“Above all, I’m happy with the progression I’ve made,” was Egan Bernal’s simple but heartfelt explanation of how it felt to take a landmark WorldTour podium finish at the Volta a Catalunya. The Ineos Grenadiers rider finished third overall Sunday behind an all-conquering Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) and a resurgent Mikel Landa (Soudal-QuickStep).
It was Bernal’s top performance in a WorldTour race since his life-threatening accident in early 2022 and his first GC podium since winning the Giro d’Italia outright in 2021. It was also his first in a week-long WorldTour stage race since winning the Tour de Suisse way back in 2019.
A lot of water has flowed under the bridge since then, but in one of the toughest editions of the Volta a Catalunya, Bernal impressed with top 10 finishes in the opening two Pyrenean stages, then improved on that consistency with a second place at the Alt de Queralt, moving six places in the overall in one fell swoop.
The Ineos Grenadiers racer and former Tour de France winner followed that with an equally tenacious performance in the final, very technical and hilly Montjuic stage – one in which he had the misfortune to crash out while looking to be en route to a final top-three placing back in his earliest days as a pro in 2018.
This time Bernal came through without difficulty, responding well to the intense ebb and flow of attacks on the multiple assaults, and could come home with his third place intact, the same result he took in Catalunya back in 2019 behind Miguel Ángel López and Adam Yates.
“I’m very calm and above all happy with the progression I’ve made,” Bernal told Cadena Ser radio station after the finish in Montjuic and where hundreds of Colombian fans chanted his name again and again on the other side of the barriers when he then made his way to the team bus.
“It’s not easy on a physical or a mental level, after being at the height of world cycling, to go to not even being able to finish races.
“That was very hard, but with support from everybody, my family and friends and my team, I could get back to being on a good road, and I hope one day to get the level of before, too.”
Bernal brushed off a question about what it felt like to race against another Tour winner, Pogačar, at a point where the Slovenian star looked to be at the height of his powers. Rather, he insisted, he was setting…
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