Giro d’Italia pro bike: Thibaut Pinot’s personalised Lapierre Xelius SL3

Giro d’Italia pro bike: Thibaut Pinot’s personalised Lapierre Xelius SL3

The Frenchman’s bike pays homage to his impressive career

Photos: James Startt Words: Rachel Jary

While he is in his final season as a professional bike rider, Thibaut Pinot is certainly not going out quietly. The Groupama-FDJ rider has been impressively active throughout this year’s Giro d’Italia, currently leading the mountains classification and finishing in second place on two tough stages. Pinot is known for his attacking style and trademark climbing technique in which he varies the pace and gets in and out of the saddle regularly. His Lapierre Xelius SL3 is set-up to assist Pinot as he storms up the climbs in this unique style – he has an upright position clearly made for climbing rather than aerodynamic benefits.

The Xelius SL3 was released at the start of 2022 as the third-generation Xelius from French bike brand Lapierre. On release, this version of the Xelius was said to be the lightest yet, despite it being disc-brake only. Lapierre claimed that the new SL3 was designed to be “more racy, more aggressive and more powerful”. It featured a new carbon construction with lighter and stronger Torayca carbon fibres, as well as a new “rigid polypropylene mandrel”, which Lapierre says offers improved stability during the lay-up phase.

Another key area where Lapierre’s Xelius SL3 was improved compared to the previous iteration is in aerodynamics. The down tube, seat tube and seatstays were all redesigned when the bike was released, as was the aero profile of the head tube and forks. The compact frame design borrows its geometry from Lapierre’s Aircode DRS (a frame that’s used by Groupama-FDJ’s sprinters and rouleurs), it should lower a rider’s centre of gravity on fast descents and improve aerodynamics. The hole between the seat tube into the dropouts is said to be there to increase compliance and comfort on rough surfaces.

At the front of Pinot’s bike, he is using Lapierre’s integrated cockpit which sits on top of a very high stack height – the Frenchman is not adhering to the trend of slammed stems that is more common in today’s peloton. His shifters also sit high and his handlebars are wide, this is likely to give Pinot more leverage to get in and out of the saddle and really torque the bike during his trademark attacks.

Pinot’s handlebars were dressed in white Prologo bar tape on the drops, and left bare along the tops, one of the few aerodynamic considerations on his Xelius SL3. The saddle that Pinot uses is the Prologo Nago Evo Tirox with carbon rails.

When it comes to gearing, Pinot was using a 54/40 chainring combination his Shimano Dura-Ace R9600 groupset, alongside what looks like an 11-30 cassette. The cassette runs with titanium gears from 19T to the 30T and steel from 11T to 17T for weight saving which is why there is a differentiation in colour.

The top tube of Pinot’s bike features a list of the impressive results he’s achieved in his career so far, something that no doubt motivates the Frenchman when he puts his head down in races. The rest of the bike is painted in Groupama-FDJ’s team colours, it’s blue on the top tube and black on the seat tube with blue and white patterning on the forks and down tube.

His bottle cages are Elite’s Leggero Carbon Fibre bottle cages and he’s also using the Elite lightweight bottles. This is a bike designed for every weight saving as Pinot is a rider who will be targeting results in mountainous races this season.

Pinot’s bike featured the Shimano Dura-Ace C50 wheels with a 50mm rim depth, intended as an all-around wheel. The tubeless rims feature a 21mm inner rim width to capitalise on optimal aerodynamics when paired with the most popular tyre sizes. Pinot was using Continental GP5000 tubeless tyres which looked to be a 28mm width.

Photos: James Startt Words: Rachel Jary


READ MORE

Will Mark Cavendish return to the Tour de France in 2025?

Will Mark Cavendish return to the Tour de France in 2025?

We know the Manxman well enough now that we should never count him out when it comes to racing

Leggi di più
‘Cycling is my home… but it’s less fun nowadays’: Simon Geschke on 16 years as a professional

‘Cycling is my home… but it’s less fun nowadays’: Simon Geschke on 16 years as a professional

The German rider reflects on how the sport has changed over his career as a pro cyclist

Leggi di più
‘Our budget is 10 times higher’ - Canyon//SRAM manager Ronny Lauke on the changing economics of women’s cycling

‘Our budget is 10 times higher’ - Canyon//SRAM manager Ronny Lauke on the changing economics of women’s cycling

The German team boss on increased salaries, how the Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift has impacted his team and acquiring a new sponsor in...

Leggi di più
‘I hope I’ve inspired the next generation’ - Laura Kenny on a career of Olympic stardom

‘I hope I’ve inspired the next generation’ - Laura Kenny on a career of Olympic stardom

Part of our series of articles on British Cycling's Hall of Fame inductees, Laura Kenny reflects on her career, and how track cycling can keep developing

Leggi di più
Opinion: The 2025 Tour de France Femmes will be the hardest yet

Opinion: The 2025 Tour de France Femmes will be the hardest yet

The composition of the women's peloton next season combined with a varied and challenging route should set the stage for another historic battle for yellow

Leggi di più
Tour de France 2025 route will put Pogačar/Vingegaard rivalry back in the balance

Tour de France 2025 route will put Pogačar/Vingegaard rivalry back in the balance

The mountain-heavy 2025 Tour de France route will be the battleground for the fifth Pogačar v Vinegaard duel

Leggi di più

MEMBERSHIP

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Independent journalism, award winning content, exclusive perks.

Banner Image