As it happened: Pogacar's solo exhibition at Il Lombardia
All the action as the world champion cruised to 🍷his fourth straight title at the Race of the Fallin𒁃g Leaves
Il Lombardia 2024 route - Route changed due to heavy rains, landslides and flooding
Il Lombardia 2024 - Analysing the contenders
168澳洲5最新开奖结果:How to watch Il Lombardia 2024
168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Il Lombardia start list
Race situation
- Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates) wins Il Lombardia
- World C😼hampion attacks on Sormano and solos home from𒀰 48.5km out, with second place going to Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-QuickStep) and third to Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek)
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: Results
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 5km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 8km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 10km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 12.5km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 16km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 25km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 33.5km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 42km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 49km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 60km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 77.5km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 81.5km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 87km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 100km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 106km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 123km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 134km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 150km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 169.5km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 175km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 183km to go
- 200km
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 210km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 225km to go
- 168澳洲5最新开奖结果: 231km to go
Hello and welcome to Cyclingnews' live cover๊age of 2024 Il Lombardia.
Here we are then. The leaves are falling, the season is in its final throes, and while there are a few more races to co𒁃me in October, this is the last big one. It’s almost 120 years old, it’s one of cycling’s five Monument Classics, and it boasts a stellar start list that includes the new world champion, Tadej Pogacar. It’s Il Lombardia time, and we’ll have every inch of it covered right here.
The riders and teams have gathered in Bergamo for the start of this 118th edition of Il Lom🐻bardia. The rol﷽l-out is coming up at 10:35 local time, the start proper just five minutes after that. Six hours later, after 255km in the saddle, we’ll be calling the winner over the line.
We’re in Bergamo today, which means we’re heading to Como. Il Lombardia has developed the endeaꦚring tradition of flipping its two start and finish locations, so while there’s no finale up through the atmospheric walls of Bergamo Alto, this year we’ll see the Madonna del Ghisallo, Colma di Sormano, and San Fermo della Battaglia. We will not, however, see the Civiglio, with the vicious climb - usually coming as the penultimate test - ruled out due to landslides. That makes the finale a little less heavy than recent iterations of the Bergamo-Como route, but we do have more climbs in the first half of the race, meaning we’🦩re still in for a total elevation gain in excess of 4,750 metres.
On the subject of the route, there have been some last-minute changes, due to landslides from the heavy rainfall that has hit northern Ita🍷ly over the p🏅ast week. Nothing drastic, but the finish line has been moved away from the shores of Lake Como, while one of the early climbs, the Passo di Ganda, has been replaced by the similarly-proportioned Selvino.
The r🍌oute isn't the biggest piece of overnight news. No, that would be Tom Pidcock claiming he has been "de-selected" from the Ineos Grenadiers line-up.
There is one overwhelming favourite today and that’s Tadej Pogacar. Not only has he won the past three editions, covering both Bergamo to Como and the🍷 other way around, but he has had one of the greatest seasons of all time, winning the Giro d’Italia, Tour de France, World Championship, and another Monument with Liege-Bastogne-Liege back in the Spring. If you thought the novelty was wearing off you only have to look at his astonishingly one-sided victory at the Giro dell’Emiliജa one week ago. Quite frankly, he’s making it look like a stroll in the park. Races like this should be hard-won things but right now it would almost be more surprising were he to lose.
Anyway, it’s no su🅘rprise that Pogacar headlines our Riders to Watch feature, but we also have nine other names to throw into the mix. Have a read:
The riders are on the move, rolling 🐠out of Bergamo, and the race will kick off shortly.
Olympic champion Remco Evenepoel at sign-on just now. He's the next biggest name beyo𒁃nd Pogacar. He'll be returning to the scene of his horror crash into a ravine at the 2020 Il Lombardia, with the Colma di Sormano making its return to the race for the first time since that day, albeit from the opposite direction.
We're off
The flag is wav🌳ed and we are underway. Here come the👍 first attacks.
With no Pidcock, Ineos🙈 have a more open strategy and they're trying to get in the breakaway here.
It's Connor Swift for Ineos Grenadiers and he has snuck clear alongside Tobias Bayer (Alpecin-Deceuninck), and🐎 Giulio Masotto (Corratec-Vini Fantini).
It h🅰asn't settled down behind. Plenty of teams want a rid🌄er up the road, chief among them VF Group-Bardiani CSF-Faizane.
Romain Bardet (dsm-firmenich-Po๊stNL) was a non-starter, due to illness.
25 seconds is the le🌃ad for the three frontrunners. EF, Bahrain, Visma all looking to get involved in an active bunch behind.
