2025 Fleche Wallonne

Remco Evenepoel, Tadej Pogacar, and the Mur - Flèche Wallonne 2025

Remco Evenepoel, Tadej Pogacar, and the Mur - Flèche Wallonne 2025

Remco, Pogačar, and Skjelmose hit the Mur de Huy at Flèche Wallonne 2025. One brutal climb. No second chances. The wall will decide everything.

Apr 22, 2025 by FloBikes Staff
Remco Evenepoel, Tadej Pogacar, and the Mur - Flèche Wallonne 2025

Just days after one of the most explosive finishes we’ve ever seen at Amstel Gold, the men are heading for the Wall. No, not the metaphorical kind. The Mur de Huy—and it’s waiting to crown a king who can conquer 20% gradients with ice in his veins.

This is Flèche Wallonne, and the 2025 edition could give us a race for the ages.

The 2025 Flèche Wallonne is live and on demand for viewers in Canada. Don’t miss a moment of the action—watch every attack, every explosion, every final gasp on the wall.


And the lineup? Stacked. Remco Evenepoel is back, returning to the Mur for the first time since 2022—and he’s got something to prove. He’s already a two-time winner of Liège–Bastogne–Liège, and if there’s ever been a better stage for a comeback statement, this is it.

But Tadej Pogačar will be waiting. The 2023 winner has been on a tear through the classics this spring, but in Amstel Gold he looked… not invincible. Mattias Skjelmose saw the gap, launched, and dropped them both. Now, with the steepest walls of the Ardennes on the horizon, is Pogi fading—or is he just saving his best for Huy?

Julian Alaphilippe returns. So does Marc Hirschi, Dylan Teuns, and the new guard isn’t shy either. Thibau Nys makes his debut. Lenny Martinez, Romain Grégoire, Magnus Sheffield, Ben Tulett—they’re all here and fearless. And don’t forget Tom Pidcock. He’s not just here for fireworks—he is the fireworks.

And while we’re at it, Skjelmose’s form should terrify everyone. After what he did at Amstel, there’s no question—he’s a real contender, not a fluke. He beat the rainbow jersey and the best climber in the world on raw instinct. Now we see if he can repeat it on one of cycling’s most iconic climbs.

This race doesn’t need 10 climbs. It only needs one. The Mur de Huy is a single, sharp test. One chance. One brutal ramp. One kingmaker.

The Mur waits for no one. All that matters is who survives the final 1,300 meters. Who thrives when the gradient hits 20%. And who crosses the line with just enough left to raise a fist.

We’ll see you on the wall.