Almost 300 men and women won an elite bike race in 2025, and that’s only counting road events. Of those, it won’t be a particular surprise that Tadej Pogačar topped the men’s charts with 20 victories, and Lorena Wiebes the women’s, with 25. It was Demi Vollering, however, who topped the UCI Women’s WorldTour rankings.
None of this particularly matters in this latest list of our riders of the year.
Lorena Wiebes – Tom Davidson, senior news and features writer
(Image credit: Getty Images)
Let me start this nomination with a simple fact: no rider, male or female, has won more races than Lorena Wiebes in 2025. The SD Worx-Protime rider claimed 25 road victories this season (Tadej Pogačar managed 20) – her best tally to date – and that’s not to mention the gravel world title and two track world titles she won, too.
To put it simply, Wiebes won everywhere. First race day of the season at the UAE Tour? Tick. Inaugural women’s Milan-San Remo? Tick. A stage of the Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift? Tick, plus another for good luck. For many riders, the tough thing can be keeping that consistency all the way through to the end of the year. How many of her last nine races did Wiebes win in 2025? Eight. Case closed.
Pauline Ferrand-Prévot – Simon Richardson, magazine editor & Anne-Marije Rook, North American Editor
(Image credit: Getty Images)
Simon:
Being by far the strongest rider in the peloton is a gift. Yes, that rider can rightly claim to be the best, but honestly, how impressive is it if you win everything at a canter because of the physical ability passed down through your parents’ genes?
What’s truly impressive is targeting the biggest two races on the calendar and winning them. And that’s what Pauline Ferrand-Prévot did in 2025. She also did it on her comeback to the road after years focusing on mountain biking. Yes, yes, yes, she will have trained on the road a great deal, but her positioning and peloton prowess would have been more than a little rusty.
Add to that the fact she was a new member of an already established team and needed to get everyone on board with her plan, and you have an exceptional achievement that surpasses simple physical ability.
Anne-Marije:
I’m such a fan of her story arc. We often, and rightly, call Marianne Vos the G.O.A.T. of women’s cycling, but Pauline Ferrand-Prévot is right there alongside her.
The 33-year-old Française is a 15-time UCI Elite World Champion across road, cyclocross, gravel and multiple mountain bike disciplines. She’s also the reigning Olympic cross-country mountain bike champion. Few riders in the history of the sport can match that level of versatility, that sustained excellence or that trophy chest.
After conquering virtually everything there is to win off-road, Ferrand-Prévot signed a three-year deal with the Visma | Lease a Bike super team in 2024, with the stated goal of winning the Tour de France within two to three years. She didn’t need nearly that long. In her very first attempt, and after five years away from the road peloton, she went out and won the thing. And with dominance at that.
Her Tour victory was nothing short of sensational. As was her Paris-Roubaix win, proving her versatility.
Ben Healy – Aaron Borrill, tech writer
(Image credit: Getty Images)
In a sport that often tends to get quite robotic in terms of how riders approach racing, Ben Healy has been nothing short of a pleasure to watch. An animator in its purest form, Ben attacks using his instincts, not his power meter, and it shows in the way he races with his heart on his sleeve.
He demonstrated this in spades at this year’s Tour de France, where he delivered a magnificent solo breakaway to win in Vire Normandie on stage six. He continued his fine run of form to finish third on stage 10 and snatch away the yellow jersey, becoming only the fourth Irish cyclist in history to don the coveted maillot jaune.
And then he did it all over again at the World Championships in Kigali, Rwanda, with a performance that earned him a bronze medal. Asked about what events are on his radar in the future at a team event in Girona last month, the Irishman told Cycling Weekly, “I’d like to try the Cape Epic, that looks like proper fun.”
Mathieu van der Poel – Adam Becket, news editor
(Image credit: Getty Images)
There’s something about Mathieu van der Poel that doesn’t always sit right with me, it might be the Lamborghinis and the self-importance, but he is undeniably one of the best bike riders in the world, possibly ever. If it weren’t for Pogačar, his season with victories at Milan-San Remo, Paris-Roubaix and the Tour de France would be heralded.
