Demare Announces Retirement From Cycling

French cyclist Arnaud Demare announced on Thursday that he would retire from professional cycling after Sunday’s Paris-Tours one-day classic.

The 34-year-old, who won two stages of the Tour de France and eight at the Giro d’Italia during his career, is a two-time winner at Paris-Tours, which is one of the oldest cycle races in the world, having first been held in 1896.

“The time has come,” Demare said in an Instagram post. “At the end of this season, after Paris-Tours, I will turn the page on my professional career.”

Demare has managed 97 victories in his career, putting him third on the roster of active riders behind only the incomparable Tadej Pogacar (107) and Norwegian Alexander Kristoff (98), who has also recently announced his impending retirement.

His greatest victory was in the Milan-San Remo Monument one-day classic in 2016 but Demare also won some of the sport’s most historic races, including Milan-Torino and the Brussels Cycling Classic — two other events first held in the 19th century.

Démare is one of five riders to have won the French National Road Race Championships three times, having won the race in 2014, 2017 and 2020.

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He has also won the under-23 road race at the 2011 UCI Road World Championships, and the 2016 Milan–San Remo, a cycling monument.

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