Tadej Pogačar
File:Tadej Pogačar (2020).jpg
Tadej Pogačar in 2020
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Personal information | |||||||||||||
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Full name | Tadej Pogačar | ||||||||||||
Nickname | Pogi,[1] PoGo[2] | ||||||||||||
Born | Komenda, Slovenia |
21 September 1998 ||||||||||||
Height | Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value).[3] | ||||||||||||
Weight | 66 kg (146 lb; 10 st 6 lb)Cite error: The opening <ref> tag is malformed or has a bad name |
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Team information | |||||||||||||
Current team | UAE Team Emirates | ||||||||||||
Discipline | Road | ||||||||||||
Role | Rider | ||||||||||||
Rider type | All-rounder | ||||||||||||
Professional team(s) | |||||||||||||
2017–2018 | Template:Cycling data ROG | ||||||||||||
2019– | UAE Team Emirates[template problem][4][5] | ||||||||||||
Major wins | |||||||||||||
Grand Tours
Other
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Medal record
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Tadej Pogačar (Slovene pronunciation: [taˈdɛ́ːj pɔˈɡáːtʃaɾ] ( listen);[6] born 21 September 1998) is a Slovenian cyclist who currently rides for UCI WorldTeam UAE Team Emirates.[7] He is a two time Tour de France winner, and has won two one-day Monuments (Liège–Bastogne–Liège and Giro di Lombardia).
In 2019, he became the youngest cyclist to win a UCI World Tour race with the Tour of California win at the age of 20.[8] Later in the year, in his debut Grand Tour, Pogačar won three stages of the Vuelta a España en route to an overall third-place finish and the young rider title.[9][10] In both his Tour de France debut and the following year, he won three stages and the race overall, as well as the mountains and young-rider classifications, becoming the only rider to win these three classifications simultaneously.[11][12] He is the first Slovenian winner, and, at the age of 21, the second-youngest winner after Henri Cornet, who won in 1904 at the age of 19.[13][14]
In 2021, he also made history when he became the first Tour de France winner to take an Olympic medal in the road race in the same year after he took bronze at the men's road race.[15]
He is the current men's UCI World Ranking No.1 and also finished the 2021 season as the year-end top ranked road cyclist.
Contents
Career
Early career
Pogačar followed his older brother Tilen in joining the Rog Ljubljana club at the age of nine.[16] In 2011 he came to the attention of Road World Championship medallist Andrej Hauptman, who is as of 2021 his coach and head coach and selector for the Slovenian national cycling team. Hauptman watched Pogačar pursuing a group of much older teenagers from 100 metres behind. Thinking that Pogačar was struggling to keep up with the older riders, he told the race organisers that they should provide some assistance to Pogačar: the organisers explained that the younger rider was in fact about to lap the group he was chasing.[17][18] Hauptman subsequently managed Pogačar as an under-23 rider with the Rog–Ljubljana team, before joining UAE Team Emirates as a directeur sportif in May 2019, after Pogačar joined the team.[16]
UAE Team Emirates (2019–)
2019
Pogačar joined UAE Team Emirates from the 2019 season, a deal that was made ahead of the 2018 Tour de l'Avenir, which he won. He made his debut for the team at the Tour Down Under, where he finished 13th overall. He went on to win the Volta ao Algarve, taking the race lead after winning the second stage.[19] He also placed sixth at the Tour of the Basque Country.[16] In May 2019, he won the Tour of California, becoming the youngest rider to win a UCI WorldTour stage race.[17] He took the race lead after winning the queen stage to Mount Baldy on stage 6.[20] In June, Pogačar won the Slovenian national time trial championship after beating Matej Mohorič by 29 seconds.[21]
In August, Pogačar was named in the team's startlist for the Vuelta a España, his debut in a Grand Tour.[22] In the first week, he performed strongly, placing himself in the top ten on GC before winning his first Grand Tour stage on the rain-soaked stage to Cortals d'Encamp.[23] The win allowed him to move inside the top five on GC. On stage 13, which finished on the steep climb of Los Machucos, he was the only rider to stay with the race leader and his compatriot, Primož Roglič. Pogačar ended up winning his second stage to move up to third overall,[24] where he stayed heading into the second rest day. After losing time on stage 18, he dropped down to fifth on GC.[25] On the penultimate stage, with one last chance to move up the standings, Pogačar launched an attack, going on an almost 40-kilometre (25 mi) solo breakaway. He eventually took his third stage win, winning by more than a minute and a half over the rest of the contenders. The win allowed him to finish the Vuelta in third overall, the final podium position, and giving him the victory in the young rider classification.[26][27]