Still nothing sticking with these attacks, and there aren't many teams who aren'ꦓt showing an interest in ♚today's break. Just Pogacar's UAE, it seems.
We mentioned the increase in climbing in the first half of this route, so let’s take a closer look at what’s coming up. After 25km we have the Forcellino de Bianzano (6.3km at 5.1%) and while the Ganda has been scrapped, it has been replaced by what is still a proper climb in the form of the Selvino, very nearby and topping out at a similar altitude just below 1000 metꦦres.
After the shorter Colle di Berbenno (4.5 km at 6.2%), it’s up another tough one, the Valpiana, which measures 10.1km at 6.2% and tops out with just over 100km on the clock. After 🍌a descent, we have a flatter section that will take us to the lakes 𝔍and to our final climbs.
Attila Valter (Visma-Lease a Bike) a🗹ttacks from the peloton and gets a gap. Rui Costa (EF) goes next, but then the domino effect comes and thatও could shut the whole thing down again.
Valter has been brought back and we ꩵju🅠st have constant accelerations here. A trio goes clear in pursuit of Swift, Bayer, and Masotto, who are still working away 15 seconds ahead.
Mohoric is part of aᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚ dangerous move that's swelling off the front a𝔉nd we see a UAE rider jumping to mark it out.
231km to go
Just under 25km on the clock and we're about to st🤪art෴ the first climb of the day, the Forcellino de Bianzano (6.3km at 5.1%). The situation is still not settled and this could be where the breakaway really takes shape.
Masotto is dropped from the break.
And now 🎶Swift and Bayer are brought back amid a surge in ꦦpace from behind. All back together.
White shorts for the world champ today. Here he was at the start with his U☂AE teammates🀅.
Pogacar is one of nine riders to win Lombardia three times. A fourth victory would put him level with Alfrඣedo Binda, one short of the outright record holder, Fausto Coppi, who w🤡on it four years in a row then waited five to collect his fifth (1946, 1947, 1948, 1949, 1954).
Wilco Kelderman (Visma-Lease a Bike) pus👍hes the pace on the climb as six riders go clear, but we still have surges from b𒀰ehind.
Into the final kilometre of the climb and we have a large group with a bit of a gapꦡ but they'll need to drive it open to make it stick on the downhill.
225km to go
Kelderman still active at the front of this group of 20, and it's the Dutchman who leads them ov♈er the summit of the Forcellino de Bianzano, but the margins are still slim and this isn't d﷽one by any means.
Kelderman goes cle🅺ar on the descent with Remy Rochas (Groupama-FDJ) while the rest of that group are swallowed up.
Kelderman is part of a strong Visma line-up alongsid♛e Matteo Jorgenson and Tiesj Benoot. The Dutch team also have Steven Kruijswijk, Bart Lemmen, and Attila Valter, but have had to start without Jan Tratnik, who's ill.
When you have such an outstanding favourite as Pogacar💖, it arguably encourages the other teams to try and get some of their higher-calibre riders up the road. Nearly 40km on the clock and it's still far from settled.&📖nbsp;
Expert descender Mohoric is one of a number of riders to come back u🌟p to Kelderman and Rochas at the end of the downhill. Some big names here and they've quickly drummed up a strong working alliance.
The peloton ap🐻pears to be shutting down behind this move...🐼 whisper it but we may just have a breakaway on our hands.
We've mentioned Kelderman, Mohoric, and Rochas but we also have an Ineos rider in ไBrandon Rivera, plus Lidl-Trek's Julien Bernard and DSM's Martijn Tusveld. It's an exclusivelඣy WorldTour break.
We now have another group of six in pursuit, and just when it looked like the peloton had called a truce, Rui Costa kicked it back off again. UAE won't be best please♓d about that. One of their riders was just sitting up and stretching, and the traditional first nature break of the day was surely on t🌸he cards, but not anymore.
210km to go
We're about to start climbing the Selvino, which has replaced the Pass🐬o di Ganda. It's not quite as difficult but it's a little longer, measuring 11.1km at 5.7%. With the situation still not settled it could spark mo🔯re action.
"I'm not stupid - it does look strange," says Ineos DS Zak Dempster in regards to Pidcock's sudden 'de-selection'. CN's Stephen Farrand spoke to him at the start and you can read the full comme🏅nts at the link below.
The lea𒆙ding seven-man group only has a♒round 15 seconds, with four left from the six chasers, and the peloton close at hand.
