, rendering them uninhabitable, though no injuries were reported. Fire officials suspect a small tornado or waterspout caused the damage. The German Weather Service (DWD) is investigating, according to dpa. Storm-related emergency calls also came from other areas in southern Germany, where damage was mostly limited to fallen trees and flooded basements. The DWD warned of further storms Thursday, with hail, strong winds, and localized heavy rain expected. The Nations League semi-final clash between Germany and Portugal was delayed by 10 minutes due to the hailstorm in Munich on Wednesday evening. The storm caused a 10-minute delay to kick-off, but once the action got under way it was almost an electric start for the hosts as they started on the front foot with Portugal goalkeeper Diogo Costa making two great saves. There was plenty of drama in the warm-up as midway through an electrical storm, Ronaldo had a confrontation with a young fan who was dragged away by stewards. The hosts had gone in front early in the second half when Liverpool transfer target Florian Wirtz headed home but Roberto Martinez's men hit back with two goals in five minutes. A brilliant strike from Francisco Conceicao brought them level before Ronaldo bagged his 137th international goal with an easy tap-in to win the match. It sent Portugal through to the final where they will meet either Spain or France on Sunday.


Reuters
3 days ago
- Reuters
Gary Bettman: CBA discussions 'in really good shape'
June 5 - Addressing the media on Wednesday in Edmonton prior to the Oilers' Game 1 matchup with the Florida Panthers in the Stanley Cup Final, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman offered a positive assessment of the league's negotiations with the NHL Players' Association on a new collective bargaining agreement. "I think we're in really good shape, having really good discussions," Bettman said. "We're in a really good place in terms of our relationship." Bettman let reporters know that no deal was ready to be announced, but he also noted that the sides are at an early stage of negotiations. The league and the NHLPA began meeting in April, with the current CBA set to expire after the 2025-26 season. NHLPA executive director Marty Walsh struck a similar positive tone on Wednesday, describing their progress as being steady and that he felt good about where talks stood. The NHL last experienced a work stoppage during the 2012-13 season, when teams managed to play just 48 games apiece (as opposed to the normal 82 games). The league has only once lost an entire season due to lockout, in 2004-05. There were also stoppages in 1994-95 and 1992. Both sides expect talks to continue throughout the finals. "We are having very constructive, professional, cordial dialog," Bettman added. Also on Wednesday, NHL officials spoke on the topics of the Olympics and expansion, acknowledging that Russian players, at present, are still ineligible to compete at the upcoming Winter Olympics games in Milan, Italy. On expansion, it was noted that the league continues to receive interest from different markets about adding teams, but the NHL has no immediate plans to expand. Per multiple media reports, the leading expansion candidates are Atlanta and Houston. --Field Level Media


Glasgow Times
3 days ago
- Glasgow Times
Man City close on Tijjani Reijnders as Jack Grealish looks set to miss CWC squad
City are set to pay 55million euros (approximately £46million) for the 26-year-old Reijnders, who has agreed a five-year contract to move to the Premier League. The formalities of the deal are still to be completed but it appears City have landed their first major summer signing. Reijnders was a bright spark in a disappointing season for Milan, who only finished eighth in Serie A, missing out on qualification for Europe. Reijnders, who joined the Italian giants from AZ Alkmaar in the summer of 2023, scored 15 goals in 2024-25 and will bolster Pep Guardiola's midfield options following the departure of Kevin De Bruyne. City will play their first match of the Club World Cup against Morocco's Wydad AC on June 18 and the arrival of Reijnders could also impact the future of Grealish at City. As first reported by the Daily Telegraph on Wednesday, the England international looks set to miss out on City's final 35-man squad for the Club World Cup. This comes after the 29-year-old was not summoned from the bench in last month's FA Cup final defeat to Crystal Palace and omitted from the squad for the last game of the season at Fulham altogether. Grealish appears to have fallen out of favour at City (Martin Rickett/PA) Grealish, a £100million signing from Aston Villa four years ago, has fallen down the pecking order since playing a starring role in the 2023 treble-winning campaign and made just seven Premier League starts in 2024-25. Not being involved in this summer's tournament in the United States – in which City also play group games against Al Ain of Abu Dhabi and Juventus – could increase speculation over his future with other clubs reportedly interested. Another midfielder who will not feature in the US is Mateo Kovacic, who has been ruled out following Achilles surgery.