2020
Before the season started, Pogačar announced that he was making his debut at the Tour de France, where he planned on riding in support of Fabio Aru.[28] He made his season debut at the Volta a la Comunitat Valenciana, where he won two stages on his way to winning the race.[29] At the curtailed UAE Tour, he won the fifth stage, which finished atop the Jebel Hafeet,[30] and finishing second to Adam Yates on GC. In March, cycling events were among those postponed by the COVID-19 pandemic. When the season resumed, he took fourth overall in the Critérium du Dauphiné. In the Slovenian national championships, he finished second to Primož Roglič in the road race[31] before defeating him in the time trial, defending his title.[32]
In the Tour de France, Pogačar quickly demonstrated that he was in better form than Aru, his team's initial leader, after finishing second to Roglič on stage four, which finished atop the climb of Orcières-Merlette.[33] However, he lost almost a minute and a half on stage 7, which was affected by crosswinds.[34] The next day, he began to claw back time when he attacked on the Col de Peyresourde, gaining back 38 seconds over the rest of the contenders.[35] After Aru withdrew on stage 9, Pogacar won the stage to Laruns, his first Tour stage win, by outsprinting Egan Bernal and Roglič, who took the maillot jaune, as well as Marc Hirschi, who had been on an 80-kilometre (50 mi) solo breakaway.[36] On stage 13, which finished atop the steep climb of Puy Mary, he was the only rider to stay with Roglič and moving up to second overall at 44 seconds down.[37] He also took the lead in the young rider classification in the process. Two days later, he outsprinted Roglič at the top of the Col du Grand Colombier to take his second stage of the race.[38]
At the beginning of the third week, Pogačar sat in second overall at 40 seconds behind Roglič. On stage 17, the queen stage which finished atop the Col de la Loze, he struggled to follow Roglič before eventually losing 17 seconds.[39] Ahead of the penultimate stage, a 36.2-kilometre (22.5 mi) time trial finishing at La Planche des Belles Filles, Pogačar faced a 57 second deficit to Roglič. At the first time check, he already managed to claw back 13 seconds from his compatriot. He eventually headed into the final climb with a lead of 36 seconds and a deficit of 21 seconds on virtual GC. On the climb, Pogačar continued to gradually gain time before going into the virtual maillot jaune with still 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) left in his ride. At the top, he took his third stage of the race, almost a minute and a half ahead of Tom Dumoulin while Roglič finished almost two minutes down. As a result, he took the maillot jaune with a lead of 59 seconds on Roglič and he also took the lead in the mountain classification.[40][41] The next day, he finished safely in the peloton to officially win the Tour, becoming the first Slovenian winner of the race.[42] At the age of 21, he also became the second youngest winner of the Tour, just behind Henri Cornet, who won the Tour in 1904 at the age of 19. In addition to winning the Tour, he also won the young rider classification as well as the mountains classification.[43] The previous rider to win three jerseys was Eddy Merckx in 1972. He became the twelfth rider to win the Tour de France on his first attempt, and the first since 1983.[44]
After the Tour, Pogačar competed in the men's road race at the World Championships where he rode in support of Roglič, who eventually finished in sixth place.[45] Three days later, he competed at La Flèche Wallonne where he finished in ninth place. He ended his season at Liège–Bastogne–Liège, where he originally finished in fourth place before moving up to third following Julian Alaphilippe's relegation.[46]
2021
He started the 2021 season by winning the UAE Tour, Tirreno-Adriatico, Liège-Bastogne-Liège – his first win in a monument[16] and the Tour of Slovenia.
