logo
Liege-Bastogne-Liege: Tadej Pogacar unstoppable again as Kim Le Court wins for Mauritius in Femmes race

Liege-Bastogne-Liege: Tadej Pogacar unstoppable again as Kim Le Court wins for Mauritius in Femmes race

New York Times27-04-2025

World Champion Tadej Pogacar soloed to a decisive victory at Liege-Bastogne-Liege on Sunday, continuing a season in which the 26-year-old Slovenian has dominated the sport.
Italian rider Giulio Ciccone outsprinted Irishman Ben Healy to finish second, while home favourite and two-time winner Remco Evenepoel failed to compete with Pogacar in front of the Belgian crowds.
Advertisement
In the women's race, Kim Le Court became the first ever Mauritian to win a Monument, timing her sprint perfectly to overcome a high-class lead group which included Dutch pair Demi Vollering and Puck Pieterse.
Jacob Whitehead dissects the key moments of the day.
First run in 1892, Liege-Bastogne-Liege is the most venerable of cycling's five Monuments, its history betrothing it with the moniker of La Doyenne — roughly translated as the Old Lady. Closely following the Amstel Gold race and Fleche Wallonne, the trio are collectively known as the Ardennes Classics, with Liege-Bastogne-Liege its jewel.
The 260km route passes through the short, sharp hills of southern Belgium (French-speaking Wallonia) towards Bastogne on the Luxembourg border — a location initially chosen so 19th-century race organisers could hop on a train to staff a midway checkpoint.
A succession of climbs intensify in frequency — five categorised in the final 50km — as the riders return on a far more winding loop towards Liege. Known popularly as an elimination race, in the three previous editions, the eventual winner had separated themselves from the peloton with around 30km to go.
'Liege is a race that creeps up on you,' former winner Simon Gerrans once described. 'It gets tougher and tougher as the day goes on.'
The women's race begins in Bastogne, before matching the majority of the men's route for 153km back to Liege.
Liege-Bastogne-Liege has a reputation for being played out amid the changeable Wallonian weather, but the bright sunshine of Sunday's edition brought the feeling of high summer instead.
With the average pace as high as the mercury, the day's breakaway never seriously threatened. Though INEOS attempted a move with Bob Jungels and Tobias Foss midway through the race, the peloton was together until 35km remaining.
It was there, at the base of Cote de La Redoute, the race's most famous climb, that Pogacar attacked. He quickly opened a gap without leaving his saddle, holding a 10-second lead over the top of the 1.6km climb.
'Actually, there was not a plan,' Pogacar said at the finish line. 'But there was a hard pace before that, I saw that a number of teams don't have a lot of team0mates anymore, and so I said: 'OK, I'll test my legs and see if I can get a gap at the top.''
Behind, a chase group formed of Q36.5's Tom Pidcock, Tudor Cycling's Julian Alaphilippe, EF Education First's Ben Healy, and Lidl-Trek's Giulio Ciccone. Evenepoel was stuck in a fourth group after positioning himself poorly on La Redoute.
Advertisement
All four chasers, as punchy climbers with good sprints, would have fancied their chance of overall victory had they bridged to Pogacar, but the gap continued to grow. It was over one minute with 20km remaining, before the chase group splintered entirely, Alaphillipe in particular paying for his early efforts.
Pogacar's victory was never seriously in doubt.
Ciccone outsprinted Healy for second place, 1.03 behind Pogacar, with the pair managing to hold off a quickly closing larger chase group.
What is there left to write about Pogacar? In winning Liege-Bastogne-Liege, he became the first man in the sport's history to finish on the podium of six Monuments in a row.
The Ardennes Classics are meant to be the point in the season where climbers overtake powerhouses as the favourites, but the 26-year-old has been dominant for two months. He has won one Monument (the Ronde van Vlaanderen), finished on the podium in two others (Milan-San Remo and Paris-Roubaix) and won two other high-profile events (Strade Bianche and Fleche Wallonne).
Any sign that his increased mastery of the cobbles has affected his climbing? Not a bit of it. On Wednesday, Pogacar celebrated the return of the season more suited to his skill set with a demolition of his rivals at Fleche Wallonne, blowing open the race with an unprecedented early attack from the base of the Mur de Huy.