The four in the chase🃏 are Eddie Dunbar (Jayco-AlUl), Fausto Masnada (Soudal-QuickStep), Matteo Fabbro (Polti-Kometa), Cristian 🦂Scaroni (Astana Qazaqstan).
Einer Rubio 🔥jumps across to t༒hat group and they're close to the front group now.
Fabbro and 🍬Dunbar have jumped into the lead group, Rubio is just getting on, but Scaro🌌ni and Masnada are flailing.
Still 6.5km to the 🌌top of the Selvino and we now have 10 riders in the lead but the peloton still under strain with new counter-attacks popping off. Dani Martinez and Antonio Tiberi hit out, and Scaroni tries to latch on.
Tiberi, Martinez, and Scaroni make it on. Nicolas Prodhomme (Decathlon-AG2R) is fighꦏting to make it over next, and there's⛦ a bigger gap back to two more, and then the bunch.
It might just be settling down now. The 14 riders out front have๊ found 30 seconds on the bunch, whic🐽h is being led by UAE.
It's down to 12 now as Prodhomme and Rivera are droppe⛄d. The stronger climbers are aware they need to drive this open right here, with just under 4km to the top of the Selvino.
Here's the composition of the lead group
Matej Mohoric (Bahrain Victorious)
Antonio Tiberi (Bahrain Victorious)
Wilco Kelderman (Visma-Lease a Bike)
Dani Martinez (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe)
Eddie Dunbar (Jayco-AlUla)
Remy Rochas (Groupama-FDJ)
Julien Bernard (Lidl-Trek)
Einer Rubio (Movistar)
Martijn Tusveld (dsm-firmenich-PostNL)
Harold Martin Lopez (Astana-Qazaqstan)
Axel Laurance (Alpecin-Deceuninck)
Matteo Fabbro (Polti-Kometa)
With Prodhomme dropped, AG2R attempt to fire Bastien Tronchon up 💛the road. He passes Rivera, as the Pidcock-less Ineos fail in their attempts to g𒊎et a rider in the break.
Is it finally settling behind? No.ꦐ Tiesj Benoot goes off in ♉the company of Odd Christian Eiking (Uno-X). UAE look calm as they tap it out but other teams are putting pressure on them with some strong riders.
200km
55km on the clock, 200 to go, and we're coming to the top o𓆉f the Selvino. 12 leaders but they only hav🐲e 40 seconds in hand with attacks still coming from behind.
Over the top of 🎉the Selv𒐪ino and the chase with Benoot and Eiking has swelled to 10.
A long descent now and the patterns are holding but the peloton is now more than a minute 🌳down on the front of the race.
In the chase we have:
Tiesj Benoot (Visma-Lease a Bike)
Thymen Arensman (Ineos Grenadiers)
Damiano Caruso (Bahrain Victorious)
Rudy Molard (Groupama-FDJ)
Xandro Meurisse (Alpecin-Deceuninck)
Mauri Vansevenant (Soudal-QuickStep)
Tobias Halland Johannessen (Uno-X)
Gregor Muhlberger (Movistar)
Kevin Vermaerke (dsm-firmenich-PostNL)
183km to go
The chase group are slipping back. They're at 50 seconds now, with 🦄UAE setting a strong pace in the peloton at 1:10.
175km to go
The peloton knocks it off a little, with some nature breaks called. The gap to the lead💧ers goes out to 2:30 now.
The leading 11 riders start the third climb of the day, the Colle di Berbenno (4.5 km at 6.2%𓄧).
The chase group has been let go by the p🐟eloton but can they reach𓂃 the head of the race? They're closing in to within 30 seconds on this climb. Bahrain and Visma have riders in the lead group but strong riders in the chase who they'd love to have along.
169.5km to go
They're coming together. Plenty of looking around in the lead group and they can see thꦚe chasers coming up, and they ease up to welcome them along as the breakaway doubles in size.
Here's the composition of the new 22-rider breakaway
- Matej Mohoric, Antonio Tiberi, Damiano Caruso (Bahrain Victorioꦿus)
- Wilco Kelderman, Tiesj Benoot (Visma-Lease🌸 a Bike)
- Thymen A🦋rensman, Brandon River🃏a (Ineos Grenadiers)
- Rudy Molard, Remy Rochas (Groupama-FDJ)
- Einer Rubio, Gregor Muhlberger (Movistar)
- Martijn Tusveld, Kevin ꧟Verౠmaerke (dsm-firmenich-PostNL)
- Dani Martinez (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe)
- Eddie Dunbar (Jayco-AlUla)
- Mauri Vansevenant (Soudal-QuickStep)
- Julien Bernard (Lidl-Trek)
- Harold Martin Lopez (Astana-Qazaqstan)
- Xandro Meurisse (Alpecin-Deceuninck)
- Bastien Tronchon (Decathlon-AG2R)
- Tobias Halland Johannessen (Uno-X)
- Matteo Fabbro (Polti-Kometa)
It is a pretty impressive breakaway, with big teams putting big names up the road, and it's pretty much the only option when it comes to trying to disarm Tadej Pogacar. Can UAE keep a lid on this? They've made a strong start, bringing the gap down to 1:45 already as we go over the top of the third climb and down the descent. If the front group works well together they'll have to burn a lot of riders just to keep things under control ahead of the key climbs la꧒ter in the race.
