It’s been the week of thrilling mountain showdowns between Primož Roglič and Remco Evenepoel at the Volta a Catalunya, and after four closely-fought battles it’s the Slovenian who holds a narrow 2-1 advantage over the Belgian six weeks out from the Giro d’Italia.
Ask Roglič who is on top, and he will indicate it is him. “I am on my way of coming back [from an injury sustained at last year’s Vuelta a España] and for now, everything is going nicely. Details always decide and today [stage five] I won.”
Ask Evenepoel the same question, and he’ll big himself up. “If everything went well, without any mistakes, I could have won three stages back-to-back-to-back,” he said.
The general classification rivalry between the pair has developed into cycling’s most exciting, ever since they first began to trade blows at last April’s Tour of the Basque Country, a race in which they both held the leader’s jersey only to eventually see Dani Martínez snatch it away from each of them; then, at the Vuelta, Evenepoel was dominant in the opening week, but Roglič looked to be on his way back before his stage 16 crash.
Across 28 race days in the past 12 months - curiously all in Spain - Roglič has come out on top 16 times to Evenepoel’s 12. The next confrontation, the Giro, is set to be the most anticipated yet - and the younger of the duo wants the eldest to be fully aware that he still has plenty of margin for improvement in the ensuing six weeks.
“I still have some percentages to become better,” Evenepoel said pointedly, his rival happening to be just a metre behind him and within earshot. “I really feel that I am not at my very best yet. There’s still a month-and-a-half to go until the Giro.”
They are both conscious of the enormity of their heavyweight tussle. “It was another fun battle at the finish,” Roglič said when dissecting his stage five win. “La Molina [on stage three that Evenepoel won] was a bit short. I was missing a bit of a kick and the legs, but here I had it. It was enough today.”