Sunday's victory means he has become the first rider since 2017 to do the Fleche-LBL double, and just the third, after Eddy Merckx and Ferdi Kubler, to do the double while wearing the world champion's rainbow jersey.
HE MADE IT LOOK EASY 😎
Tadej Pogacar cruises to victory on the Mur de Huy – nobody else ever looked close to challenging the world champion! pic.twitter.com/NyBDdK4DQq
— Cycling on TNT Sports (@cyclingontnt) April 23, 2025
'I wish Pogacar would just take a bit of a break and give us all a chance,' INEOS Grenadiers' Geraint Thomas had joked pre-race, himself a former Tour de France winner riding his final Liege-Bastogne-Liege.
Merckx was the last rider to enjoy this type of dominance across both the Monuments and Grand Tours. The only thing that stopped him from winning five straight editions of Liege-Bastogne-Liege was when the De Vlaeminck brothers reportedly blocked him in the closing kilometres in the 1970 race.
Advertisement
Pre-race, the mood among the peloton was that a similar manoeuvre might be their only chance of stopping Pogacar.
But after all, it was only two years ago that Pogacar lay on the floor, his wrist fractured, after crashing in this race with just 80km of it ridden. The injury ruined his preparation for the 2023 Tour de France, where he would go on to lose comprehensively to Danish rider Jonas Vingegaard.
He came back to win in Liege last year, but this victory was arguably even more dominant. The ease of his decisive attack, remaining in the saddle and putting one minute into his chasers at will, underscores the reality facing cycling.
🚀 @TamauPogi part en solo dans la côte de la Redoute !
🚀 @TamauPogi goes solo on the côte de la Redoute ! pic.twitter.com/JCauzzcyba
— Liège-Bastogne-Liège (@LiegeBastogneL) April 27, 2025
As it stands, just two riders are able to regularly challenge Pogacar: on the flat, Mathieu van der Poel, and in the mountains, Vingegaard. At top form, Evenepoel could potentially join them. Since the 2022 season, Van der Poel (8), Pogacar (8) and Evenepoel (4) have won 20 of the 23 major one-day races (the five Monuments, the Olympic road race and the Worlds).
Between them, they continue to hoover up the sport's honours, with Pogacar its most commanding force. Historically, one of the sport's greatest assets has been the variety of its champions — now, the flowers invariably fall at the feet of one unassuming Slovenian.
Dominance can be exasperating, but Pogacar's style is currently holding that at bay. He rides with the freedom of an athlete who wins because he is utterly unafraid to lose. On the rare occasion that he is caught and beaten — as he was at Amstel Gold last weekend — he shrugs and attacks from 5km further out on the next occasion.
Whether exasperation ever emerges from Pogacar's supremacy remains to be seen, but there is a common assent that this is a rider whose legacy will sit alongside Merckx — and possibly even exceed it.
🎙Écoutez les premiers mots de @TamauPogi après sa victoire.
🎙️Tune in to the interview with the winner of #LBL 2025 pic.twitter.com/kK0UeUB0Bz
— Liège-Bastogne-Liège (@LiegeBastogneL) April 27, 2025
Liege-Bastogne-Liege was Evenepoel's first appearance in a Monument since a horrible training collision with a postal van in December.
It left the Belgian, fresh from winning two Olympic gold medals that summer, with a dislocated shoulder, lung contusions, and lingering nerve damage — but the mental burden was equally gruelling. The 25-year-old said he 'probably would have stopped (his) career' without his wife's support, while periods of silence left his team concerned.
Advertisement
Soudal Quick-Step reacted by launching a bright yellow kit at Liege for their team presentation and reconnaissance rides — part of a Shine For Safety visibility initiative, which will see fluorescent trim added to their race jerseys from next season.
Liege is known as la cite ardente (the fervent city), and at that presentation, Belgium's expectations for its superstar were palpable.
Their hopes had been raised by Evenepoel's win at De Brabantse Pijl nine days before, as well as an impressive ride in finishing on the podium at Amstel Gold last weekend. He won Liege-Bastogne-Liege in both 2022 and 2023 — his only two appearances at the race — and sounded confident in stating he 'knew every pothole on the road'.
