French pundit argues Pedersen is reaching level of Tadej Pogacar and Mathieu van der Poel - "For weeks, Mads has been constantly challenging the two geniuses"

Cycling
Saturday, 24 May 2025 at 12:45
madspedersen woutvanaert giroditalia
In 2025 we are witnessing the rise of Mads Pedersen to a new level. A former World Champion and rider of a tremendous level for many years now, but Lidl-Trek have developed the Dane into a perfect position where at this point in time, he begins to match the level of riders such as Tadej Pogacar and Mathieu van der Poel.
"Since the era of a few impostors who stole or attempted to steal the stars of a corrupted era (Riis, Rasmussen), now two men with completely opposite physiques have come from Denmark to redeem the damned marks of the past (Vingegaard, Pedersen)," Marc Fayet wrote in his column for Cyclism'Actu.
"One is as emaciated as the other is dolled-up, one is as white as the other is dark, one is as ethereal as the other is earthbound. One is at the forefront of tomorrow's champion, and the other is the resurrection of yesterday's champion. At a time when we adore graceful climbers, when we admire their ability to be as light as a breeze, it's time to celebrate the thick, powerfully heavyweight champions".
Pedersen's 2025 season has been packed with triumphs and strong results ever since he began racing in February. With his sharp-tongued remarks, ambition and more traditional approach to training - he is not a fan of altitude training and avoids it - the 29-year old has gained quite a lot of popularity, specially taking into consideration his aggressive style of racing.
He won the Tour de la Provence alongside it's queen stage, won a stage at Paris-Nice where he climbed better than ever and played an incredible domestique role for Mattias Skjelmose... Currently at the Giro, besides his four stage wins, virtually confirmed points classification win and several days in the pink jersey, he is also taking on a domestique role for Giulio Ciccone and Mathias Vacek at the same time.
However none of these can be called his season's highlights, as during the spring he rode to 7th at Milano-Sanremo, 5th at Dwars door Vlaanderen, 2nd at the E3 Saxo Classic, won Gent Wevelgem and joined both Tadej Pogacar and Mathieu van der Poel on the podium of the Tour of Flanders and Paris-Roubaix. In several races, he proved to be the strongest outside of the 'big two', and his consistency now for several months is a feat to be admired. Pedersen's level is truly incredible at the time being, and rightfully he is being compared to the riders that were his main challengers this spring.
"For weeks, Mads has been constantly challenging the two geniuses, the Slovenian and the Dutchman, often in vain. Without calculation and driven solely by his own will, he often remained the last of the brave, proving that giving up was not part of his reason," Fayet argued.
"He would rather die than weaken, for there is always hope at the end, that of continuing his collection of Gent Wevelgem's, of which he already owns two pairs. He imagined himself recently reaching Roubaix or San Remo with his arms in the air and his head in the clouds; the outclassed riders left him no room".
Besides all the top results in which he did not win, the Dane has already collected eight wins by this time, six of them at World Tour level, and he is the second rider with the most UCI points this season. Simultaneously, he has signed a lifelong contract with the American team and the supporting work for his co-leaders in the team continue to build a dynamic that is rare in rival teams and which can further benefit him in the future.
claps 2visitors 2
18 Comments
User Avatar
KerisVroom 24 May 2025 at 14:41+ 906

Kind of weird that he didn't do altitude. Is he still not doing altitude camp?

Mistermaumau 26 May 2025 at 24:51+ 3808

No, but now he’s started considering it at least. Maybe they were smart enough to propose a family holiday so he couldn’t use not wanting to be separated as an excuse? He’s a bit like Vingo when it comes to priorities, Vingo being the only one who gets shit for it even though there was someone doing pretty much the same not so long ago who never got any stick for it.

User Avatar
maria20242024 26 May 2025 at 17:39+ 863

Vingo is criticized because he uses every excuse possible to avoid racing (not because of training in altitude camp). Perhaps because he doesn't really like cycling, for him is just a job. If he can avoid racing, he does.

User Avatar
KerisVroom 26 May 2025 at 17:59+ 906

I am with Vingo on this one. Life isn't just about cycling. Though as a cycling fan, I hope to see him go head to head with Pogi. But cycling is a dangerous sport and if he wants to lessen his exposure to danger, I can totally empathize with him.

