San Sebastian Klasikoa: Marc Hirschi outsprints Julian Alaphilippe to victory
F༺renchman is second, Lennert Van Eetvelt takes third















Marc Hirschi (UAE Tea🅠m Emirates) took a striking win at Donostia San Sebastián Klasikoa in a two-up sprint against Julian Alaphilippe (Soudal-Quickstep) after the two made a blistering attack on the final as𒅌cent of the 236km Basque race.
The two rode clear on the ascent of Pilotegi with 7km remaining, with an attack ignited by Alaphilippe. They quickly carved a lead on the remnants of the main peloton, before setting up for a cat-and-mouse sprint where Hirshi proved the str𝐆onger sprinter of the two after opening his sprint within the final 200🔯m into Donostia San Sebastián.
Behind them, Lennert Van Eetvelt (Lotto Dstny) managed to follow th๊eir initial move but was unable to bridge to the duo out front, but secured third place ahead of Kevin Vermaerke (Team dsm-firmenich PostNL) who won the sprint for fourth.
Sp🌼eaking after the finish, Hirschi described the race as “sup🎉er hard”.
“We went so fast, and then we just climbed,” he sa♋id of the final ascent, “We just ꧂suffered to the top and then we looked back and we were only two so we knew we had to continue and we had a nice sprint.”
UAE Team Emirates had picked Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) as the day’s major threat, but the Dan🐼e failed to make a dent in the race and was instead dropped on the day’s main climb of Jaizkibel.
“We were surprised Vingegaard didn't feel so strong on the second last climb,” Hirs🌞chi said. “So actually we had a plan that after the Tour if [Vingegaard] doesn’t feel super we’re going to attack with Pavel or Jan [Christen] and then was good for us as we sit on the wheel.”
Sivakov’s attack was one of the day’s most impressive solo moves - animating the final 40km of racing. “I think ifꦍ there was one less Lotto-Soudal guy Pavel would win today,” Hirschi said. ”They closed an💦d we were ready, we were three guys still so we went full gas on the last climb.”
Hirschi describe💞d the day as a “very very big victory and mea💯ns a lot to me. Next to Tour de France victory and Flèche Wallonne this is one of my biggest wins in cycling.”
Alaphilippe was also happy with his ride when interviewed shortly after the finish, despite mis🍎sing his opportunity to take a repeat victory at the race he won in 2018.
“I feel happy to be back on the podium of a big race and of course little bit disappointed to be really close,” he said. “But I think I did a good💖 race and did my best so happy with this second place.
“I was really suffering, I felt good so I did my tempo,” he said of the last climb. “In the end, I did my best, and Marc Hirschi was really strong. He did a good sprint, good timing and he&rsqu𒉰o;s also really explosive.”
How it unfolded
The peloton set off to sunny coasta🧜l splendour in Donostia San Sebastián, with a 236km loop in the harsh undulations of the Basque separating them from꧙ a return to the very same finishing spot.
Ahead of them, seven categorised ascents would punctuate a route with barely a flat kilometre within it. The key deci𓆉sive climbs on the route ahead promised to be the Jaizkibel (7.9km at 5.5%) with around 75km remaining and the savagely steep Erlaitz (3.8km at 10.7%) with 45km remaining.
Attacks came quickly from the peloton with Alpecin-Deceuninck populating the early attacks, before a group of 10 mౠanaged to ride clear just after 40km of riding.
The breakaway contained Davide De Pretto (Jayco AlUla), Simon Caܫrr (EF Education - EasyPost), Warren Barguil (Team dsm-firmenich PostNL), Sylvain Moniquet (Lotto Dstny), Jesús Herrada (Cofidis), Ben Zwiehoff (Red Bull-BORA-hansgrohe), Ådne Holter (Uno-X Mobility), Amanuel Ghebreigzabhier (Lidl-Trek), Thibault Guernalec (Arkéa-B&B Hotels), Pierre Latour (TotalEnergies).
The group worked well together for the bulk of the day’s racing, shedding n♈o one from their ranks and holding a three-minute lead with 80km remaining, as the rꦛace too to the ascent of Jaizkibel.
The steep ramps of the Jaizkibel were enough to shed most of the breakaway, who wer⛦e caught by the peloton in quick succession, with Carr, Ghebreigzaꦫbhier and Zwiehoff leading over the summit.
By the end of the descent from Jaizkibel, Carr found himself solo but showing impressive form as he held nearly a minute gap on the approach to𝕴 the 3.8km 10.7% slopes of Erlaitz.
The ramps proved to be too testing, and Carr was reeled back barely a kilometre into the ascent. His return to the peloton was quickly met with an attack by Julian Alaphilippe and Florian Lipowitz (Red Bull-BORA-hansgrohe ). They were joined ಌby Pavel Sivakov (UAE Team Emirates), who attacked solo as the two initial attackers were reeled back well before the summit.
Sivakov rode solo over the peak o💝f Erlaitz with 40km separating him from the finish,. Behind him a fragmented peloton selected only the strongest climbers of the day, and even shed the likes of Jonas Vingegaa🌄rd and Hugh Carthy.
His effort was a brave one, and despite barely establishing a half-minute gap the French rider held a slim but viable margin of 15 seconds into the finish town of Donostia San Sebastián, where a 16km circuit would concl🐻ude the race.
The finish circuit’s central📖 climb of Pilotegi (2.1km at 10.8%) proved too much for Sivakov, as his strong solo effort was pulled in with 9km remaining.
His brief breakaway partner Alaphilippe showed his hand on the final brutal 15% slopes o💙f the climb as he danced away from the remains of the day’s peloton with only Marc Hirschi able to match his pace.
The two left no doubt about their finishing form, quickly carving a gap to th💎e remaining field, and the stage was set for an electric two-up sprint.
Results
The latest race content, interviews, featur♑es, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your𒈔 inbox!
Pet🌄er Stuart has been the editor of Cyclingnews since March 2022, overseeing editorial output across all of Cyclingnews' digital touchpoints.
Before joining🔯 Cyclingnews, Peter was the digital editor of Rouleur magazine. Starting life 𓆉as a freelance feature writer, with bylines in The Times and The Telegraph, he first entered cycling journalism in 2012, joining Cyclist magazine as staff writer. Peter has a background as an international rower, representing Great Britain at Under-23 level and at the Junior Rowing World Championships.
Latest on Cyclingnews
-
Tour de France stage 3 Live - Can Alpecin-Deceuninck triple up on another day for the sprinters in Dunkerque?
Jasper Philipsen chases a second stage win on flat 178km day which could be hit by the North Sea wind once again -
'Certainly an organised gang' - Cofidis boss speaks out following mass theft of team's bikes at the Tour de France
Journalists staying in the same hotel as the French team were also targeted by thieves -
Best bike racks for cars: Tow hitch, roof mount and trunk mount options to carry your bike by car
The best bike racks for cars will keep your bike safe and secure on your travels -
Tour de France abandons: All of the riders who have left the 2025 race so far
Two riders drop out in first two days in Northern France