However, the challenges of recovering to take on Pogacar were underscored at Fleche Wallonne on Wednesday, where he was well-beaten by his rival, and the current gap between the pair was even larger on Sunday.
On this day, Evenepoel's legs never appeared to have him close to overall victory. It meant he was poorly positioned at the base of La Redoute — that element of racing potentially only slowly returning after his crash — and was even too far back to join the main chase quartet.
Post-race, he admitted that the emotion of the week had also taken its toll, but the psychological hurdle of his return is now complete. He will compete at the Tour de Romandie in Switzerland on Tuesday, before a high-altitude training camp in Spain next month to begin preparations for the Tour de France, where he will battle against Pogacar once more.
Liege-Bastogne-Liege often takes time to unfold, its length serving to whittle down the riders' wills and legs until the threads holding the peloton together fray in the closing kilometres.
This was the final tilt at La Doyenne for several retiring riders, including Thomas, 40-year-old Jakob Fuglsang, who won this race in 2019, and popular Frenchman Romain Bardet, who finished second last year. Only Bardet featured at the business end of the race.
The peloton will be a very different place next season, although it looked slightly different on Sunday already. The Norwegian team Uno-X wore throwback jerseys in the colours of 7-Eleven, commemorating 40 years since the now-defunct American team made their debut in the Monuments. Uno-X's current sponsor Reitan has links with the supermarket chain in Scandinavia.
Advertisement
On the road, INEOS' attempted move through Jungels and Foss was a proactive move which highlighted the tactical bravery the British squad has shown this season, while Bahrain Victorious made a similar attempt by putting Jack Haig in the day's breakaway.
Outside those teams, there were few signs of innovation in an attempt to win the race. Some of this is undoubtedly down to Pogacar's strength, but many simply sat in, content to ride for a podium in a bunch sprint. While it may be each team's most realistic chance of some form of success, this passivity is not good for cycling.
But Pogacar's post-race comments were both instructive and damning of his competition. Right now, his command is such that he does not need a plan to win.
Unlike their male counterparts, the elite of the women's peloton are each capable of taking chunks from the others on any given day.
The field whittled down to an outstanding quartet with 15km left: pre-race favourite Vollering, world champion Lotte Kopecky, Pieterse, who had won Fleche Wallonne on debut on Wednesday, and Cedrine Kerbaol, a rising French star.
Surprisingly, it was Kerbaol who broke clear, but she could not break the chasers. Vollering and Piertse began to bridge the gap — by this stage, Kopecky had been replaced by Kim Le Court, who hauled herself back into contention on the day's final climb.
The catch was made with 8km remaining, with the lead quartet entering the barriers together. Vollering opened up the sprint, but was quickly passed by the power of her Dutch rival Pieterse, before Le Court, who had drafted Pieterse perfectly, timed her explosion perfectly to win by a bike length.
Le Court is used to bridging gaps. She thought she might never make it as a road professional, having almost quit bike racing as a 20-year-old in 2016 due to the financial repercussions of several serious injuries.
Le Court kept competing in mountain biking, but it was only last year that she made her debut as a full professional on the road, winning a stage of the Giro d'Italia in similar conditions.
Advertisement
At Liege-Bastogne-Liege, grit delivered the biggest win of her career.
'I have no words,' Le Court said post-race. 'I tried everything I could to come back to the group. I never gave up, kept the rhythm, the confidence in myself, and saved a bit of energy for the sprint. I just went all out and did everything that I could.'
2021 — Tadej Pogacar (Slovenia) / Demi Vollering (Netherlands)
2022 — Remco Evenepoel (Belgium) / Annemiek van Vleuten (Netherlands)
2023 — Remco Evenepoel (Belgium) / Demi Vollering (Netherlands)
2024 — Tadej Pogacar (Slovenia) / Grace Brown (Australia)
2025 — Tadej Pogacar (Slovenia) / Kimberley Le Court (Mauritius)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

