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Pogacar opens the throttle on the descent.
There is a moment—just after the Col du Galibier empties into its high-alpine balcony—where the road tilts down and the earth appears to fall away beneath your tyres. That is where Pogacar made the Dauphiné his own. Head dropped, elbows tucked, he pushed 70 km/h into the first left-hand hairpin, carving a line so audacious that Jonas Vingegaard, centimetres behind, lifted a fraction, spooked by the white stripe licking at his front wheel. The spell was broken; the race was won.
Twenty-four hours earlier the Slovenian had fielded sour questions about that limp time-trial between Charmes-sur-Rhône and Saint-Péray—“The watts were there, the legs were not,” he shrugged. On the Grand Aigueblanche–Valmeinier 1800 queen stage he answered with his pedals. UAE Team Emirates drilled the Télégraphe ascent, but it was the downhill where Tadej Pogacar bared his teeth, dancing across the apexes like a skier working invisible edges.
Team staff later revealed he had reconnoitred the descent on an off-day after Liège—helmet cam, GoPro, full geek mode. He could recite every drainage cut by memory, and it showed: Vingegaard lost nine seconds in the first kilometre, 18 by the second, and would never see Pogacar’s rear wheel again until the finish gantry.
In the press room we scrolled back through history; no rider had ever claimed the Dauphiné on his maiden attempt while wearing rainbow bands of the world champion’s jersey. Pogacar just ticked that box. He also became the first to win both the points jersey and the overall since Eddy Merckx—another marker in an already crowded résumé.
Anecdote for the romantics: as he coasted through the finish lane he asked a volunteer for a flower from the roadside bouquet, “for a little kid who painted ‘Allez Pogi’ on the Télégraphe.” Ten minutes later, yellow jersey zipped tight, he found the boy and tucked the blossom into the youngster’s cap before stepping onto the podium.
On Sunday morning the UA E staff loaded the bus toward Geneva with two trophies, a suitcase of maillot jaune laundry and, perhaps, a psychological edge deeper than any time gap. July remains a beast of higher altitude and harsher politics, but right now the Tour’s horizon is tinted Slovenian gold.
Feel the rush of that Galibier free-fall every day with our new limited edition Pogacar yellow jersey print—a high-definition cycling print capturing the champion knifing through the alpine curvature, Vingegaard clinging in vain. Perfect as centre-piece cycling wall art for every fan who cherishes bold racing. Secure your numbered Tadej Pogacar poster from the 2025 Pogacar Dauphiné triumph before the peloton rolls onto the Champs-Élysées.
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➤ ABOUT THE PRINT
Each artwork is professionally printed on gallery quality matte paper which perfectly compliments the designs using only archival inks. The high print quality ensure that your wall print will last a long time while maintaining its original color.
Premium Matte Paper: 200 gsm, premium quality, matte finish
Shipped in a stiff cardboard tube (100% recyclable, 90% recycled)
---------------------------------------------------
➤ HOW TO ORDER
Simply purchase the listing in your desired size.
Sizes:
A3 (297 X 420 mm / 11.7 X 16.5 in)
A2 (420 x 594 mm / 16.5 x 23.4 in)
A1 (594 x 841 mm / 23.4 x 33.1 in)
---------------------------------------------------
➤ PLEASE NOTE: FRAME IS NOT INCLUDED
---------------------------------------------------
➤ ADDITIONAL
If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.
Pogacar opens the throttle on the descent.
There is a moment—just after the Col du Galibier empties into its high-alpine balcony—where the road tilts down and the earth appears to fall away beneath your tyres. That is where Pogacar made the Dauphiné his own. Head dropped, elbows tucked, he pushed 70 km/h into the first left-hand hairpin, carving a line so audacious that Jonas Vingegaard, centimetres behind, lifted a fraction, spooked by the white stripe licking at his front wheel. The spell was broken; the race was won.
Twenty-four hours earlier the Slovenian had fielded sour questions about that limp time-trial between Charmes-sur-Rhône and Saint-Péray—“The watts were there, the legs were not,” he shrugged. On the Grand Aigueblanche–Valmeinier 1800 queen stage he answered with his pedals. UAE Team Emirates drilled the Télégraphe ascent, but it was the downhill where Tadej Pogacar bared his teeth, dancing across the apexes like a skier working invisible edges.
Team staff later revealed he had reconnoitred the descent on an off-day after Liège—helmet cam, GoPro, full geek mode. He could recite every drainage cut by memory, and it showed: Vingegaard lost nine seconds in the first kilometre, 18 by the second, and would never see Pogacar’s rear wheel again until the finish gantry.
In the press room we scrolled back through history; no rider had ever claimed the Dauphiné on his maiden attempt while wearing rainbow bands of the world champion’s jersey. Pogacar just ticked that box. He also became the first to win both the points jersey and the overall since Eddy Merckx—another marker in an already crowded résumé.
Anecdote for the romantics: as he coasted through the finish lane he asked a volunteer for a flower from the roadside bouquet, “for a little kid who painted ‘Allez Pogi’ on the Télégraphe.” Ten minutes later, yellow jersey zipped tight, he found the boy and tucked the blossom into the youngster’s cap before stepping onto the podium.