He began the 2021 Tour de France as one of the pre-race favorites along with Primož Roglič, Geraint Thomas and Richard Carapaz. On stage one he finished with the group of favorites eight seconds behind stage winner Julian Alaphilippe and took the lead in the white jersey classification. Pogačar won the fifth stage, the race's first time trial, finishing 18 seconds ahead of Stefan Küng and taking significant time out of his GC rivals.[47] On stage eight he launched an attack, from more than six minutes behind the breakaway, taking over the yellow jersey with a lead of over four and a half minutes on those considered to be contenders for the overall victory.[48] Pogačar extended his GC lead on the ninth stage to Tignes, responding to an attack by Carapaz on the final climb 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) from the finish and dropping his rivals in the main group, emerging with an overall lead of over two minutes over second placed Ben O'Connor, who had moved up the order after winning the stage from the breakaway.[49]
Following stage eleven, which included a double ascent of Mont Ventoux, the closest rivals to Pogačar included Rigoberto Uran, Jonas Vingegaard and Carapaz, but all them remained more than five minutes behind. Pogacar had temporarily lost some time to Vingegaard on the final ascent of Ventoux before catching him on the descent to the finish alongside Carapaz and Uran.[50] Pogačar extended his lead further with wins on stages 17 (to the Col de Portet)[51] and 18 (in Luz Ardiden), by which point he had a lead of 5' 45" over Vingegaard and an unassailable lead in the polka dot jersey classification.[52] On the penultimate 20th stage, a time trial between Libourne and Saint-Émilion, Pogačar conceded half a minute to Vingegaard but retained a lead of over five minutes going into the final stage to Champs-Élysées in Paris.[53]
Pogačar's win made him the youngest cyclist to win consecutive Tours. This was also the second year in a row that he won three distinctive jerseys. Both during and at the end of the Tour there were accusations of doping on social media and in the press due to the dominance Pogačar displayed.[54] When asked about it he answered, "For sure I am not angry about it. They are uncomfortable questions because the [cycling] history was really bad. I totally understand why there are all of these questions."[55]
Jonathan Vaughters, the Directeur Sportif of one of the teams who had a GC rider competing against Pogačar, Team EF Education–Nippo, offered an explanation for how Pogačar was able to be so successful on stage eight. He explained that the twin factors of uncharacteristic weather conditions and chaotic, uncontrolled racing dynamics played a part.[56] In addition to this in previous years there was usually a dominant team who would contain the attacks of any riders considered a threat for victory, whether it was Team Ineos, Team Jumbo-Visma or Movistar Team. During the 2021 Tour teams Ineos and Jumbo had both suffered from the first week crashes and Movistar was not as strong as they had been in years past. As such by the time Pogačar launched his attack late in the stage, there were no teams remaining who were strong enough to keep him in check. Vaughters also stated, "Simply put, the race was so aggressive all day long, along with really the race as a whole on the flats, that basically by the time the peloton was taking in the climbs, they were cooked. This was further exacerbated by the wet conditions."[57]
After the Tour de France, Pogačar won the bronze medal in the men's road race at the Olympic Games after finishing behind Wout van Aert in the sprint for the silver medal.[58] At the end of July, UAE Team Emirates announced that they had agreed a one year extension to his contract, committing him to the team up to the end of 2027.[59] Pogačar took a break from racing following the Olympics, returning to competition at the Bretagne Classic Ouest–France at the end of August,[60] where he initially managed to follow an attack by Alaphilippe on a gravelled climb 60 km from the finish along with Mikkel Frølich Honoré and Benoît Cosnefroy, but was dropped by the other escapees who went on to take the podium places.[61]