Here's a shot of the action a little earlier - this was the chase group forming and eventually ma🐼king its way over to the breakaway.
Onto the Valpiana climb now and it's another solid effort that will continue to drain the leg𓂃s ahead of the key cli💛mbs later on.
The gap stands at 2🔯:15 on the lower slopes of the Valpiana. UAE have two riders on the front in Jan Christen and Finn Fisher-Black. There are 22 up the road but as ever with a group of that size, cooperation is always ♕going to be a question mark. They appear to be riding steady here and will likely want to stick together over this climb as the following section could be key - a 13km descent followed by a 40km flat jaunt through the plains towards the lakes. That's where, if everyone worked together, they could attempt to pull out a decisive advantage.
Tiberi has been dropped from the breakaway and that's a surprise as he's had a hell of a season would have been one of the most dangerous in the break, coming across to give Bahrain three riders in the move. But he's now back in the cars and swigging full-fat, full-fizz coke so might be having a 😼bit of a hunger flat.
The pace is still mo🍃dest in the break and half-way up this climb the gap drops to 1:48.
𝔍Tiberi is back in the bunch and that's a blow for Bahrain Victor👍ious, who'd started this race so inventively getting three strong riders up the road.
Tiberi has been spat out the back of the peloton. He's heading for a DNF today. He started so wel🍷l, getting across the break in a very hard start, but he has completely blown up.
If anyone can challenge Poღgacar, you'd think Evenepoel would be u𓆉p there, but the Olympic champion hasn't been sounding his usual confident notes.
150km to go
Just over 1500 metres from the top of the Valpiana, the last of the four𓂃 climbs in the opening portion of the race, and the 21-man breakaway leads the UAE-led peloton by 1:35 now.
At the summit of the Valpiana, the 21 leaders have 1:40 over the peloton. A 13km descent now, and then a 40km trip over to the lakes, where we'll take on our key climbs. As it stands, we have a strong breakaway but the UAE team of race favourite Tadej Pogacar have i🌸t under wraps.
Let's have a little preview of our finale
With just over 100km to go, the Sella di Osigo (5km at 5.7%) serves as an introduction to the Mado𒁏nna del Ghisallo and꧂ its famous hilltop church, tackled this time by the gentler, southern approach (6.3 km at 4.1%).
The race then descends to Bellagio on the shores of Lake Como before coming around to tackle the Colma di Sormano, which appears for the first time since Remco Evenepoel’s horror crash into a ravꦬine on the descent in 2020. This time it’s tackled in the opposite direction, so Evenepoel and co will be climbing up past the point of the crash, before descending the so-called ‘Muro di Sormano&rsquo💞; (Wall of Sormano), which is the most fearsome and famous point of the climb taken in the other direction. As it is, the climb measures 12.9km at 6.4%, with steep stuff at the top and still a tricky descent.
As mentioned earlier, no Civiglio, which is a loss at nearly 10% oveꦬr 4km, so it’s straight over to Como, with the punchy San Fermo della Battaglia (2.7km at 7.2%) acting as the final launchpad before the 4km descent that leads to the flamme rouge and the final kilometre.
134km to go
The leaders finis𝓀h the descent where they stretched their lead to 2:15. They're now on the flat - ꦅhow well will they work together?
෴The breakaway appear to have drummed🅠 up some sort of working alliance. There'll always be some passengers and soft-pedallers but enough riders are now turning through in a pretty fluid motion.
The chaingang was rolling in two lovel🎃y lines but a couple of riders drop back to their cars and suddenly Fabbro pulls off the nose and no one comes through.
123km to go
The gap does now hit three minutes, with Christen still the man on the front for๊ UAE. Fisher-Black, as well as Pogacar and Evenepoel, have had a quick toilet stop, so that will help the gap nudge out.