It’s hard to see how a rider like the Alpecin-Deceuninck man can be beaten at times; he can match Pogačar on the Poggio and then out-sprint him, too. His stage win in Boulougne-sur-Mer at the Tour was classic Van der Poel, and then he fought back into the yellow jersey again. When a race is him vs his Slovenian rival, you know it’s a must watch.
Isaac del Toro – Jamie Williams, video manager
(Image credit: Getty Images)
It’s close between Isaac del Toro and Oscar Onley. I’ve chosen the former because I think he’ll be the rider that takes over the baton from Pogacar as the world’s best GC rider. Del Toro made mistakes, mistakes his team probably should have helped him avoid, but he’s young and I think he’s learnt from them.
He also handled the loss of the Giro d’Italia admirably, how easy it would have been to cross the line and lose temper with the team, Carapaz or other riders in the heat of the moment. Stunning rides this year and his story is only just beginning.
Evie Richards – Hannah Bussey, tech writer
(Image credit: Fabio Piva / Red Bull Content Pool)
This one is easy: Evie Richards. She’s the first-ever British rider to win the XCO World Championships, the first-ever to win the short track Worlds, and now, the most successful female rider in short track World Cup history, and she seems to have had an absolute blast while doing so.
She’s one of the best role models for young girls entering the sport, being vocal about her firm belief that you can win on the bike without sacrificing your health and well-being.
She’s clearly worked hard to strike a good balance between life and racing. You can see she genuinely loves it, and it comes through in her riding style. It’s such infectious joy that you can’t help but be delighted with every result she gets.
If, like me, you have a cycling-fledgling in the family, you would do well also to join the Evie Richards fan club; you’ll become a happier person if you do.
Tadej Pogačar – James Shrubsall, senior news and features writer
(Image credit: Getty Images)
It’s obvious – perhaps a little too obvious in fact. But tasked with picking a rider of the year it’s difficult to go with anyone other than Tadej Pogačar. There is little need for me to list his victories here – countless words and many, many stories have been written about them. We’ve even seen the first tentative strains of what might be termed ‘Pogačar Fatigue’ from fans (and by his own admission, he’s been pretty tired himself).
But as suspense has begun to dwindle when Pogačar is around, the feeling has been growing in inverse proportion that we are seeing history being made in front of our eyes.
If you’re feeling a bit jaded with it all (many aren’t), know this: in 20 years’ time your young clubmates will have to watch you become all wistful as you recount the Slovenian’s endeavours. Enjoy this moment.
Wout van Aert – Matt Ischt-Barnard, ecomm and tech writer
(Image credit: Getty Images)
Wout van Aert’s incredible return to form after arguably an up-and-down 2024 season, in which any brilliance was overshadowed by injury, was fantastic to watch.
Top five finishes across the Classics season quietened any speculation about his ability to still race at the top, before he won stage nine of the Giro d’Italia to put it completely to bed.
However, it was that final ascent and, ultimately, descent of Montmartre climb on stage 21 of the Tour de France that showed just what class he still is, and I hope an omen for the year ahead. A race with Van Aert at the front is never a boring one.
Wout is back, and I hope dearly that he can add another monument to his 2020 San Remo in 2026.
Zoe Bäckstedt – Meg Elliot, news and features writer
(Image credit: Getty Images)
This might be cheating because Zoe Bäckstedt is also one of Cycling Weekly’s riders of the year, but I got the chance to interview her for our mag – and our chat only affirmed her place in the top spot, for me.
This year’s success followed an already glittering career, as she added a ninth rainbow jersey to her growing collection. At January’s UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships, she collected rainbow jerseys in the mixed team relay and the under-23 race. She then went on to win five of the six time trials she competed in, scooping up a national and under-23 world title.
But in her final race of the season, Bäckstedt won gold at the UCI World Championships in Rwanda as the fastest under-23 woman in the time trial. Yet, the attribute that most sung out during our interview was her genuine love of bikes – whether she’s cycling off road or on, she’s just happy to be there, riding at her best.