User Avatar
maria20242024 26 May 2025 at 17:39+ 863

Vingo's case, more than a desire to be with his family, it seems to be fear of racing and crashing. Yes, cycling is a very dangerous sport; you have to have a lot of confidence, otherwise, it won't be long before the rider gives up. The retirement out of fear starts avoiding running, considering EVERYTHING extremely dangerous, even climbing Montmartre. If Vingo doesn't win again the Tour this year, probably his retirement is near.

Mistermaumau 26 May 2025 at 10:46+ 3808

Nobody ever complained about Froome doing nothing but stage races once he realised he’d NEVER get a result in one-day stuff? Why the different standards?

Mistermaumau 25 May 2025 at 13:04+ 3808

Some people are just mature and stubborn enough to stay within their personal limits despite outside pressure, when you don’t, you end up like Senna, is that what spectators want to provoke with their « demands » on athletes?

User Avatar
KerisVroom 26 May 2025 at 17:40+ 906

I think it is because outliers like Tadej and Remco buck the trend. They can ride one day race and GC well and people start to compare and expect the same thing of him, which is understandable.

Mistermaumau 26 May 2025 at 24:54+ 3808

Yeah, people, full of expectations, but what are THEY providing? And do THEY live up to others’? Seems part of modern cowardice, if you can’t take out your frustrations in your own life on those you consider responsible, start hitting on someone completely innocent.

User Avatar
KerisVroom 26 May 2025 at 17:40+ 906

Hahaha, it's okay for fans to expect, but the athlete doesn't need to comply with expectation. It's good that Vingo stands his ground. Otherwise, he'll be crushed under expectation like Wout did earlier in the spring. I kind of enjoy current generation of cyclists because they know what is important outside of cycling. That keep them grounded, unlike the previous generation which wasn't too unfriendly with each other off the bike.

User Avatar
maria20242024 26 May 2025 at 17:41+ 863

Senna? Fortunately, the vast majority of cyclists and racers are all alive and well, even the most adventurous. There's no need to come out and defend Jonas (and thus indirectly diminish the others) because no one attacks him. I'm simply describing his behavior and describing how those who are afraid of racing usually finish the career. That's all.

User Avatar
KerisVroom 26 May 2025 at 17:41+ 906

Let's hope that's not the case. If he retires early, then it may be an era of infighting within UAE.

User Avatar
maria20242024 26 May 2025 at 17:42+ 863

noooo, no more. No one expect one day race. Lately, he doesn't even race 1 week tours. It's a fact. I don't understand why his fans get so upset about the description of facts.

Mistermaumau 26 May 2025 at 09:18+ 3808

You’re absolutely right but that doesn’t mean « fans » should have the right to behave with total impunity and have the excuse of remaining ignorant about the consequences of their actions. If we all agree that collective pressure can be damaging then we must also accept that each of us risks being a contributor if we don’t reflect on how we act. It’s always easy to say it wasn’t me, but then who was it that applied the pressure? It starts with an event commented by enough fans, pundits and critics which gives media an excuse to amplify and search for a broader base for discussion and when that occurs, the entourage starts reacting and eventually the athlete notices too and changes their natural attitude. This leads me on to a new topic I was thinking about, when riders dedicate a performance or win to a certain event that they say inspired them, like Verona riding for Cicco. That basically implies that when there isn’t some specific occasion (family birthday or death, injured team mate, etc.) these guys don’t feel line, manage to push themselves to their limit? Or is it just because there’s little else of interest to say at such a moment?

Mistermaumau 26 May 2025 at 17:58+ 3808

Sorry Maria but you’ll have to do better than that, show with facts that he’s racing less one weekers ( except obviously in the direct reasonable time after injury). I am not particularly a fan of his, he’s not on my podium of current riders, it serms more you are an anti-fan.

User Avatar
KerisVroom 26 May 2025 at 22:43+ 906

I thought his recent absence from 1 week tours were due to the concussion delaying his build up. I don't see how that is considered avoidance. He's going head to head with Tadej in Dauphine soon.

abstractengineer 26 May 2025 at 17:48+ 3368

Catching up??? he got beat a lot of times by both

Mistermaumau 26 May 2025 at 17:59+ 3808

Agreed, there’s still a big difference between hanging on behind and staying ahead. Sure he’s improved enormously but he needs them to have a really bad day to beat them in anything but tve most favourable terrain.

Just in

Popular news

Latest comments