This has been the picture at the head of the peloton for a little while nꩲow - Christen and Fisher-Black leading the way for UAE. When they're done they still have Marc Hirschi, Pavel Sivakov, Adam Yates, and Rafal Majka to set up Pogacar.
White shorts fꦬor Pogacar tꦇoday... how do you like your world champs?
Rainbow stylin' - The bikes, kit and on-bike style of world road race champions past and present
3:35 now as the breakaway drop down the little descent in the middle of this long flat section that's so crucial to the development of what will or won't be a race-winning advantage. Pogacar is widely expected t♉o take flight on the Sormano, and still has strong teammates to work on the Madonna di Ghisallo, so while the leaders have found a couple of minutes since the top of the Valpiana, they need at least a couple more.
Rivera has gapped the rest of the b💙reak on that mini descent but they'll come back together and pres🌞s on along the flat for the next 17km.
We'r💎e getting some glimpses of lakes now. Here's the map. It's Ghisallo from the south, ಞthen down to Belaggio and along Lake Como to take on the Sormano from the west.
Worth noting that behind the two UAE henchmen, Movistar have takꦇen a prominent position in the peloton. They🍨're led by Enric Mas, who took Pogacar to a two-up sprint in Como two years ago.
106km to go
The gap beꦏtween break and bunch hits four miไnutes.
The gap h🉐its 4:20 now with 7km to the foot of🌠 the next climb. Christen is tiring at last for UAE.
Here's a shot of our breakaway
100km to go
Down into double figures now and to bring any lateco🌠mers up to speed we have a 21-man breakaway that formed essentially from two groups after an aggressive and unsettled first couple of hours of racing. It's a strong break, too, with big teams throwing big riders up the road, a sign of how everyone views their chances with Pogacar in attendance. But this break are giving themselves a chance, carving out 4:45 ahead of the start of the main climbs. It's not a lot against a rampaging Pogacar but there are some big names up there including Martinez, Arensman, Kelderman, Benoot, Rubio, Dunbar... to name a few. It's still in the balance and we're not far away from the famous Madonna di Ghisallo.&nb🦹sp;
We're just 2km from the start of the Sella di Osigo, which 💎effectively acts as an intro to the Madonna di Ghisallo, climbed today from the easier side but still passing that famous chapel at the top.
Here you can read Pogacar's pre-race throughts:
UAE disappear from the front of the bunch, with other teams coming through although this would appear to be a battle for position ahead of the climb rather than any assistance in the chase. FDJ have the lead, and they have riders in the break, so this is just a surge to be up fro𒆙nt on this next climb, and it has knocked 20 seconds off the gap.
Th🦂e breakawayꦛ hit the Sella di Osigo with a lead of 4:18.
Israel, QuickStep, FDJ are the teams that have muscled their w💧ay through to the front of the bunch.
The▨y start t♊he climb and now a UAE rider hits the front to actually set the pace. It's Pogacar's trusty lieutenant, Rafal Majka, and now he's joined by two more, one of whom is Jan Christen, who has done a lot of work today and is squeezing the final drops out.
Christen is finally done. It's Majka, Hirschi, Yates, and Sivakov ahead of Pogacar in the UAE line, interrupted by a rider from EF, who missed today's breakaway despite t🔜rying to get a rider in there.
Neilson Powless is the EF rider who sits third wheel in the middle of that train. 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:He won Gran Piemonte two days ago, while EF also have Ben Healy, who was up there in the World Championsh🌞ip recently.
The gap is coming down. It has already dropped to 3:38 as the leaders h𝄹ead into the final kilometre of this preliminary climb.
In this shot from we can see Powless and Healy, with the Olympic 🐈champion E♍venepoel lurking behind.
87km to go
3:25 is the gap now as the break reach the top of the Sella d🔯i Osigo and take on the mini plateau ahead of the Madon꧂na di Ghisallo.
Arensman rolls off the front of the break, where questions are now being💯 asked. They're still all together but they've shipped a good chunk of their lead.
The leaders now start the climb of Madonna di Ghisallo, which measures 6🥂.3km at 4.1%. Caruso is dropped, 🌸and having dominated the break with three riders, Bahrain are left with just one: Mohoric.
81.5km to go
This climb gets a little steeper towards the top but the lower sloꦉpes are gentle. Arensman, Mohoric, Dunbar, Vansevenant among the main workers at the front, w𝓡hile Majka continues his effort in the peloton. 3:10 the gap.
If ✤you're really playing catch-up and looking for Tom Pidcock in this bunch, he's not here. He was, in his words, "de-selected", a situation that an Ineos DS has admitted "does look strange".
