Rider Profile
Mathieu van der Poel
Alpecin-Premier Tech

Personal Details:
Teams history:
- 2026 - Alpecin-Premier Tech
- 2025 - Alpecin-Deceuninck
- 2024 - Alpecin-Deceuninck
- 2023 - Alpecin-Deceuninck
- 2022 - Alpecin-Deceuninck
- 2021 - Alpecin-Fenix
- 2020 - Alpecin-Fenix
- 2019 - Corendon-Circus
- 2017 - Beobank-Corendon
- 2016 - Beobank-Corendon
Biography:
Mathieu van der Poel was born in Kapellen on January 19, 1995, son of Adrie van der Poel and grandson of Raymond Poulidor.
Van der Poel’s pedigree first translated into underage success on the cyclocross circuit, though he also served notice of his ability on the road with gold in the junior road race at the 2013 World Championships in Florence.
In Tabor in 2015, Van der Poel claimed the first of his multiple elite cyclocross world titles. Together with his contemporary Wout van Aert of Belgium, he would dominate the cyclocross scene and it was only a matter of time before their rivalry extended to the road.
In his early years at senior level, Van der Poel raced sparingly but promisingly on the road, winning the Dutch title in 2018 and placing second in that year’s European Championships. The breakthrough came the following spring, when Van der Poel sampled the Classics for the first time and enjoyed immediate success by winning Dwars door Vlaanderen and then scoring a remarkable comeback victory at Amstel Gold Race.
In the pandemic-interrupted 2020 season, Van der Poel beat Van Aert in a two-up sprint to win a dramatic edition of the Tour of Flanders, and he claimed an astounding victory ahead of a deep field at the 2021 Strade Bianche.
The 2021 road campaign saw a remarkable Tour de France debut in which Van der Poel won stage 2 at Mur de Bretagne and spent six days in the yellow jersey. Despite a nagging back injury, the Alpecin-Deceuninck rider added another Tour of Flanders and Dwars door Vlaanderen in 2022, when he also won the opening stage of the Giro d’Italia in Visegrad.
A rapid finisher, a solid time triallist and often overwhelming on punchy climbs, Van der Poel has also won medals in both the Mountain Bike and Gravel World Championships, taking the bronze medal in cross-ccountry MTB in 2018 and dominating gravel in Belgium for the gold in 2024. Few riders in the history of cycling have been as versatile.
Between 2023 and early 2025, he won three consecutive cyclocross world titles, bringing his total as an elite rider to a seven. On the road, 2023 was prolific for the Dutchman as he won Milan-San Remo, Paris-Roubaix and the road world championship title.
In 2024, he made history by winning both the Tour of Flanders and Paris-Roubaix in the same year for only the 13th time in history. His quest for an Olympic Games medal fell short, however, as he crashed out of the cross-country MTB event and finished 12 in the road race. But he was back on top a week later with the gravel championship at Worlds.
His seventh cyclocross world title in 2025 matched matched Eric De Vlaeminck's historic number of seven elite men's world titles.
Key Results - Road
2025
🥇 Milan-San Remo
🥇 E3 Saxo Classic
🥇 Paris-Roubaix
🥇 Tour de Franc stage 2, four days in maillot jaune
2024
🥇 Paris-Roubaix
🥇 Tour of Flanders
🥇 E3 Saxo Classic
🥇 National championship, time trial
🥈 Gent-Wevelgem
🥉 Liège-Bastogne-Liège
2023
🥇 Milan-San Remo
🥇 Paris-Roubaix
🥇 World Championships road race
🥈 Tour of Flanders
🥈 E3 Saxo Classic
2022
🥇 Tour of Flanders
🥇 Dwars door Vlaanderen
🥇 One stage Giro d'Italia
🥇 GP de Wallonie
🥈 Two stages Giro d'Italia
🥉 One stage Giro d'Italia
🥉 Milan-San Remo
2021
🥇 Strade Bianche
🥇 One stage Tour de France
🥇 Two stages Tirreno-Adriatico
🥇 Two stages Tour de Suisse
🥈 Tour of Flanders
🥉 Points classification Tirreno-Adrriatico
🥉 E3 Saxo Classic
🥉 Paris-Roubaix
2020
🥇 Tour of Flanders
🥇 Dutch National Championship road race
🥈 De Brabantse Pijl
Key Results - Cyclocross
🥇 World Champion 2015, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2023, 2024, 2025
🥇 European Champion 2017, 2018, 2019
🥇 Dutch National Champion 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 2020
Key Results - Mountain Bike
🥇 Dutch National Champion, 2018
🥇 European Champion, 2019
🥇 World Cup XCO Overall, 2018
Key Results - Gravel
🥇 UCI World Championships, Belgium, 2024
🥉 UCI World Championships, Italy, 2022
Related Articles

