The spring Classics are filled with ups and downs, even when it’s flat. For some, these most brutal of races become the main stage for breakthrough performances. For some, the springtime has offered a real opportunity to emerge from the peloton’s long shadow to remain in the cycling conscience forevermore.
In 2024 talk has been all about cycling’s Hollywood stars Mathieu van der Poel and Tadej Pogačar. Look past these mighty figures and we can see that this spring has seen a changing of the guard, a carousel almost, of riders capable of reaching the top ten in these one-day tests.
In this list, we’ll break down the names that have made an impact over the spring period, taking their status up to the heights of Classics contenders.
Maxim Van Gils
The renaissance man of the spring Classics, Maxim Van Gils has made quite the splash in 2024.
Carrying the hopes of the ProContinental Lotto-Dstny team on his back, the young Belgian has become a perennial top ten finisher in the Classics. It all began with a courageous ride at Strade Bianche that was rewarded with a podium finish. A top ten shortly after at Milan-San Remo proved his promise.
The next coming of Philippe Gilbert in the Ardennes, Van Gils scored a podium finish at the dantesque Flèche Wallonne before rising to Tadej Pogačar’s challenge at Liège–Bastogne–Liège to finish among the best of the rest in fourth position. Now nestled comfortably inside the top 15 of the UCI Rankings, the 24-year-old from the Antwerp suburbs has entered the top list of favourites for Classics to come.
Amber Kraak
Former competitive rower Amber Kraak certainly – wait for it – cracked the spring Classics in 2024 on both the pavé and the bergs. Looking after proceedings at FDJ-Suez after Cecilie Uttrup Ludwig’s crash at the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad, the Dutchwoman slotted into the top five in an attritional Paris-Roubaix Femmes.
Riding on the high of a headline performance in the Hell of the North, the good results kept coming with a top ten at the Brabantse Pijl and the Amstel Gold Race. With three top tens in one week, Kraak left a memorable mark on this year’s Classics season, particularly when other women’s form yo-yoed.
Laurence Pithie
One of the break-out stars of the year so far, New Zealand’s Laurence Pithie has risen into the top echelon of Swiss army knife riders in 2024. With a UCI WorldTour win under his belt at the Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race and a stint in the yellow jersey at Paris-Nice on his palmarès before the Classics kicked into full flow, the 21-year-old Groupama-FDJ rider was in a good place to keep the champagne flowing.
Top 15s at both Milan-San Remo and Brugge-De Panne were just the prologue for a break-out Monument performance at Paris-Roubaix. If it weren’t for a crash, a top five would have been in the youngster’s grasp. However, a sixth place on debut is impressive enough.
Having penned a contract with Bora-Hansgrohe for 2025, the Kiwi will be making his Grand Tour debut next month at the Giro d’Italia. With his current run of form, expect some big results at the Corsa Rosa for another of Groupama’s development alumni.
Ingvild Gåskjenn
Before this spring, Ingvild Gåskjenn was considered a background character in the melee of the women’s peloton. However, the Liv-AlUla-Jayco rider emerged from the shadows this April in a breakout week in the Ardennes, peaking with third place at the Amstel Gold Race.
While Lorena Wiebes’ celebration blunder stole post-race discussions, Gåskjenn snuck onto the podium in a bike-throw. Like Pfeiffer Georgi, Gåskjenn’s reaction was priceless. The pinnacle of her career to date, the Norwegian has made a big name for herself this spring.
Paul Lapeira
Decathlon-AG2R have looked like a rejuvenated team since the French sportswear manufacturer took over the naming rights at the beginning of the season. Paul Lapeira, who hails from the Breton-Norman border, has been punching well above his weight in 2024 as part of the Révolution Decathlonnaise.
A double-billing of wins in the Loire Valley at the start of March put his name on the map, winning solo on both occasions. Although not strictly the spring Classics, a stage win at the Tour of the Basque Country solidified this jump up the pecking order at the French outfit. When off the top step of the podium, Lapeira has become a mainstay in the top 15 this Classics season. A breakthrough ride at Amstel Gold saw him claim a top five after a hardy effort to bridge across to the winning group, while a top 15 at Liège-Bastogne-Liège solidified his status as one of France’s big Gen Z hopes.
Pfeiffer Georgi
Pfeiffer Georgi has managed to prolong her breakout season for multiple years now. 2023 felt like a coming of age with a high-profile win at the Classic Brugge-De Panne along with a flurry of one-day wins throughout the calendar at Binche-Chimay-Binche and the Dwaars door de Westhoek. However, 2024 has felt like Georgi has matured into a serious Classics contender in her own right.
It’s hard to overlook her third place finish at Paris-Roubaix after a formidable ride on the cobbles. It’s even harder to overlook her effervescent joy when she found out she made the final podium. This was no fluke though – a top five at the Trofeo Alfredo Binda and Amstel Gold have taken Georgi’s name into the top ranks among the women’s Classics scene in 2024.
Mauri Vansevenant
Mauri Vansevenant doesn’t fit into the dictionary definition of breakout star. That said, he has been single-handedly holding down the fort for Soudal-QuickStep this Classics season to the surprise of many. Known for crashing into a bush at La Flèche Wallonne, Vansevenant returned to the top ten in big ways in 2024.
A stellar ride at Amstel Gold yielded him a fourth place finish, losing out in a sprint within the leading group. He repeated this top ten effort a week later at Liège by giving Soudal their highest Monument finish this year.
Bonus points must be granted for his rock-and-roll style on the bike – very old school indeed.
António Morgado
Despite stating his dissatisfaction toward the Classics in the post-race interview following Le Samyn, Portugal’s António Morgado has shown that he is more than just another grain in the UAE Team Emirates kindergarten sandbox.
The 20-year-old had promised heaps of potential after a ferocious rise through the junior ranks in the past seasons, but Morgado has translated that onto the senior level. His first pro win came in the eleventh hour of the Classics season at the Giro della Romagna, but there’s more to this bushy-eyebrowed prodigy.
Born in 2004, Morgado became the youngest rider to reach the top ten at a Monument in 80 years with his fifth place effort at the Tour of Flanders. A hardy rider in the hills and cobbles, and a quick turn of speed to boot, Morgado is a name we will be getting very familiar with in the seasons – or even decades – to come.
Still can’t shake the boredom of the 2024 Classics rotation? Read our analysis of why the men’s Classics have felt like a lead balloon this year.