Skip to content
World Today News
  • Home
  • News
  • World
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Health
  • Technology
World Today News
  • Home
  • News
  • World
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Health
  • Technology
Thursday, March 5, 2026
World Today News
World Today News
  • Home
  • News
  • World
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Health
  • Technology
Copyright 2021 - All Right Reserved
Home » tag: Paul Seixas
Tag:

tag: Paul Seixas

Sport

Paul Seixas: Rising Star Ready to Challenge Pogačar at Strade Bianche & Liège-Bastogne-Liège

by Alex Carter - Sports Editor February 28, 2026
written by Alex Carter - Sports Editor

French cycling sensation Paul Seixas, 19, has declared his intention to challenge world number one Tadej Pogačar head-to-head this spring, dismissing any fear in favor of respect for his rivals. The audacious stance from the Decathlon CMA CGM rider comes as he prepares for a demanding classics campaign, including his debut appearances at Strade Bianche, La Flèche Wallonne, and Liège-Bastogne-Liège.

“There is impatience to give 100 percent. You have to win when everyone is there, We see the most important and rewarding for a racer who has a competitive spirit,” Seixas told Cyclismactu. “The goal is not to take over when he (Pogačar) is no longer there. The goal is to be able to beat him one day.”

Seixas’s confidence is fueled by a spectacular start to his sophomore professional season at the Volta ao Algarve in Portugal, where he secured his first professional victory with a stage win and finished second overall against a strong field including Juan Ayuso, João Almeida, and Oscar Onley. The win came on the same mountain where Pogačar claimed his first professional win in 2019, a coincidence not lost on French media.

The young Frenchman’s willingness to confront cycling’s established stars contrasts with the approach of some competitors, such as Belgian Arnaud De Lie, who recently opted to skip Milan-San Remo, citing a lack of opportunity against Pogačar and Mathieu van der Poel. Seixas, however, is eager to test his limits.

“I still have to progress, because they are still a little above,” Seixas acknowledged, referring to Pogačar and Remco Evenepoel. “Now I aim for to measure my progress compared to last year, when I was already able to confront them. I reckon if you’re afraid, you’ve already lost. The word ‘fear’ is too strong and does not mean what you feel at the beginning of a race. I would say more that there is respect, a lot of respect for these guys.”

His spring program will also include a challenge for a first general classification triumph at the Itzulia Basque Country, where he will face Isaac del Toro, Ayuso, Primož Roglič, and Mikel Landa. Seixas views these races as crucial opportunities to gauge his development and identify areas for improvement.

“The goal is to raise your arms as much as possible, but to raise your arms, you have to race against the best,” he said. “There was already a huge plateau in the Algarve, but it’s these top riders who have the most impact on a race are the ones I have to race against, so I can realize what I lack to reach the highest level.”

Seixas’s rapid ascent has already captured the attention of the French cycling public, eager for a homegrown grand tour contender. His rookie season included a victory at the Avenir – a race also won by Pogačar – and a top-10 finish at the Critérium du Dauphiné against a formidable lineup of rivals. He also finished third at the European road championships behind Pogačar and Evenepoel.

While a decision on his grand tour debut remains pending, with the Vuelta a España considered a more likely option than the Tour de France to shield him from immediate pressure, Seixas is focused on the challenges ahead. His team, Decathlon CMA CGM, backed by a French retail giant and one of the world’s biggest shipping companies, is clearly investing in his potential.

Confirmed spring program for Paul Seixas:

  • Faun-Ardèche Classic (February 28)
  • Strade Bianche (March 7)
  • Itzulia Basque Country (April 6)
  • La Flèche Wallonne (April 22)
  • Liège-Bastogne-Liège (April 26)
February 28, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Sport

Paul Seixas: Can France’s Cycling Prodigy Handle the Tour de France Pressure?

by Alex Carter - Sports Editor February 10, 2026
written by Alex Carter - Sports Editor

Will all the hype and expectations piled onto the slender shoulders of Paul Seixas be too much? The cycling world will soon find out.