Astana's Ecuadorian young꧃ster Harold Lopez is the next rider to drop from the break. 19 left in there now.
1km to the top of Madonna di Ghisallo and𒊎 it's steeper now. Majka is making serious inroads now and the gap i🦩s down to 2:40.
77.5km to go
To the top of the Madonna di Ghisallo now and Molard acceleratesꦬ past the chapel to lead the breakaway onto the descent, which measures just over 10km. The peloton come over the top just two minutes in arrears.
The breakaway have shipped nearly three minutes over th🧜at duo of climbs (plus the approach). It had looked vaguely promising for them for a while but hopes will now be 🌃fading.
Majka handled Madonna di Ghisallo for UAE and has now handed over to Marc Hirschi. Pogacar still has Yatꦫes and Sivakov for the Sormano.
A mid-descent kicker and the break start attacking each other. S🌳plits emerge as they head onto the main portion of the descent.
The breakaway is back together on the flat and it doesn't look like they♚'re going to combine and commit here. 1:40 is the gap and they've got a bit of flat to work with but we'll soon be heading to the mighty Colma di Sormano.
Pogacar is poised and despite a stro⛄ng🃏 breakaway this race is very much going his way.
And here's a gratuitous lake shot
60km to go
60 left, and 5 until the foot of the Sormano. The 19 riders left in the breakaway have a lead of 1:25 and while the stronger climbers in there might be waiting to open the taps on the ascent, you𝔉 sense UAE will go hell-for-leather in a Pogacar lead-out a🐼nd wipe it out rather quickly.
Here's how the Sormano looks - a serious climb, with a really steep section at the top. This isn't the famous 'Wall of Sormano', which is on the other ⛎side of the hill and will be descended. This is the lesser-know⛎n format but this climb hasn't been included since 2020 and Evenepoel's crash into a ravine, so with it being taken in the opposite direction he'll be riding up past the site of that crash.
With no Civiglio this yꦜear, and only the light San Fermo di♔ Battaglia later on, this is the key climb of the 2024 Il Lombardia.
Here we go then. We're onto the Sormano and the gap is ju﷽st a minute.
Yates is up next 🅰for UAE and things are get🅰ting serious now as the British climber takes the bunch onto the climb and raises the pace.
FDJ light up the break as Rochas forces a split with Molard in his wheel. Dunbar and 🍸Rubio are up there, as is Meurisse who accelerates nဣext.
Moh🔜oric is among th൩e riders dropped from the break and he has already been caught by the bunch.
Meurisse has found 27 seconds o🅘n his former companions. Only nine remain in the bre💛ak behind him.
Yate♏s is done. Sivakov takes it up for🐷 UAE. Still a long way from the top.
Arens𒊎man, Martinez, Rubio, and Dunbar establish themselves as the strongest in the break behind Meurisse, but the pelot🌠on - itself thinned out - is close at hand now.
Benoot and Vansevenant among the next to be caught, and now Giulio C😼iconne (Lidl-Trek) sort of attacks. Not sure what the plan is there.
Evenepoel has taken the box🃏 seat in Pogacar's wheel. Everyone knows what's about to happen.
49km to go
7km to the summit of Sormano and the bunch is just 23 seconds behind the head of the race. That's Meurisse, who's being joine♎d now by Arensman, with the ওothers now swallowed up.
Pogacar attacks!
48.5km to go and the world champion takes flight in the least surprising move of the season. Arensman and Meurisse, the last two remaining breakaway riders, were just being caught as༺ the Slovenian nipped around🧸 his last teammate, Sivakov and surged clear.
As you might expect, the acceleration is clear and decisive. Evenepoel and 🐓Mas respo𓆉nd behind but they can't go with the world champion.
Lennert Van Eetvelt (Lotto-Dstny), the talented Belgian younsgter, manages to get across to Evenepoel and Mas to form ✱a chasing trio. B꧋ehind, destruction.
Poga﷽car opens up a lead of 30 seconds, 1,500 metres after his attack.
Behind the chasing trio, we have Michael Storer (Tudor), Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek), and Sivakov, who clearl🌜y wasn🧸't even at the end of his effort when Pogacar launched. Further behind, David Gaudu (FDJ), Roger Adria (Red Bull-Bora), and Giulio Pellizzari (Bardiani) are there.
Adria and Pellizzarღi drop Gaudu and make it up to Sivakov, Ciccone, and Storer.
2km from the s🃏ummit now and Pogac꧟ar has extended his lead to 50 seconds over the chasing trio. That Ciccone group is 95 seconds down.
