- Road to Paris: Paved With Gold
- This year, all trails led to Paris. Every UCI World Series event, training camp, and every second of every day brought elite athletes from around the world closer to the small Parisian suburb of Élancourt, where history was to be made. Pauline Ferrand-Prévot and Tom Pidcock, friends from the school of INEOS Grenadiers, reigned supreme. With Jenny Rissveds and Alan Hatherly making the podium.
What is that mysterious quality reserved for the highest mountains? Why are we so hell-bent on suffering in silence on our solitary climbs to reach cloud-riddled peaks? We join Sophie Moser on a ride on the Julier Pass to learn more about our fascination with the gravity-defying act of cycling in the mountains – and why we keep coming back for more.
The Julier Pass is one of Sophie Moser’s favorite climbs in her adopted home of Switzerland. Little red trains pass overhead as the snowy road bends through quaint villages. These mountains stop us in our tracks. They fascinate us and inspire a will to conquer them at any cost. But even world-class scenery won’t help when you’ve spent your legs. Sometimes the struggle is real: you’re fighting your mind as well as the gradient.
On a summer ride last year, Sophie had it bad. ‘It was so painful. I was waiting for it to feel good. It was a day when I questioned why I do this,’ she tells us.