An eight-rider escape shaped the opening half of the 188.5-kilometre race but was never granted significant freedom. Team Visma | Lease a Bike, Bahrain - Victorious, Tudor Pro Cycling Team and Lidl - Trek all contributed to a measured chase as the race passed repeatedly over Côte du Pin, Col de la Justice and the punishing gradients of Val d’Enfer.
The elastic was steadily shortened rather than violently snapped.
When the break was finally neutralised with 41 kilometres remaining, the shift in intensity was immediate. Multiple accelerations reduced the peloton sharply and forced the favourites into open battle.
Matteo Jorgenson and Seixas moved to the front as the field fragmented into small elite groups.
Seixas commits, chase fractures
Seixas made the defining move of the race.
The Frenchman accelerated clear and initially carved out ten seconds over Jan Christen, Jorgenson and Lenny Martinez. The response never cohered. Instead, the gaps widened.
By the third passage of the finish line his advantage had grown to 1 minute and 11 seconds. Behind him, the Martinez led group was unable to organise a structured pursuit, and a further selection containing Mattias Skjelmose, Christian Scaroni, Egan Bernal, Davide Piganzoli and Jefferson Cepeda drifted to nearly two minutes.
Jorgenson, who had been on Seixas’ wheel when the decisive move began, was unable to sustain the acceleration and slipped back into the chase group as the French rider rode clear.
With sixteen kilometres remaining the race had already been decided in practical terms. Seixas led alone. The chasers were split across multiple layers and losing cohesion.
The final ramps of Val d’Enfer tested endurance rather than tactics. The gap remained stable inside the final six kilometres, and the solo effort became a controlled ride to the line rather than a defensive scramble.
Seixas is widely views as one of the biggest stars of the future in cycling
A breakthrough beyond his years
At 19 years and 157 days old, Seixas joined a rare company in the history of the Faun-Ardèche Classic. Recent editions have been won by riders in their early twenties, including Juan Ayuso and Romain Gregoire, but Seixas’ display elevated him into even more exclusive territory.
Already a winner this season at the Volta ao Algarve, and with a strong record in one-day races despite his age, the Frenchman converted aggressive instinct into mature race management on terrain that punishes misjudgement.
The structure of the race underlined the quality of the performance. This was not a late counterattack from a small group. It was a long-range solo launched the moment control shifted from breakaway management to favourite confrontation.
From that instant, the 2026 Faun-Ardèche Classic belonged to Paul Seixas.