Evenepoel is 🐟not happy in this chasing trio. He feels the others should be con𒁏tributing more to this chase. Realistically, they know that barring a crash or mechanical for Pogacar, they are racing for second place.
Onto the steeper section at the top of the climb and the day gets even better f🌳or UAE as Sivakov rides away from his group to go solo as the fifth 🍃rider on the road.
Pogacar takes his lead past the minute-mark as he headsꦛ through the fans who have gathered at the summit of the Sormano.
42km to go
Pogacar crests the Sormano, having ca🐽rved out a lead of 1:07 in the space of 7km. Everyone knew it was coming, no one could do the least bit about it. Barring accident, the Slovenian is heading for his fourth straight title here and capping perhaps the greatest ever season in appropriate style. We still have 40km to go but the race feels as good as over as a contest.
Evenepoel accelerateౠs at the summit to gap Mas and Van Eetvelt heading onto the descent.
Sivakov is next over the top at 1:55 down, andܫ he has found nearly half a minute over Storer, Ciccone, Adria, and Pelizzari.
Poga🦹car has more than a minute in ha🍸nd but he is still giving it full beans down this descent. He goes tearing into a tight corner and has to grab a load of brake.
33.5km to go
Evenepoel himself misjudge👍s a bend ܫand the gap goes out to 1:30.
A couple ofꦬ kilometres to go until the end of the descent proper, and it's more gentle for a few kilometres ahead of a flat 10km section that precedes the drop down to the foot of the final climb of the day, t🐻he San Fermo di Battaglia, which tops out just over 5km from home.
In a world of his own
Evenepoel leading the challenge from behind.
25km to go
Here's the situation as we head into the finale
- Pogacar leads alone (obviously)
- Evenepoel chases alone, at 1:15
- Mas and Van Eetvelt are together at 1:50
- Siva𝓀kov is alone as the fifth man on t🤪he road, at 2:30
A shot from the top of the Sormano
The gap continues to grow on this flatter section, and with this race pretty𒊎 much tucked up in bed thoughts turn to 🀅the significance of the victory.
- Four straight titles a🍌t Il Lombardia, bringing him level with Alfredo Binda and one 💞behind the all-time record-holder, Fausto Coppi.
- A season - perhaps the ༒greatest of all time - that has featured wins at the Liege-Bastogne-Liege, Giro d'💧Italia, Tour de France, World Championship, and now Il Lombardia.
- 25 victories for♏ the season in total, in 58 days of racing
- 88 career victories
- Seven career Monuments (plus four Grand Tours)
Sivakov is closing in on Mas and Van Eetvelt. They're almost in a different race, at 3:15 down, but they're still in the racܫe for a Monument podium.
16km to go
𒐪Pogacar's lead reaches two minutes over Evenepoel. He's a🧜bout to take on the little descent to the foot of San Fermo della Battaglia.
12.5km to go
Pogacar nurses his way tඣhrough a randomly soaked patch of road on this sinuous descent. No risks now, with 2:12 in hand.
10km to go
Pogacar arrives down on the outskirts of Como. 2.5km 💎to the foot of the final ♑climb.
8km to go
Pogacar is gaining all the time. He has 2:30 now on Evenepoel and a whopping 4:30 on the next gꦏroup as he starts the climb of San Fermo della Battaglia.
Here's a view of our closing kilometres here.
Pogacar is,🦩 of course, sailing further into the sunset on this climb. 2:40 now.
Sivakov attacks Mas and Van Eetvelt! We📖 could ♍have two UAE riders on the podium.
5km to go
Pogacar crests San Fermo della Battaꩵglia and heads into the fina♈l 5,000m of this race. He has almost three minutes in hand and just needs to drop to the finish in Como.
Sivakov's attack has been snuffed out ꦡso the fight for third place is s𝕴till open.
Pogacar stretches his back on the descent, and a🎃 smile now breaks across his face. He knows it's done.
2.2km from home and the next rid🤪er on the road, Evenepoel, 🍃is only just cresting San Fermo della Battaglia.
A new podium contender enters the chat... Cicᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚcone has jumped from the group behind to join Sivakov, Mas, and Van Eetvelt🐲 towards the top of the climb.
Ciccone attacks straight away.
Meanwhile Pogac💝ar enters the home straight and he looks like he's cruising to sign-on. He looks over his shoulder but I'm not sure why...
Pogacar raises his hand, waves to the crowds, presses something on his computer, and raises both arms aloft. He crosses the line and now he gets ofไf and lifts the bike above his head.
Tadej Pogacar has won the 2024 Il Lombardia
Great move from Ciccone who caught those riders off guard and has🐷 taken a gap onto the descent.
