कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त

THE ESCAPE ARTIST

Cycling Weekly

|

May 15, 2025

Across 16 years as a pro, Thomas De Gendt spent hundreds of hours in long-range attacks. He shares his breakaway secrets with Tom Davidson

- Tom Davidson

THE ESCAPE ARTIST

Thomas De Gendt was never a serial winner, but that didn’t stop him from becoming one of the peloton’s most recognisable names. A stalwart of Lotto-Soudal’s squad, the Belgian’s role was often a solitary one; he would wait until the flag dropped, shoot out of the bunch, and romp ahead up the course, unfussed whether anyone joined him or not. The move became so inevitable that television commentators could almost set their clocks by it.

In 2018 alone, De Gendt spent over 3,000km in breakaways, almost 25% of all the racing he did that season. His attacks earned him stage wins at each of the Tour de France, Giro d'Italia and Vuelta a España across his career, a Grand Tour treble that only around 100 riders can claim to have completed. De Gendt called time on his road racing in 2024, aged 37, retiring to a life of gravel adventures. Here’s his advice for anyone bold enough to follow his irrepressible instinct to attack.

Change with the times

In November and December, I used to do only slow, endurance rides. In January, I did my first intervals, and in February, slightly longer rides with a lot of intervals. We almost didn’t eat during training, to get skinnier. That was the old way. In the last years of my career, I was already doing intervals in November.

Every day is a breakaway day

If you have good legs, you can try and be in a breakaway every day. The high mountains stages were a bit too hard for me. The ones that I won were almost all the same - shorter climbs of maximum 15 minutes. They’re still hard days, but not really mountain days. Those were the days that I tried to be at my best.

Get wily with age

Cycling Weekly से और कहानियाँ

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

ALL BLAZED OUT

Cycling ignites passion but too much pressure and expectation can burn it away. Psychologist and racer Steve Mayers tackles the delicate issue of burnout

time to read

8 mins

September 25, 2025

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

WE CAN BE HEROES!

\"From Ibiza to the Norfolk Broads\" is a quirky David Bowie lyric - but to James Briggs it was the inspiration for a life-changing bike ride

time to read

6 mins

September 25, 2025

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

Meet the UK's newest hill-climb

The Zig-Zag Hill-Climb is the UK's freshest grassroots race, and is now open for entries

time to read

3 mins

September 25, 2025

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

BATES VOLANTE TRACK BIKE

A rapid late '30s beauty, with unique, shapely tubing and flowing forks

time to read

1 mins

September 25, 2025

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

WATT WORKS FOR ME ANNA HENDERSON

As she prepares for the Rwanda Worlds, the TT specialist talks veganism, being coached by her boyfriend, and loving Pilates

time to read

2 mins

September 25, 2025

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

Bäckstedt blows away competition

Welsh rider wins under-23 women's time trial in dominant fashion to take ninth world title

time to read

3 mins

September 25, 2025

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

GOODBYE BUT NOT FAREWELL

Fresh from his Tour of Britain retirement party, Geraint Thomas sits down with Chris Marshall-Bell to look back on his extraordinary two-decade-long career

time to read

7 mins

September 25, 2025

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

CERVELO S5

The latest S5 delivers aero gains, reduced weight and enhanced comfort

time to read

4 mins

September 25, 2025

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

Tour de Romandie

Passing vines, Condor's Carlo Clerici leads Cilo's Hugo Koblet at the 1953 Tour de Romandie, potentially on stage four to Martigny.

time to read

1 min

September 25, 2025

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

Should I be wearing an aero jersey?

Drag-cutting designs boost your speed but there's more to it than 'smooth and skin-tight'

time to read

2 mins

September 25, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size