In September he competed at the European Road Championships in Trentino: in the road race, after a number of breakaways had emerged and been caught by the peloton, he was able to follow an attack by Matteo Trentin to form part of a lead group which expanded to include ten riders, however he was unable to keep pace with a further attack from this group 23 km from the end of the race, with a three-man selection of Remco Evenepoel, Sonny Colbrelli and Cosnefroy dropping their rivals and securing themselves the medals.[62] At the Road World Championships in Flanders later that month, Pogačar finished 37th in the road race.[63]
He then moved on to Italy in October to compete in the autumn classics held there: although he failed to finish the Giro dell'Emilia, he made an impression at Tre Valli Varesine, animating the race with a long-race attack from 120 km: although he lost contact with the head of the race due to a puncture he won the sprint in the chase group to finish third.[63] At Milano–Torino, Pogačar managed to keep pace with the other favourites for most of the day, emerging from the peloton's fragmentation in crosswinds 65 km from the end as part of a front group which absorbed the day's early breakaway, and remaining in contention for the win until losing contact with Adam Yates and Roglič in the closing kilometres of the final climb up Superga: he subsequently lost the two-up sprint for third place to João Almeida.[64]
A few days later, Pogačar won his second monument at Il Lombardia, responding to an attack by Vincenzo Nibali by dropping the Italian and the rest of the lead group 30 km from the finish: although he was subsequently joined at the front of the race by Fausto Masnada, Pogačar won the resulting two-man sprint at the finish line. He became the third rider after Fausto Coppi and Eddy Merckx to win two monuments and the Tour in the same year[65] and just fourth rider to win the Tour de France and the Tour of Lombardy in the same season, after Coppi, Merckx and Bernard Hinault, and the first to do so in 42 years.[66]
As the 2021 offseason began the director of the Giro d'Italia, Mauro Vegni, challenged Pogačar to complete the Giro-Tour Double. Vegni stated, "If I'm not wrong, Pantani was the last. So perhaps it's time for a rider to add their name to the roll of honour." Pogačar did state he plans on attempting to win the Giro at some point in the future, but not in 2022.[67] The only riders to complete any grand tour double since Pantani are Alberto Contador in 2008 and Chris Froome in 2017.
2022
Pogačar started the season off with victories in the 2022 UAE Tour and 2022 Strade Bianche and then showed absolute dominance as he won two stages and nearly swept every jersey in the 2022 Tirreno-Adriatico handily defeating Vingegaard and Landa, just missing the mountains jersey to Quinn Simmons.[68]
Comparisons with Eddy Merckx
While many had been hesitant to make comparisons between Pogačar and Merckx following his first Tour victory, before he even started his second Tour, Cyrille Guimard, a former rival of Merckx and a Directeur Sportif of Greg LeMond, as well as of former Tour champions Van Impe, Hinault and Fignon, claimed that Pogačar was above the level of both Merckx and Hinault.[69] Then, following his performance on stage eight, former Tour de France winner Joop Zoetemelk compared the young Slovenian to Merckx.[70] By the end of the race Merckx himself said that he regarded the Slovenian as "the new Cannibal", in reference to his own nickname, also suggesting that "If nothing happens to him, he can certainly win the Tour de France more than five times".[71] After the 2021 Il Lombardia, Merckx said that he has heard plenty of cyclists called "the new Merckx", but none of them ever fulfilled the promise. In Pogačar's case he thinks it is finally true because of the races he has already won.[72] Ernesto Colnago said that, according to his experience, Pogačar will be "the only one following Eddy Merckx".[73]
Personal life
Tadej was born and grew up in Komenda, 20 km north of the Slovenian capital of Ljubljana. His mother Marjeta is a teacher of French and his father Mirko formerly worked in management at a chair factory before joining Tadej's former team Ljubljana Gusto Santic as part of their management team in 2021. Tadej is the third of four siblings.[16]
Pogačar lives in Monaco with his partner, fellow Slovenian professional cyclist Urška Žigart.[74] They became engaged in September of 2021.[75] His role model is Alberto Contador.[76] He was also an admirer of Fränk and Andy Schleck while growing up.[16]
