On the Warlaing à Brillon sector, Pogacar recorded a time of 3 minutes and 4 seconds,
taking the Strava KOM and going two seconds faster than the previous benchmark set during last year’s race. Florian Vermeersch matched the time in his wheel, underlining both the pace and the intent behind the effort.
A signal, not a coincidence
It is easy to dismiss recon efforts as controlled efforts, far removed from race conditions. But Pogacar’s latest outing fits into a broader pattern that has defined his approach to
Paris-Roubaix.
From the moment he first targeted the race, he has treated it not as an experiment, but as a genuine objective. Last year, on debut, he proved as much. Despite crashing at a key moment in the finale, Pogacar still rode to second place behind Mathieu van der Poel, having earlier been part of the decisive move and even forcing the race from distance.
That performance reshaped expectations. No longer a curiosity on the cobbles, Pogacar arrives in 2026 as a genuine contender to win.
Tadej Pogacar during recon of the cobbles ahead of Paris-Roubaix 2026
Momentum meets opportunity
The timing of this recon effort only adds to the sense of momentum. Pogacar has already claimed Milano-Sanremo and the Tour of Flanders this spring, beating Van der Poel in both, and arrives at Roubaix chasing an even rarer piece of history. Victory on Sunday would complete the full set of Monuments, making him the first rider since Roger De Vlaeminck to do so.
Against that backdrop, every detail takes on added significance. Setting the fastest time on a key sector does not decide the race. But it reinforces a wider impression. Pogacar is not just preparing for Roubaix, he is actively testing the limits on the terrain that has traditionally resisted riders of his profile.
The rivalry sharpens
If Pogacar’s recon ride sends a message, it is one his rivals will already understand. Van der Poel returns as the three-time defending champion, chasing a fourth consecutive victory. Wout van Aert, meanwhile, leads a Visma team built around finally cracking the race. Both know that Roubaix is rarely won on raw numbers alone. Positioning, durability and a degree of fortune all play their part.
But the Slovenian’s latest outing suggests one thing clearly. He will not be easing his way into this year’s race.
Pogacar’s time on Warlaing à Brillon will not appear in any official result on Sunday. It may not even matter once the race unfolds. Yet as a final act before Paris-Roubaix, it serves its purpose.
A reminder that he is not just here to take part.