The 19-year-old singlehandedly revived the hopes of an entire cycling-crazed nation with his promising rookie season and rekindled the Tour de France hopes of Europe’s sleeping giant in France. His 2025 results sheet is enough to set any long-suffering French fan’s heart fluttering: fifth at GP La Marseillaise, runner-up at Paris-Camembert, winner of the points jersey at the Tour of the Alps, eighth overall at the Critérium du Dauphiné, and a dominant overall victory at the Tour de l’Avenir.

And all that came before a European championships podium alongside cycling gods Tadej Pogačar and Remco Evenepoel, a result that further fueled the French fervor. “Obviously when you follow these guys once, it gives you a lot of confidence,” Seixas told AFP during an altitude training camp this week in Spain. “Being much younger than them, I tell myself that if last year at the end of the season, I managed to keep up with them, that means that if I progress further, I will be able to close this gap.”

That’s just the kind of cool panache that French fans have been waiting for, well, since the 1980s. Seixas now carries the weight of expectations that have buried one generation of French riders after another, all chasing the same elusive prize: becoming the first French male Tour winner since Bernard Hinault in 1985.

Unlike many who came before him, Seixas appears to possess a rare combination of talent. Nearly everyone who’s come close to him has said the same thing: Yes, he could win the Tour de France some day. But that was also said about nearly every rising French prospect who’s come down the pipe ever since “The Badger” hung up the cleats.

The challenge for Seixas is to attempt to put that hype and pressure to one side, and focus on racing. After all, he’s only 19.

The hype train has already left the station. Every French media outlet — from L’Equipe to Vélo Magazine — will follow his every move in 2026. So much so, Decathlon CMA CGM has even brought on a full-time press attaché to deal solely with requests about the French prodigy.

Everyone around Seixas is trying to protect their young protege. Aurelien Paret-Peintre said he hopes everyone will give him room to improve and progress. “The media are overdoing it, but he’s a guy with exceptional talent,” Paret-Peintre told Cyclism’Actu. “To do what he did at 19 last year, there’s not much you can criticize about his physical maturity. He’s already at the very top after just one year as a professional, so you have to give him time.”

Decathlon’s brain trust is walking cycling’s ultimate tight rope. Team brass want to give Seixas space to grow, but they’re also piling on realistic opportunities. For his sophomore season, it’s about building on the momentum of 2025, and putting a few wins on the board. No one’s talking yellow jerseys just yet.

Sport director Sébastien Joly said the team is putting circles around two major spring dates: Strade Bianche and Liège-Bastogne-Liège. That puts him on a collision course with Pogačar and Evenepoel, and reflects how much confidence they have in their young steed. “The Tour of Algarve and the Ardèche Classic will be concrete opportunities to aim for victory,” Joly said last month. “Paul is entering his second season in the WorldTour, and the idea is to offer him a balanced schedule while allowing him to progress against the world’s best.”

Of course, the big hype will be around the Tour de France debut. Everyone is waiting to see if Decathlon will take him to the Tour in 2026. Team brass said a decision won’t be made until May. “It would definitely be a dream, but it’s not my goal this year,” Seixas told AFP this week. “But it makes me want to push myself in training to succeed in the race.”

The Tour is, and will be, part of his racing future. The question is when the timing is right. The central debate is whether going to the Tour too early could hurt more than help his progression. Anything less than a spectacular debut might be framed as a disappointment. Yet history shows it can take several tries to crack the Tour code, meaning an early start could also have its upside.

Decathlon performance director Jean-Baptiste Quiclet talked to Vélo Magazine about the quandary. One option is to bring Seixas to the Tour without expectations. Let him race freely, jump into a few breaks, test himself in the time trial, and absorb the pressure, speed, and demands of the race that will define his future. That is broadly the approach Groupama-FDJ took last year with France’s other hyped prospect, Lenny Martinez, who did not impress in his Tour debut.