Have we already seen a Milan-San Remo dress rehearsal? Here's what Tirreno-Adriatico and Paris-Nice might reveal about the first Monument of 2026
By Stephen Farrand published
Analysis Italian race still offers the best preparation for Milan-San Remo and 'race hardness'

'It's only a matter of time before he wins Milan-San Remo' – Mathieu van der Poel braces himself for first face-off with Tadej Pogačar in 2026
By James Moultrie published
News Dutchman says he doesn't 'have much left to do' in terms of preparation after taking two stage wins at Tirreno-Adriatico

Mathieu van der Poel explains why he refuses to follow the narrow handlebar trend
By Stephen Farrand published
News Despite trend towards narrower bars, the Dutch Classics favourite still rides with handlebars that measure 450mm

'Milan-San Remo should be fun' – Mathieu van der Poel shows he is ready for the Classics with Tirreno-Adriatico tactical masterclass
By Stephen Farrand published
News Dutchman wins stage 4 with 280-metre sprint in Martinsicuro

'Going as deep as I did today is difficult to simulate in training' – Mathieu van der Poel puts on a show on Tirreno-Adriatico gravel ahead of next big Classics
By Stephen Farrand published
News Dutchman excels in the mud and rain as only Isaac del Toro and Giulio Pellizzari are able to match him

'I would love to go back to Strade Bianche' - Mathieu van der Poel reveals regrets about missing Italian Classic
By Stephen Farrand published
News Dutchman racing Tirreno-Adriatico to build Classics peak

Mathieu van der Poel, Wout van Aert, Isaac del Toro among the riders to watch at Tirreno-Adriatico
By Dani Ostanek published
Preview Isaac del Toro the GC favourite at the Race of the Two Seas, while Mathieu van der Poel and Wout van Aert also head to Italy

'Even for Mathieu the race is way over the limit' – Van der Poel may be king of the Classics, but here's why he won't race Strade Bianche in its current form
By Stephen Farrand published
Analysis Plus our analysis on how changes to the Strade Bianche date and route could make the Italian race even better
Blogs
-
The fascination of the three amigos GC battle - Philippa York Vuelta a España analysis
Jonas Vingegaard is the overall favourite but can João Almeida and Juan Ayuso combine to beat him? -
Nathan Haas blog: Has the UCI done enough for gravel pros at the Gravel World Championships?
Sponsored gravel riders appear to be losing interest in the rainbow jersey battle -
Lauren De Crescenzo and her tough decision to miss UCI Gravel World Championships
In her own words, the gravel star explains the complex picture of the Gravel World Championships for the US team -
A proper women's race – Historic day in Emporia at Unbound Gravel
Extended gaps around women's start end with unprecedented sprint finish though 'it’s still imperfect, but it’s the best we can do for now' -
Road prep and adapting to new rules as Life Time Grand Prix begins at Fuego XL mountain bike event
Lauren De Crescenzo uses The Growler for confidence boost ride ahead of prestigious off-road series






