
Pogacar wins cycling's Il Lombardia for fifth consecutive year

Tadej Pogacar won the cycling Monument Il Lombardia for a fifth time in as many years on Saturday, equalling Fausto Coppi's record of victories in the season-ending race.
Slovenian superstar Pogacar crossed the line first in Bergamo after a trademark attack on the key Passo di Ganda climb to blitz the rest of the field and become the first man since Eddy Merckx in 1975 to win three Monuments in a single season.
From the moment Pogacar was left to attack by his powerful UAE teammates with around 38 kilometres remaining there was no doubt of the final result, even with Quinn Simmons out on his own one minute and 10 seconds up the road.
Pogacar finished nearly two minutes ahead of Remco Evenepoel, who again ended up second behind cycling's dominant force as he did at the recent world and European championships.
At 27-years-old Pogacar has now won 10 of the sport's Monuments -- the five toughest and longest one-day races of the year -- nine shy of a career tally set by Merckx, who won three in 1969, 1971, 1972 and 1975.
His fifth straight victory in as many years in the "Race of the Falling Leaves" is another record to add to a growing list as Italian great Coppi strung four consecutive wins between 1946 and 1949, with his fifth coming in 1954.
Pogacar is used to making history as this year he became the first man to win both the Tour de France and world championship two seasons in a row.
And he is now also the first to finish on the podium of all five Monuments in the same season.
In April, Pogacar won both the Tour of Flanders and Liege-Bastogne-Liege, victories which go alongside third place in Milan-San Remo and second in Paris-Roubaix which were both won by Mathieu van der Poel.
O.Lis--GL