With no players left from last season's team photo, Baylor begins summer practice with new roster
With no players left from last season's team photo, Baylor begins summer practice with new roster

San Francisco Chronicle​

time29 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

With no players left from last season's team photo, Baylor begins summer practice with new roster

WACO, Texas (AP) — Baylor coach Scott Drew had plenty of players for the first practice of the summer Wednesday, about two months after the team photo from last season was widely circulated on social media with an X marked over all 14 of those players since none was returning to the Bears. Only four of those players exhausted their college eligibility. Nine others left in the transfer portal and one-and-done guard VJ Edgecombe could become Baylor's highest pick ever in the NBA draft later this month. 'Guys you didn't want to lose and were valuable, we haven't had many that we've lost. Whenever you do, that just tears at a coach, because you feel like you didn't do your job,' Drew said this week. 'With the portal, I think we've all gotten used to a lot more turnover in a hurry, and not to take things necessarily personal." The Bears rebuilt their roster with eight transfers and a four-player signing class with a five-star prospect and the son of a NBA champion. Among the 14 players at the first practice was Cameron Carr, the former Tennessee guard who transferred to Baylor in the middle of last season long after that team photo session. One of the former Bears was guard Robert Wright, who averaged 11.5 points and 4.2 assists a game as a freshman last season and had reportedly agreed to a lucrative NIL deal to stay before transferring to BYU for an even bigger package. 'You know people are going to leave. Rob, obviously, was someone we had an agreement with. When you make an agreement, you think you're done,' Drew said, without getting into any specifics. 'Obviously that was a surprise to us, but again, the staff did a great job of putting together a roster and team. That's part of, hopefully, the House settlement, where you get to a point where you know who's on your team and when they're locked in, they're locked in." The eight incoming transfers have more than 500 of games played combined, including guards Dan Skillings, who played 100 games over three years for Cincinnati, and JJ White, who started 75 of 99 games at Omaha over the same period. Juslin Bodo Bodo is a 7-foot post from Cameroon, started all 71 of his games for NCAA Tournament team High Point the past two seasons. Obi Agbim, a 6-3 guard, was the Mountain West newcomer of the year after averaging 17.6 points and 3.4 assists in 29 games last season for Wyoming. Five-star prospect Tounde Yessoufou, a small forward from St. Joseph High School in California, leads the signing class that also includes Andre Iguodala II, whose father was a four-time champion over 19 NBA seasons with four teams; Italian forward Maikcol Perez and big man May Soyoye. Baylor, Gonzaga and Houston are the only teams to win at least one game in each of the past six NCAA Tournaments, though the Bears have lost in the second round the past four years since their national championship in 2021. Drew and his staff will get an early look at the new squad with Baylor representing the United States at the World University Games next month in Germany. 'Any year you get a foreign tour, it's huge. ... Since we're returning 0.0 (percent of our) scoring, this give us all an opportunity,' Drew said. 'The games will be good for those that can play in it. But the practices will be great for everyone. And then, the one thing everybody leaves out is you do these team-bonding activities. There's nothing better than being overseas, that really brings you together a lot more than when you have all the distractions you do in the United States.'

Canadian bantamweight boxer Amanda Galle signs with MVP, looks to add titles
Canadian bantamweight boxer Amanda Galle signs with MVP, looks to add titles

Hamilton Spectator

timean hour ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Canadian bantamweight boxer Amanda Galle signs with MVP, looks to add titles

TORONTO - Canadian boxer Amanda (Bambola) Galle already holds the IBO bantamweight title. Now the 36-year-old from Mississauga, Ont., wants to add to her collection. Galle (11-0-1) will get a bigger platform to do so, having signed with Most Valuable Promotions (MVP) co-founded by Jake Paul and Nakisa Bidarian. 'I know it's going to put me on big cards with tremendous viewership … Just a bigger stage, a bigger audience,' Galle said of what she expects from the new partnership. 'Family members having the ability to tune in from their couch and watch me on TV.' After signing with MVP, Canadian lightweight (Prince) Lucas Bahdi found himself on the undercard of Paul's November 2024 bout with Mike Tyson before a crowd of 72,300 at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, where Bahdi won a majority decision over Italian Armando (La Furia del Quadraro) Casamonica. Shown on Netflix, the main event maxed out at 65 million concurrent streams. In addition to fighting before a bigger audience, Galle is looking to 'take my career to the next level and go collect all the goods that I'm working so hard for.' That would be the big four WBA, WBC, IBF and WBO titles. 'I want all the (championship) belts,' said Galle. The undisputed bantamweight (118-pound) title is on the line July 11 on MVP's all-women boxing card at Madison Square Garden, headlined by the trilogy fight between Ireland's Katie Taylor and Puerto Rico's Amanda Serrano for the undisputed super-lightweight title. The card sees American Shurretta Metcalf take on New Zealand-born Australian Cherneka Johnson with the bantamweight titles on the line. Galle won the vacant IBO title by in December 2023 defeating Venezuela's Niorkis Carreno and won a rematch last time out in December. She has won five straight since a draw with Mexico's Jaqueline Mucio Munoz in July 2022 and says she is ready to go again. 'I've been in the gym the last six months … feeling very strong, healthy and in shape,' she said. So ready that she told MVP that she is ready to step in, if needed, on the July 11 card. Denmark's Dina Thorslund was originally slated to face Metcalf in New York but has stepped away from fighting to have a baby. The MSG show also features Canadian Tamm Thibeault, a former Olympian and world amateur middleweight champion from Shawinigan, Que., who takes on American Mary Casamassa. Montreal's Jessica Camara takes on England's Chantelle Cameron on the card for the WBC interim super-lightweight title. Galle was handled previously by DiBella Entertainment and Toronto-based Lee Baxter Promotions. 'I have to give them gratitude that they did keep me busy' Galle said. 'And Lee Baxter brought the IBO world championship belt to my backyard in Toronto, so I was able to fight for it in front of all my fans … I displayed an Italian buffet of punches.' She said that win made her realize 'I could be the best. I can beat the best.' That's because Carreno fought Thorslund in April 2022, losing a unanimous decision for the WBO bantamweight title. 'And she gave (Thorslund) a hell of a more difficult time than she gave me,' added Galle. Galle started in combat sports at age six, earning her black belt in karate after being inspired by TV's 'Mighty Morphin Power Rangers.' Switching to boxing, she had her first fight at 16 and went on to win three national titles (on 2009, 2013 and 2018). Galle turned pro in 2019. Her nickname Bambola is Italian for doll. 'Fourteen years as an amateur (boxer), six years as a pro, I'm doing 20 years of boxing and I still classify my face as being a beautiful doll. So I'm fulfilling that name all right,' she said with a chuckle. A graduate of Toronto Metropolitan University (formerly Ryerson University) in early childhood education, Galle has always trained at All Canadian Martial Arts Academy in Mississauga. Today she teaches boxing at the gym's academy. She is also an ambassador for Fight To End Cancer in honour of her mother, who died in 2022 — nine years after being diagnosed with Stage 3 breast cancer. Galle won the Canadian super-bantamweight title two weeks before her mother died. —- This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 11, 2025 Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .

With no players left from last season's team photo, Baylor begins summer practice with new roster
With no players left from last season's team photo, Baylor begins summer practice with new roster

Fox Sports

timean hour ago

  • Fox Sports

With no players left from last season's team photo, Baylor begins summer practice with new roster

Associated Press WACO, Texas (AP) — Baylor coach Scott Drew had plenty of players for the first practice of the summer Wednesday, about two months after the team photo from last season was widely circulated on social media with an X marked over all 14 of those players since none was returning to the Bears. Only four of those players exhausted their college eligibility. Nine others left in the transfer portal and one-and-done guard VJ Edgecombe could become Baylor's highest pick ever in the NBA draft later this month. 'Guys you didn't want to lose and were valuable, we haven't had many that we've lost. Whenever you do, that just tears at a coach, because you feel like you didn't do your job,' Drew said this week. 'With the portal, I think we've all gotten used to a lot more turnover in a hurry, and not to take things necessarily personal." The Bears rebuilt their roster with eight transfers and a four-player signing class with a five-star prospect and the son of a NBA champion. Among the 14 players at the first practice was Cameron Carr, the former Tennessee guard who transferred to Baylor in the middle of last season long after that team photo session. One of the former Bears was guard Robert Wright, who averaged 11.5 points and 4.2 assists a game as a freshman last season and had reportedly agreed to a lucrative NIL deal to stay before transferring to BYU for an even bigger package. 'You know people are going to leave. Rob, obviously, was someone we had an agreement with. When you make an agreement, you think you're done,' Drew said, without getting into any specifics. 'Obviously that was a surprise to us, but again, the staff did a great job of putting together a roster and team. That's part of, hopefully, the House settlement, where you get to a point where you know who's on your team and when they're locked in, they're locked in." The eight incoming transfers have more than 500 of games played combined, including guards Dan Skillings, who played 100 games over three years for Cincinnati, and JJ White, who started 75 of 99 games at Omaha over the same period. Juslin Bodo Bodo is a 7-foot post from Cameroon, started all 71 of his games for NCAA Tournament team High Point the past two seasons. Obi Agbim, a 6-3 guard, was the Mountain West newcomer of the year after averaging 17.6 points and 3.4 assists in 29 games last season for Wyoming. Five-star prospect Tounde Yessoufou, a small forward from St. Joseph High School in California, leads the signing class that also includes Andre Iguodala II, whose father was a four-time champion over 19 NBA seasons with four teams; Italian forward Maikcol Perez and big man May Soyoye. Baylor, Gonzaga and Houston are the only teams to win at least one game in each of the past six NCAA Tournaments, though the Bears have lost in the second round the past four years since their national championship in 2021. Drew and his staff will get an early look at the new squad with Baylor representing the United States at the World University Games next month in Germany. 'Any year you get a foreign tour, it's huge. ... Since we're returning 0.0 (percent of our) scoring, this give us all an opportunity,' Drew said. 'The games will be good for those that can play in it. But the practices will be great for everyone. And then, the one thing everybody leaves out is you do these team-bonding activities. There's nothing better than being overseas, that really brings you together a lot more than when you have all the distractions you do in the United States.' ___ AP college basketball: recommended in this topic

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store