Pogacar’s Tour de Suisse triumph marks 58th win since 2024 as win rate hits staggering 44.3%
Tadej Pogacar has 121 professional victories in total, but since the start of the 2024 season, the World Champion has an incredible win rate of 44.3%, following his three stage victories and GC triumph at the recent Tour de Suisse.

Courtesy of journalist Jonas Creteur, since the start of 2024, Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) has scored 58 wins (including GCs but excluding other classifications) out of 131 races (including GCs), following his most recent triumph, which came at the Tour de Suisse on Sunday.
On debut in Switzerland, Pogačar made a statement on the opening stage, soloing 69km to victory and practically putting the GC to bed barring incident or accident. The World Champion would complete a hat-trick of stage victories, pipping Mathieu van der Poel in the time trial before overtaking Lenny Martinez in the closing moments of Sunday’s final stage.
In total, Pogačar’s last 9 victories came in Swiss races, as he also won 4 stages and the GC at the Tour de Romandie, which finished in May.
Switzerland is 1 of 8 countries that Pogačar has claimed a victory in during this time frame, including Italy, Spain, Belgium, France, Canada, Switzerland, UAE and Rwanda. Pogačar has won the most times in this period in France, 17 times, followed by 15 in Italy and 10 in Switzerland.
In terms of how the 58 victories break down, 32 came via individual stage wins, 4 of which were time trials. 16 of those were Grand Tour stage wins, with 6 at the Giro and 10 at the Tour.
Since 2024, Pogačar has picked up 8 GC victories, including the Giro d’Italia (2024), Tour de France (2024, 2025), Volta a Catalunya (2024), UAE Tour (2025), Critérium du Dauphiné (2025), Tour de Romandie (2026) and Tour de Suisse (2026).
Pogačar has also won 18 one-day races in this time stretch, including the World Championships in 2024 in Switzerland and in Rwanda 2025.
In addition, Pogačar has won eight Monuments since the start of 2024, including Milan-Sanremo (2026), Tour of Flanders (2025 and 2026), Liège-Bastogne-Liège (2024, 2025, and 2026), as well as Il Lombardia (2024 and 2025).
Beyond the Monuments and World titles, Pogačar has also added three consecutive editions of Strade Bianche and became European Champion in 2025.
The Slovenian's most recent win on the final stage of the Tour de Suisse saw him catch and pass the last man standing from the breakaway, Lenny Martinez (Bahrain-Victorious), on the final climb to Villars-sur-Ollon to deny the Frenchman victory. After finishing second, Martinez acknowledged the prolific nature of the World Champion.
“Tadej wins a lot of races, and that’s exactly what he wanted to do again today,” Martinez told CyclingPro.net at the finish. “It’s complicated but that’s how it is. That’s cycling. I wasn’t going to ask him to let me beat him.”
Meanwhile, Mike Teunissen (XDS Astana) described how he feels that the Tour is becoming increasingly difficult and highlighted that the World Champion could win a significant number of stages.
“Pogacar could win ten stages this year if he wants to. There is very little left for the sprinters, but even less for the classics riders,” Teunissen said in an interview with Wielerrevue.
Pogačar will be hoping and expected to add to this significant tally when the Tour de France kicks off in Barcelona on July 4, as the World Champion hunts a record-equalling fifth Tour title.

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