“There are two opposing views. The first is somewhat similar to the ‘Lenny Martinez project,’” Quiclet said. “Developing the skills to be a leader in a grand tour is a long continuum. And to achieve this, you require to aim for consistency, daily concentration and self-sacrifice, which builds you up from your first grand tour.”

Quiclet said it will be a balancing act because right now Seixas is quite good at everything. He can handle himself in one-days, monuments, classics, and the worlds — proven by his third behind Pogačar and Evenepoel at the European championships — and he can race GC under the weight of expectations. His Tour de l’Avenir win in 2025 confirmed that. The team doesn’t want to hold him back either.

“We don’t want to break the positive momentum, because with each passing month, we see a new Paul,” Quiclet said. “Whatever Paul does, all eyes are on him,” he said of a possible Tour start. “We won’t be able to protect him from the pressure even if he rides in a free role. What matters is what he thinks is most relevant to his future quest for the general classification.”

Many view Seixas’ time trialing ability as the key asset to his skillset. He grew up in the northern suburbs of Lyon, with a mixed heritage featuring both Portuguese and Czech roots. He spent summer afternoons watching the Tour with his grandfather, and learned about discipline from his father, a national-level karate champion.

“What I love is winning races. But even if I manage to achieve my dreams, that won’t stop me. It just makes me want to push myself further in training to succeed in races,” he told AFP. “And winning a race is still an indescribable, priceless feeling.”

Groupama-FDJ boss Marc Madiot told CyclismActu that Seixas is the prototype of a new generation of French riders who are taking the latest in science, training, nutrition, and coaching, and layering it on top of the deep French tradition. “If you placed Bernard Hinault in today’s generation, he would have had the same abilities as Paul Seixas,” Madiot said. “That gives you an idea of his level. Riders today are better prepared, better trained, better educated. They’re ready to perform much younger.”

Madiot — who won Paris-Roubaix twice and raced alongside Hinault — said Seixas brings a winning attitude that he hasn’t seen in years for a French rider. “He has that attitude, that desire to win, that inner fire. That’s what sets champions apart,” he said. “We don’t see that very often anymore.”

Seixas opens the year at the Volta ao Algarve (February 18-22) and his second-season goals are realistic. He wants to post some strong and consistent early season results, and ideally knock down his first pro win. France has been here before, and things can go either way. If he’s as good as everyone says he is, he could quickly rise to the top. Any setbacks or brutal reality checks, however, could see the dreams of Tour de France salvation sputter out again.

February 10, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Search:

Recent Posts

  • Song Ping, Former Top Chinese Leader, Dies at 109

    March 4, 2026
  • WV High School Wrestling: State Tournament Preview – Cameron, Oak Glen & More

    March 4, 2026
  • Regional & National Football League Selection | France Football Matches

    March 4, 2026
  • Gnocchi Parisienne: Recipe & Wine Pairing for Airy Cheese Dumplings

    March 4, 2026
  • Matsuoka’s Instagram Live Stream Interrupted by Alarm | Gaming Incident

    March 4, 2026

Follow Me

Follow Me
  • Privacy Policy
  • About Us
  • Accessibility statement
  • California Privacy Notice (CCPA/CPRA)
  • Contact
  • Cookie Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA Policy
  • Do not sell my info
  • EDITORIAL TEAM
  • Terms & Conditions

@2025 - All Right Reserved.

Hosted by Byohosting – Most Recommended Web Hosting – for complains, abuse, advertising contact: contact@world-today-news.com


Back To Top
World Today News
  • Home
  • News
  • World
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Health
  • Technology
World Today News
  • Home
  • News
  • World
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Health
  • Technology
@2025 - All Right Reserved.

Hosted by Byohosting – Most Recommended Web Hosting – for complains, abuse, advertising contact: contact@world-today-news.com