The Tadej Pogačar era rolled on at the Tour of Flanders, the world champion equalling the record for most victories at the race and claiming his 12th Monument with a typically devastatingly dominant solo win.

It’s only the second time this century that a men’s team has won Milan-San Remo and the Tour of Flanders in the same season, Pogačar’s 2026 season so far simply: three races, three wins. Strade Bianche, Milan-San Remo, the Tour of Flanders all ticked off, a maiden win at Paris-Roubaix next weekend now seemingly pivotal in deciding if the Slovenian can win all five Monuments, perhaps even in the same season.

Mathieu van der Poel was dispatched on the Oude Kwaremont, the gap 34 seconds by the finish, while debutant Remco Evenepoel finished third.

“It was a crazy race,” Pogačar reacted afterwards. “I don’t race too much, so when I race there’s pressure to win. So far, everything went perfect so I can be more than happy. Next week I’ll be motivated and try to enjoy the cobbles.”

Pogačar joins an elite club of riders to have won the race three times, alongside Van der Poel, Fabian Cancellara, Lotte Kopecky, Tom Boonen, Johan Museeuw, Eric Leman, Fiorenzo Magni and Achiel Buysse.

His winning run has also now stretched into its seventh month, the World Championships time trial the last time Pogačar tasted defeat.

Tadej Pogačar wins Tour of Flanders
Tadej Pogačar wins Tour of Flanders (Image Credit: credit: TNT Sports)

Today, from a front group consisting of the merged early breakaway and main protagonists, Pogačar, Van der Poel and Evenepoel distanced the rest on the penultimate ascent of the Oude Kwaremont, Wout van Aert and Mads Pedersen close but unable to follow. The Paterberg was then also too much for Evenepoel; Pogačar and Van der Poel going clear ahead of the Koppenberg.

The Belgian’s time trialling expertise saw him agonisingly close to regaining contact on numerous occasions after repeated protracted chases, but the duo’s power up front was just too tricky to bridge to.

Pogačar launched on the final ascent of the Kwaremont, his gap on Van der Poel immediate. However, by the top the gap was only six seconds, Van der Poel holding the advantage on the shallower top slopes.

The Slovenian doubled his advantage on the rolling roads before the Paterberg and had an advantage of 13 seconds heading onto the final climb of the race. That lead extended further on the vicious 20% slopes, Pogačar fighting off Van der Poel’s spirited chase on the flat finish to Oudenaarde.

In the women’s race, Demi Vollering took her first Tour of Flanders win after repeating the blueprint seen during the men’s race: an attack on the Oude Kwaremont before holding off the chasers over the Paterberg and run to the line.

Vollering’s advantage was even greater than in the men’s race, Pauline Ferrand-Prévot and Puck Pieterse sprinting for the podium places 42 seconds after the winner had crossed the line. It was Ferrand-Prévot who won that particular battle. Kopecky, who sits on three Flanders titles alongside Pogačar, Van der Poel and the rest was fourth.