In addition to his native Slovenian, Pogačar speaks fluent English and Italian.[citation needed]
Major results
Road
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- 2016
- 1st
Time trial, National Junior Road Championships
- 1st
Overall Giro della Lunigiana
- 1st Stage 2b Course de la Paix Juniors
- 3rd
Road race, UEC European Junior Road Championships
- 2017
- 2nd Raiffeisen Grand Prix
- 3rd Time trial, National Under-23 Road Championships
- 3rd Overall Tour de Hongrie
- 4th Overall Istrian Spring Trophy
- 5th Overall Tour of Slovenia
- 5th Overall Carpathian Couriers Race
- 7th Piccolo Giro di Lombardia
- 8th GP Laguna
- 9th GP Capodarco
- 9th Croatia–Slovenia
- 10th Giro del Belvedere
- 2018
- National Under-23 Road Championships
- 1st
Road race
- 1st
Time trial
- 1st
- 1st
Overall Tour de l'Avenir
- 1st
Overall Grand Prix Priessnitz spa
- 1st
Overall Giro del Friuli-Venezia Giulia
- 1st Trofeo Gianfranco Bianchin
- 2nd Gran Premio Palio del Recioto
- 3rd Overall Istrian Spring Trophy
- 4th Overall Tour of Slovenia
- 4th Poreč Trophy
- 4th Raiffeisen Grand Prix
- 5th GP Laguna
- 7th Road race, UCI Under-23 Road World Championships
- 8th Giro del Belvedere
- 2019
- 1st
Time trial, National Road Championships
- 1st
Overall Tour of California
- 1st
Overall Volta ao Algarve
- 3rd Overall Vuelta a España
- 1st
Young rider classification
- 1st Stages 9, 13 & 20
- 1st
- 4th Overall Tour of Slovenia
- 6th Overall Tour of the Basque Country
- 1st 20px Young rider classification
- 6th GP Miguel Induráin
- 7th Gran Premio di Lugano
- 2020
- National Road Championships
- 1st
Time trial
- 2nd Road race
- 1st
- 1st
Overall Tour de France
- 1st
Mountains classification
- 1st
Young rider classification
- 1st Stages 9, 15 & 20 (ITT)
- 1st
- 1st
Overall Volta a la Comunitat Valenciana
- 2nd Overall UAE Tour
- 3rd Liège–Bastogne–Liège
- 4th Overall Critérium du Dauphiné
- 9th La Flèche Wallonne
- 2021
- 1st
Overall Tour de France
- 1st
Mountains classification
- 1st
Young rider classification
- 1st Stages 5 (ITT), 17 & 18
- 1st
- 1st 20px Overall Tirreno–Adriatico
- 1st
Overall UAE Tour
- 1st 20px Overall Tour of Slovenia
- 1st Liège–Bastogne–Liège
- 1st Giro di Lombardia
- 3rd
Road race, Olympic Games
- National Road Championships
- 3rd Time trial
- 5th Road race
- 3rd Overall Tour of the Basque Country
- 1st Stage 3
- 3rd Tre Valli Varesine
- 4th Milano–Torino
- 5th Road race, UEC European Road Championships
- 7th Strade Bianche
- 10th Time trial, UCI Road World Championships
- 2022
- 1st 20px Overall Tirreno–Adriatico
- 1st
Overall UAE Tour
- 1st Strade Bianche
- 5th Milan–San Remo
General classification results timeline
Grand Tour general classification results | |||||||
Grand Tour | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
— | — | — | ||||
![]() |
— | 1 | 1 | ||||
![]() |
3 | — | — | ||||
Major stage race general classification results | |||||||
Race | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | |||
![]() |
— | — | — | — | |||
![]() |
— | — | 1 | 1 | |||
![]() |
— | NH | — | ||||
![]() |
6 | 3 | |||||
![]() |
— | — | |||||
![]() |
— | 4 | — | ||||
![]() |
— | NH | — |
Classics results timeline
Monument | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Milan–San Remo | — | 12 | — | 5 |
Tour of Flanders | — | — | — | |
Paris–Roubaix | — | NH | — | |
Liège–Bastogne–Liège | 18 | 3 | 1 | |
Giro di Lombardia | — | — | 1 | |
Classic | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 |
Strade Bianche | 30 | 13 | 7 | 1 |
Amstel Gold Race | DNF | NH | — | |
La Flèche Wallonne | 53 | 9 | — | |
Clásica de San Sebastián | DNF | NH | — |
Major championships results timeline
Event | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
Road race | Not held | 3 | NH | |||
Time trial | — | ||||||
![]() |
Road race | — | — | 18 | 33 | 37 | |
Time trial | — | — | — | — | 10 | ||
20px European Championships | Road race | — | — | — | — | 5 | |
Time trial | — | — | — | — | 12 | ||
Road race | — | 6 | 7 | 2 | 5 | ||
Time trial | 5 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
— | Did not compete |
---|---|
DNF | Did not finish |
NH | Not Held |
Cyclo-cross
Awards
- Vélo d'Or: 2021[77]
- International Flandrien of the Year: 2021[78]
References
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External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tadej Pogačar. |
- Tadej Pogačar profile at ProCyclingStatsTemplate:UAE Team Emirates riders
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