While UAE Team Emirates have warned Tadej Pogačar against riding this year’s Paris-Roubaix, citing the dangers inherent in the jagged cobbled roads of the Hell of the North, the world champion’s big Tour de France rival Jonas Vingegaard has been offering his take on the wider safety issues currently impacting the sport.
In a recent interview with former pro, team manager, and commentator José De Cauwer in Het Nieuwsblad, the Visma-Lease a Bike leader, currently racing at the typically chaotic Paris-Nice, even argued that “too many riders race as if there are no brakes on a bike” and said he would encourage his children to start racing because cycling is “just too dangerous”.
Two-time Tour winner Vingegaard’s yellow jersey defence in 2024 was derailed by a shocking high-speed crash on a descent at the Tour of the Basque Country, which saw him suffer a collapsed lung and broken ribs, as well as a fractured collarbone, and sparked a high-profile debate about safety in the peloton which has rumbled on into 2025.
(Zac Williams/SWpix.com)
And speaking to De Cauwer – Greg LeMond’s manager at the 1989 Tour de France, and credited with the American’s famously race-winning use of tri bars – at the Volta ao Algarve, Vingegaard joked that the Belgian was therefore at “fault” for the increasing focus on aerodynamics and higher speeds of the modern peloton.
“It’s your fault that we’re racing so fast today,” the Dane told De Cauwer.
“A bit too fast now, if you ask me,” replied the Belgian commentator. “How big is the problem of safety in cycling?”
To which Vingegaard responded: “Very big. Just look at me. I could have died last year.”
However, the double Tour winner isn’t convinced by his Visma teammate Wout van Aert’s suggestion that the number of gears available to the riders should be restricted in order to potentially lower speeds.
> “Limiting number of gears would make cycling a lot safer,” says Wout van Aert, as Belgian star shares photo of knee scars suffered in horrific Vuelta crash
“I’ve thought about that, but I’m hesitating,” he said. “With a bigger gear we’ll go faster, but the peloton is also much more elongated. Crashes happen more often in a compact peloton.
“In general, I would say that everyone in cycling needs to realise the scale of the safety problem. That is still not the case enough. And everyone has a responsibility: the riders themselves, the organisers, and the UCI.
“If I may give the example of my crash in the Basque Country again. The organisers made a mistake by sending us over a road with tree roots underneath. But we riders also fight and race at a time when it is not really necessary.
“That was also noticeable at the Volta ao Algarve: sometimes we fight for position towards a bend that goes nowhere. Sometimes there is too little respect.
“You can also say that about Wout’s crash in Dwars door Vlaanderen: do you have to fight so hard at that moment? Too many riders race as if there are no brakes on their bike.”
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And when asked by De Cauwer if he would let his son and daughter race when they are older, Vingegaard was extremely clear.
“To be honest, if my daughter or son asks that question – daddy, can we race? – the answer is ‘no’,” he said.
“The way the sport is now… It’s just too dangerous.”
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Can't comment on whether it was Pogacar's greatest victory because I do not subscribe to TNT. Shame lots of other people didn't see the race either.
However, there was some great performances at the European Indoor Athletics Champs, which were shown on BBC 1 and 2.
I can't wait to not see Milan San Remo, The Tour Of Flanders, Liege-Bastogne-Liege, Gent-Wevelgemand Paris Roubaix in the coming weeks.
Abrahamsen's laptop could just be connected to a power meter, no? Doesn't have to be connected to a trainer.
Abrahamsen doesn't actually appear to have the shower on, I think the moisture is just sweat. I saw an interview with him about a month ago where he said how he was doing 25 hours a week on rollers (so you're right, probably just running Zwift off his power meter) in his girlfriend's apartment in Oslo, for normal training he uses a bedroom with the window open but for heat training he takes the rollers into the bathroom where he can set the temperature at a consistent 30°C. Loses about a litre and a half of sweat in 50 minutes apparently so no wonder he looks like he's been under the shower!
Presumably that driver has put those cones there to stop cyclists from thoughtlessly trying to squeeze past and scratching their vehicle?
I didnt see the aftermath of Pogi's crash but was he caught by the Peloton? I dont think he was?
If he was - then yes it was a great ride. If no - then also a great ride but definately not his greatest even at SB. Surely last years destruction of the Peloton counts more?
As for Tom being "sporting", Im less convinced of that, I think its a good spin to put on it but Im not convinced he thought could make Pog hurt enough to make going into the red to make it worthwhile - especially with Wellins nearby with plenty in the tank. I suspect Tom and the team chose to see what would happen as bruising and stiffness set in and as it happens they didnt get the effects they wanted. That said - coming 2nd to Pogi at anything is pretty much a statement that you are world class.
I hope when years later the history of this period is written that Pogi stands untarnished. He seems to have it all - great personality, superthoughtful - espcially to the women riders, respectful, a great deal of flair and is a monster on the bike. He shows you can be a true champion without the "be a dick" mentality of a lot of others.
Very much my take on it too, Tom had a choice between trying to go solo from 50 kms out with Pogacar only 30 seconds behind after the crash or letting him catch up, working together and hoping that the crash had taken something out of him. Tom's a good lad and maybe there was an element of sportsmanship in his decision but it's quite easy to be sporting when the sporting decision is arguably the correct pragmatic decision as well. He said himself, probably only half joking, "Of course it was still a long way to go and I didn't want to ride that far on my own." He admitted at the end that he was exhausted even having had Pogacar with him sharing the work so it seems likely that if he hadn't waited Pogacar would have swallowed him up in any case.
Car spreading
https://climatevisuals.org/carspreading/
https://cleancitiescampaign.org/carspreading
It's entirely subjective and I can't find any statistics to back it up, but my impression over (far too) many years of watching Paris Roubaix is that it's not really any more dangerous in terms of injuries than most other races. There may be more tumbles but they are usually at lower speeds on the cobbles, the narrowness of the sectors means riders often fall onto the verge rather than hard surfaces and the fact that the race very quickly goes into single file eliminates the bunch pileups that so often lead to broken collarbones and wrists. Yesterday proved that incidents can happen anywhere, after haring around terrifying high-speed descents on gravel Pogacar came off on what looked like a fairly innocuous bend on tarmac. I'd say he's at just as much risk of suffering a Tour-ending injury in the other classics that he's definitely going to ride as he would do at PR. As I said, a purely subjective impression, does anyone know of any statistics that prove or disprove that PR causes more serious injuries than other races?
I guess older people, like me and Pogacar's manager, associate P-R with the serious injury suffered by Johan Museeuw which almost cost him his leg.
I too am one of those old folks and I remember it well (though it was gangrene rather than the actual crash directly that almost took his leg, as I recall). But then I can also remember, as I'm sure you can, poor Fabio Casartelli being killed in the Tour and Wouter Weyland in the Giro, but nobody would suggest that Pogacar avoids those races. I can understand the manager's nervousness, I'm just wondering whether it actually has any real factual foundation in terms of PR being any more dangerous than most other races.