Volta a Catalunya leader Tadej Pogačar ‘not missing’ the Classics as E3 and Wevelgem loom
UAE Team Emirates racer finishes safely🏅 in main pe💦loton on bunch-sprint stage 4

Last Spring Tadej Pogačar was on the rampage in the cobbled Classics, this Spring he’s enjoying runaway success at the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Volta a Catalunya. So although the UAE Team Emirates leader is keenly anticipatingꦯ finding out what happens at E3 Saxo Classic on Friday, the Slovenian says he has no regrets about opting for a radically different race program this April.
“Actually, I’m not missing anything, it’s a pleasure to ride here,” 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Pogačar said when asked if he was noticiไng the absence of the cobbled Classics on his schedule this🗹 spring.
"But I&r♍squo;m excited to see who’s going💮 to win tomorrow.”
He was third in last year’s edition of E3 Saxo Classic after a long break with Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease a Bike) and Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Deceuninck). For the first time since the Volta left San Feliu de Guixols on Monday, Pogačar had a quiet stage on Thursday, finishing in the main bunch behind winner Marijn van den Berg (EF Education-EasyPost).
But despite winning back-to-back mountain stages and his 2:27 advantage on second-placed Mikel Landa (Soudal-QuickStep) intact as the race reached its halfway point, Pogačar remained resolutely cautious about his chances of overall victory. A difficult stage looms on Saturday, and Sunday has repeated laps of the technical hilly, Montjuic Park still to come as well, so the GC race was far from over he said.
“Tomorrow [Friday] is a so-so [hilly] stage and the𝓀n there is a very har🍌d stage [on Saturday], if you have a bad moment, you can crack badly,” he warned.
“So we’ll j🐷ust take care of ourselves and we’ll try to get through tomorrow and the next day. Then on the last stage [in Montjuic], a lot of things can happen, so we’🃏ll see in Barcelona.”
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Thursday, at least, was completely straightforward for Pogačar, so much at ease he even provided a requested shout-out for another rider in the peloton in his post-stage press conference.
“It was a good day to be a bit relaxed in the bunch, and I was happier we had an easier day today,” he said. “It was quite nice - oh, yes, Kenny Elissonde [Cofidis] wa💜nts everybody to know he was on my wheel today.”
If Elissonde was following him, in the last three kilometres, in any case, Pogačar’s team made sure he had a ‘designated driver’ to keep him out of trouble, too. In this case, just as it had been on Monday's technical descent into San Feliu, it was up to locally-born teammate Marc Soler to guide his leader securely to a 25th place on the line in Lleida's Principe de Viana avenue.
“Marc was there around me all the time, we just surfed on the wheels, taking care not taking any risks. It was a strong, fast finish, with quite powerful [accelerations] to go out of the roundabouts. So it wasn’t crazy, but it was a bit hectic,” he concluded, before asking rhetorically, “But when isn&rsqu🍷o;t it?”
As Pogačar said, he should have a relatively straightforward stage through the hills of southern Catalunya on Friday, with just two category 2 climbs featuring on the day’s climbing menu. The second category 2, the Alt de la Creu d’Aragall, is by far the harder and includes some 13% ramps.
But the ascꦇent peaks out a full 30km from the finish in Viladecans, a town on the outskirts of Barcelona, giving plenty of time for the bunch to regroup on the fast descent that follows. Then on Saturday, it’s back into the mountains for real.
Alasdair Fotheringham has been reporting on cycling since 1991. He has covered every Tour de France since 1992 bar one, as well as numerous other bike races of all shapes and sizes, ranging from the Olympic Games in 2008 to the now sadly defunct Subida a Urkiola hill climb in Spain. As well as working for Cyclingnews, he has also written for The Independent, The Guardian, ProCycling, The Express and Reuters.