Another thrilling Milan-San Remo finale demands we look back over it. This is not an attempt to be Captain Hindsight, it’s a chance to look back at the tactics of the day, if they were successful and why teams chose to take this approach.
Most people expected UAE Emirates to smash the Cipressa, just like they did last year, where they reduced the bunch to just 30 riders, but that didn’t happen this year. They did pace the climb, and sacrificed Felix Großschartner, but the pace wasn’t super high. The thinking behind this was to save more men for the Poggio, it was going to be an all or nothing move on the final climb.
While everything seemed to be going to plan for UAE Emirates, Jumbo-Visma were forced into some last-minute changes. Jan Tratnik crashed with 30km to go and wouldn’t be a feature late in the race. The problem was that Tratnik was likely to be the final man for Wout van Aert, someone to potentially help him chase down any moves.
The sports directors in the car would have been frantically trying to think about what they could do, the hope would have been that Christophe Laporte could potentially do that job, but he’d already used up a lot of energy helping to position van Aert. This is a prime example of how a piece of bad luck can severely impact team tactics, van Aert was alone at the key point on the Poggio, but we’ll never know what would have happened if Tratnik had survived.
On the Poggio, we got the expected move by Tadej Pogačar. He and Tim Wellens launched to the front with 2.4km of the Poggio still to go, this was the move of the day. All the big players were in a good position for this attack, except for van Aert, he had to use up energy moving up a few positions.
With 1.2km left of the climb, Matteo Trentin played a blinder. The Italian was sitting 9th wheel when Wellens was pushing on the front, he swung over creating a swiftly opening gap, and it was game over for everyone behind him. This left an elite group of Wellens, Pogačar, Søren Kragh, Filippo Ganna, Mads Pedersen, Matej Mohorič, Mathieu van der Poel and Van Aert, it really was a clever move by the veteran Trentin.