Izaguirre has now caught the Mas, Van Eetvelt, Sivakov gro🧸up!
Evenepoel enters the final kilometre. A good display from the Olympic champion, who would be winning alone by two minutes were it not for Pogacar. He crosses the line waving to the crowd, knowing this w🥃as the best he could do, even if it's a whopping 3:15 down on the winner.
Second place for Remco Evenepoel
Here come 🃏the rest, Ciccone enters the final km ಞstill with a lead!
The rest are closing but Ciccone is going to hang on⛦ to tak𓆉e the fina step on the podium.
Third place for Giulio Ciccone.
Izaguirre leads the group home ♌just a few seconds later for fourth place, ahead of Mas, Sivakov, and Van Eetvelt.
Results
Let's hear from the winner
“Every victory is special, and today also. The team worked so hard all year for all the victories we achieved, and today is no different. It was a big day for us, long race, hard race, and it was all dependant on our team,🎉 but we did a super good job and I’m super happy to win with the team."
As for the attack on the Sormano: "We planned it like this. The race is so hard that in the end the last 40km is more or less man to man. I k꧋new if I had a decent gap on the top I can come to the finish, but you never know. There was a moment after the descent where it was false down but really fast, then a little bit up and down, and there I tried to push to win some seconds and win the mental game on this chase. Then it wa🐽s one by one to the finish anyway."
His thoughts in the closing kilometres: "I was j🌊ust enjoying 🌜the crowds, and looking forward to off-season."
Pogacar is asked about the history he has made t🍸oday and this season...
"Let's see at the end of th𒁃e career," he says.
The winner's shot
3:16 is the biggest winning margin at Il Lombardia since Eddy Merckx in 1971 - also in Como and 🌌also in the world champion's jersey.
Here are the thoughts of the runner-up, Remco Evenepoel
"Honestly, it feels a bit like a personal victory. I think everyone knows the last time I raced Bergamo t🐻o Como, how it ended. So now finishing best of rest feels like a personal victory. It makes me really proud - I'm not going to say emotional because I'm quite over the moment of four years ago but it feels really good to be second today.
"We kind o♏f knew and predicted how and where Tadej would go. We knew 3km after the bridge where I crashed was the hardest point and that's where he went. I did my own pace to the top to get some advantage over the others and limit the time loss to Tadej, then I went flat out on the descent, dropped the others, and it was like a time trial then. I was dying on San Fermo in the last kilometres but the gap was made by then. It was 1v1 and I think everyone saw again who is the best rider of the moment. Just a deserved winner today.
"It is, let's say, one of my first good results in Italy. It feels good to do the race without any problems, without bad luck, and with a good feelinౠg. I'm just a bit unlucky there's a great phenomenon ahead of me, but it gives confidence and morale to try and come here with better shape and go for the win. It's the perfect way to end my season."
This was Evenepoel crossing the line
And here's the third-placed Ciccone
"For sure the feeling is really go🗹od. It's a good way to finish the season, especially for me - this year was a really hard season for me. Now I would really like to enjoy the off-season and just recharge the energy for next year.
"My feeling today was really good on the climb. Maybe I did a mistake when I tried to attack because the tempo wꦛas really fast. Then I paid in the last 2km of Sormano. But then I was there with Bauke [Mollema] and he did a really good job. In the final on San Fermo I went all out to the top. Maybe there were just looking at each other, I just went straight past. I did a good downhill and knew I had a gap so really enjoyed the last kilometre.
"It's always my dream [to win Lombar༒dia]. It's one of my favourite races, so a podium behind this guy [Po🍒gacar] is already a good victory."
Ciccone there finishing just ahead of the next group on the road. The way he roared back at them on San Fermo della Battaglia, and then roജared straight past them, was pretty spectacular.
Our race report, results, and photos c🥂an all be found here:
The 2024 Lombardia podium
The trophy in the hands of Pogacar🃏 for the fourth straight year.
There's not a huge amount of post-race analysis to be done here. There was a big, strong, and pretty interesting breakaway that formed after a hard first couple of hours, but UAE had the strength to neutralise its threat, and from there the race played out according to the script - effectively a lead-out for Pogacar's take-off on the Sormano. No one even considered following, such was the air of inevitability of it all, and for nearly 50km we watched the gap grow out and the suspense drain away. The gulf in class is staggering, really, but what some of these races lack in proper competition is redressed by the sight of history being made in front of our eyes. The Merckx comparisons are still premature, but it's heading t🐼hat way...
Strong shot to be fair
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