"Not the best preparation for the Tour de France... If I were the UAE team, I would be afraid" - Alberto Contador raises concerns for Tadej Pogacar long-term

Cycling
Wednesday, 30 April 2025 at 10:33
2025 03 27 17 42 landscape
Tadej Pogacar proved once again on Sunday at Liege-Bastogne-Liege that he remains the man to beat in the World Tour peloton. Obliterating all his so-called rivals, the Slovenian put in a now typically impressive display to solo to the win at the Ardennes Monument. Whilst undoubtedly impressed by Pogacar's performance, Alberto Contador does have some concerns.
The root of Contador's concern for Pogacar is burnout. After all, the UAE Team Emirates - XRG has been very active this season, racing all four of the Monuments to date, plus other Classics such as La Fleche Wallonne, the Amstel Gold Race and Strade Bianche, and the UAE Tour back in February. In many of these race, Pogacar has also spent a long time riding solo after launching long-range attacks. According to Contador, these efforts might catch up with the world champion sometime soon.
"I think that from the inside, the people around him must be starting to tell him: 'Hey Tadej, you don't have to start 70-80km from the finish line. We're going to be effective and we're going to save and economise on strength,'" Contador tells Eurosport following Liege-Bastogne-Liege. "I'm convinced that this preparation that Tadej is carrying out, with this calendar that would be almost two months of competition, with races that are skipped but [ones that are] very demanding, is not the best preparation for the Tour de France."
Compared to the likes of Jonas Vingegaard, Primoz Roglic and even Remco Evenepoel, Pogacar has been a much more regular figure so far in 2025. And although this hasn't stopped him bringing in incredible success, Contador doesn't think the UAE Team Emirates - XRG leader will be able to stay at such a high level for ever. "Let's see how the fatigue of a calendar… Not only in the race, but also when you are at home taking care of everything to the millimetre for races of almost 300km," comments the Spanish icon. "If I were the UAE team, I would be afraid of the efforts, the continuous efforts."
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22 Comments
RidesHills 01 May 2025 at 09:03+ 766

Pogacar had some hiccups in his early 20s, but now he's 26. The past isn't predictive of the future. Barring an injury, the next 4 years or so should be his peak competitive years. He said that he was looking forward to vacation (a real break) and then restarting his training program. He'll be ready. Honestly, it's not the Tour he should worry about. It's the Vuelta, or the Worlds, plus riding his fifth Monument. (Can he repeat Merckx's 1972 and win 2 grand tours and 3 monuments in the same season? And add the worlds?) He obviously tried to win all 5 monuments this year. But it's the end of the season when fatigue will set in, if at all. He'll be ready for the Tour, I am sure.

Mistermaumau 29 April 2025 at 18:03+ 3640

You are probably right but EVERY rider is different, some peak early, some late, some don’t peak but are consistently always there, some evolve into a different type of rider, some just fade or stop. You never know until it’s done.

Veganpotter 30 April 2025 at 02:31+ 641

The advantage with the Vuelta is that the very best rarely show up. So he can still win on fumes.

Ayrton 30 April 2025 at 15:28+ 151

If he wins the Vuelta on fumes then what has he got left for the worlds? I think the obvious decision would be not to do two GTs this year because that's just stupid. Winning the TDF, 3 monuments and the worlds is perfectly sufficient for a season.

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