On Sunday morning the UA E staff loaded the bus toward Geneva with two trophies, a suitcase of maillot jaune laundry and, perhaps, a psychological edge deeper than any time gap. July remains a beast of higher altitude and harsher politics, but right now the Tour’s horizon is tinted Slovenian gold.
Feel the rush of that Galibier free-fall every day with our new limited edition Pogacar yellow jersey print—a high-definition cycling print capturing the champion knifing through the alpine curvature, Vingegaard clinging in vain. Perfect as centre-piece cycling wall art for every fan who cherishes bold racing. Secure your numbered Tadej Pogacar poster from the 2025 Pogacar Dauphiné triumph before the peloton rolls onto the Champs-Élysées.
---------------------------------------------------
➤ ABOUT THE PRINT
Each artwork is professionally printed on gallery quality matte paper which perfectly compliments the designs using only archival inks. The high print quality ensure that your wall print will last a long time while maintaining its original color.
Premium Matte Paper: 200 gsm, premium quality, matte finish
Shipped in a stiff cardboard tube (100% recyclable, 90% recycled)
---------------------------------------------------
➤ HOW TO ORDER
Simply purchase the listing in your desired size.
Sizes:
A3 (297 X 420 mm / 11.7 X 16.5 in)
A2 (420 x 594 mm / 16.5 x 23.4 in)
A1 (594 x 841 mm / 23.4 x 33.1 in)
---------------------------------------------------
➤ PLEASE NOTE: FRAME IS NOT INCLUDED
---------------------------------------------------
➤ ADDITIONAL
If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.
Pogacar opens the throttle on the descent.
There is a moment—just after the Col du Galibier empties into its high-alpine balcony—where the road tilts down and the earth appears to fall away beneath your tyres. That is where Pogacar made the Dauphiné his own. Head dropped, elbows tucked, he pushed 70 km/h into the first left-hand hairpin, carving a line so audacious that Jonas Vingegaard, centimetres behind, lifted a fraction, spooked by the white stripe licking at his front wheel. The spell was broken; the race was won.
Twenty-four hours earlier the Slovenian had fielded sour questions about that limp time-trial between Charmes-sur-Rhône and Saint-Péray—“The watts were there, the legs were not,” he shrugged. On the Grand Aigueblanche–Valmeinier 1800 queen stage he answered with his pedals. UAE Team Emirates drilled the Télégraphe ascent, but it was the downhill where Tadej Pogacar bared his teeth, dancing across the apexes like a skier working invisible edges.
Team staff later revealed he had reconnoitred the descent on an off-day after Liège—helmet cam, GoPro, full geek mode. He could recite every drainage cut by memory, and it showed: Vingegaard lost nine seconds in the first kilometre, 18 by the second, and would never see Pogacar’s rear wheel again until the finish gantry.
In the press room we scrolled back through history; no rider had ever claimed the Dauphiné on his maiden attempt while wearing rainbow bands of the world champion’s jersey. Pogacar just ticked that box. He also became the first to win both the points jersey and the overall since Eddy Merckx—another marker in an already crowded résumé.
Anecdote for the romantics: as he coasted through the finish lane he asked a volunteer for a flower from the roadside bouquet, “for a little kid who painted ‘Allez Pogi’ on the Télégraphe.” Ten minutes later, yellow jersey zipped tight, he found the boy and tucked the blossom into the youngster’s cap before stepping onto the podium.
On Sunday morning the UA E staff loaded the bus toward Geneva with two trophies, a suitcase of maillot jaune laundry and, perhaps, a psychological edge deeper than any time gap. July remains a beast of higher altitude and harsher politics, but right now the Tour’s horizon is tinted Slovenian gold.
Feel the rush of that Galibier free-fall every day with our new limited edition Pogacar yellow jersey print—a high-definition cycling print capturing the champion knifing through the alpine curvature, Vingegaard clinging in vain. Perfect as centre-piece cycling wall art for every fan who cherishes bold racing. Secure your numbered Tadej Pogacar poster from the 2025 Pogacar Dauphiné triumph before the peloton rolls onto the Champs-Élysées.
---------------------------------------------------
➤ ABOUT THE PRINT
Each artwork is professionally printed on gallery quality matte paper which perfectly compliments the designs using only archival inks. The high print quality ensure that your wall print will last a long time while maintaining its original color.
Premium Matte Paper: 200 gsm, premium quality, matte finish
Shipped in a stiff cardboard tube (100% recyclable, 90% recycled)
---------------------------------------------------
➤ HOW TO ORDER
Simply purchase the listing in your desired size.
Sizes:
A3 (297 X 420 mm / 11.7 X 16.5 in)
A2 (420 x 594 mm / 16.5 x 23.4 in)
A1 (594 x 841 mm / 23.4 x 33.1 in)
---------------------------------------------------
➤ PLEASE NOTE: FRAME IS NOT INCLUDED
---------------------------------------------------
➤ ADDITIONAL
If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.
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