‘I don’t really like racing but I like winning’ — Pauline Ferrand-Prévot’s unrelenting path to the top

‘I don’t really like racing but I like winning’ — Pauline Ferrand-Prévot’s unrelenting path to the top

The Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift winner was on stage at Rouleur Live 2025


“I really like cycling, it’s my life. I can’t say I really like racing but I like winning. Maybe it’s a bit pretentious to say this, but I race because I love to win,” Pauline Ferrand-Prévot told a captivated crowd at Rouleur Live 2025. 

An Olympic gold medal, a yellow jersey and a Roubaix cobblestone; Ferrand-Prévot’s trophy cabinet is unique in the world of cycling. Those prizes were all claimed in the last 18 months of a career that started over a decade ago. Also on her palmarès: Elite World Championship titles over road, mountain bike and cyclocross.

In recent years cycling fans have been spoilt by the multi-discipline talents; from the likes of Marianne Vos and Puck Pieterse on the women’s side to Mathieu van der Poel and Tom Pidcock on the men’s, the stars over the dirt, gravel and mud are often the protagonists on the road too. Ferrand-Prévot might just be the best example of this, something she attributes to her upbringing doing several disciplines: “As a child I was very scared to be bored, so I did everything.”

Read more: ‘It’s important to show that it’s not all robotic’ – Puck Pieterse on inspiring the next generation of cyclists

This approach of different goals and challenges has kept her enjoying the sport. She revealed to the Rouleur Live crowd that her decision to race the Queen of the Classics, Paris-Roubaix Femmes avec Zwift came off the back of this attitude: “I was a bit bored, so I asked my team if I could do Paris-Roubaix!”

The Roubaix win was the first half of a miraculous double in her home country’s two most important races, the second being the Tour de France Femmes. When Ferrand-Prévot won the Grand Boucle she became the first French yellow jersey winner since Bernard Hinault in 1985. It was the biggest result of her glistening career, and came after only returning to the road in January.

Ferrand-Prévot grew up with cycling as a constant — family rides, local races, and the Tour de France on television every summer, but not for the women. 

“I was training crazy hours even when I was young. I love training and love trying to be better. But, I was watching the Tour de France and I really wanted to be a boy. When I told my mother that I would like to be a professional cyclist, she said ‘first you have to go to school’. Women’s cycling wasn’t as developed as it is now. It’s a different sport now, it’s much more professional. It’s totally different,” said Ferrand-Prévot.

As women’s racing slowly gained more and more ground into the 2010s, she watched its development from inside the sport, not from the sidelines. Her return to the road after years focused on mountain bike and cyclocross titles wasn’t a nostalgic move, it was born out of the same desire for a new challenge: “I didn’t see myself continuing in mountain biking for another four years.”

Ferrand-Prevot

She wanted a new target, and the road felt unfinished. But most importantly, thanks to the development of the sport, there was a goal bigger than anything else to set her sights on: the Tour.

“I came back [to the road] to win the Tour,” said Ferrand-Prévot.

Rejoining the women’s peloton showed her how much had changed: the depth of the field, the speed, and the tactical sharpness.

“I was thinking: ‘maybe I made the wrong choice because it was so fast!’” admitted the Frenchwoman.

Choosing Visma–Lease a Bike was a calculated move. She wanted a structure proven to win big races, and riding with Marianne Vos offered a chance to learn and collaborate rather than compete internally. Balancing two major riders could have been an issue, which did require some ironing out initially. 

“I didn’t want to be in her way, and she didn’t want to be in my way,” said Ferrand-Prévot. “We found a good way to work together at the Tour. We spent a lot of time together in camp. We really want to learn together.”

“[I chose Visma because] I need my freedom. I am 33 years old, I have stuff to learn but I have a lot of experience. It’s a young team with younger athletes. You really want to work together. It’s why we won as a team because we wanted to learn and win together.”

Preparing for the Tour meant restructuring her training — longer efforts, more specific work, and a strict routine. But Ferrand-Prévot said she was used to pressure from Olympic and world championship campaigns. Her preparation isn’t just in the miles on the roads, dirt and gravel: “Before the Olympics, I was working with a psychologist. Mentally it is as demanding as it is physically.”

But even still the Tour demanded a different kind of attention, more focused on the longer climbs and the pressure of a home nation waiting for its champion. 

Has the victory changed her?

“I don’t know?” Ferrand-Prévot rhetorically asked. “Maybe I feel more confident that I feel like I can win on the road.” There we go: one of cycling’s understatements of the century.

READ MORE

The Tour de France peloton and race convoy winding up hairpin bends of an Alpine mountain road, viewed from above

The eight climbs that will decide the Tour de France

From the Col du Tourmalet to a historic Alpe d'Huez double, these are the eight climbs that will determine the outcome of the 2026 Tour...

Read more
Tadej Pogačar riding solo ahead of the peloton on stage one of the 2026 Tour de Suisse

Pogačar in ominous form ahead of the Tour de France

Tadej Pogačar soloed clear with 70 kilometres to go on stage one, turning his first Tour de Suisse into a procession — and sending an...

Read more
Tour de France 2026 route: Catalan Grand Départ, time trials and two ascents of Alpe d'Huez

Tour de France 2026 route: Catalan Grand Départ, time trials and two ascents of Alpe d'Huez

All you need to know about the route of the 113th edition of the Tour de France

Read more
Illustration of cyclists, a bike and a bidon tumbling in a cloud of dust beside an "Allez Opi-Omi" roadside sign, depicting a Tour de France crash

Over and Out: four riders on crashing out of the Tour de France on day one

Crashing out of any race hurts, but the opening stage of the Tour de France? Four riders who have lived that day-one nightmare on the...

Read more
Luke Tuckwell in the race leader's yellow jersey leads the peloton on a mountain stage of the Critérium du Dauphiné

Del Toro delivers, but UAE struggle for control

The Tour Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes (the renamed Dauphiné) was a race without control — an interesting audit of the biggest teams' strengths and weaknesses three weeks out...

Read more
Pep's big day out: The lost cycling history of FC Barcelona

Pep's big day out: The lost cycling history of FC Barcelona

As Barcelona prepares to host the third Spanish Tour de France Grand Départ, Rouleur uncovers a forgotten chapter of FC Barcelona’s cycling ambitions.

Read more

READ RIDE REPEAT

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Get closer to the sport than ever before.

Enjoy a digital subscription to Rouleur for just £4 per month and get access to our award-winning magazines.

SUBSCRIBE