Arvid de Kleijn is perhaps one of the, if not the very best sprinter in the current peloton that has never raced at World Tour level. At 30 years of age, the experienced fast man gave a few words to CyclingUpToDate on Tudor Pro Cycling Team's media day, and has shared his point of view on what sprinters have to do in 2025 to be able to be competitive.
De Kleijn is someone who has pulled this off successfully, having a strong leadout and managing to take very strong results this past season despite being relatively under the radar in comparison to other sprinters.
The Dutchman took the team''s first-ever World Tour win at Paris-Nice last spring, which came after three second places at the UAE Tour. Later in the year he also won the GP de Fourmies, GP d'Isbergues and two stages at the Tour de Langkawi.
De Kleijn is a pure sprinter, but he is fully aware that nowadays only being a good sprinter will earn almost nothing (as shown well by Fabio Jakobsen's words recently), but it is imperative that they have a good 'engine' to survive the races and ever-increasing climbing levels.
"Sprinting is really something different than these guys (Michael Storer and Yannis Voisard, who sat next to him, ed.) are doing, we´re almost doing another sport," he jokes. "And these guys put a lot of W/Kg and we need to find a balance to be really fast and be able to win sprints, and having at least the minimum aerobic capacity to go over climbs and be able to sprint again".
Doing so is always a hard decision and something that can be a make or break for a sprinter. In the past, but specially in recent years, we have often seen some focus on one side specifically and miss out on their chances as they lack the other. "It's a hard mix, and we're trying to make the balance as perfect as possible so we can be super fast and be able to come to the finals".