Paris-Roubaix 2026: Pacing 30 Cobble Sectors
The cobblestones are gone.
After a month of training for Flanders and Roubaix (rough roads, low cadence grinding, full-body vibration) the Ardennes classics pivot to smooth tarmac and short, violent climbs. Amstel Gold Race on April 19 is the door you walk through. And most amateurs never adjust for it.
I didn’t, for two years running. Came out of Flanders prep feeling strong, legs heavy with cobble fitness, and figured that fitness would carry over to the Limburg hills. It didn’t. The Cauberg emptied me in 90 seconds. The Keutenberg — 22% max gradient, tarmac, no cobbles to blame — had me zigzagging like a tourist. I had the engine for five-minute sustained efforts on rough roads. The Ardennes wanted something I hadn’t trained: repeated 60-to-90-second punches at 130%+ FTP, thirty-three times, on smooth pavement where there’s no excuse for bad legs.
Different races. Different physiology. Same riders making the same mistake.
Quick Summary: Amstel Gold Race 2026
Detail Info Date April 19, 2026 Edition 60th Distance 257km Climbs 33 (tarmac, Limburg hills) Cobbled sectors 0 Avg climb length 800m-1.5km Key climbs Cauberg, Keutenberg, Bemelerberg, Gulperberg Top favorites Evenepoel, Pidcock, del Toro The amateur training lesson: Cobbled classics reward sustained muscular power at low cadence through rough sectors. The Ardennes rewards VO2max repeatability — dozens of short, steep kicks where you’re above threshold for under two minutes each. Different energy system. Different training.
Here’s the cleanest way to think about it.
The Tour of Flanders has 16 climbs over 278km, many on cobblestones. The efforts are 2-4 minutes, often at 105-115% FTP, with the surface absorbing 10-15% of your muscular output before it even reaches the pedals. You’re grinding. Cadence in the 60s. Whole body working. The limiter is durability — who can still produce power after hours of being shaken apart.
Amstel Gold has 33 climbs over 257km. None are cobbled. Most are under 2km. Many are under a minute at full gas. The gradients are steep — the Keutenberg hits 22%, the Cauberg touches 12% — but the surface is smooth tarmac. Your cadence stays in the 80s or even 90s. No vibration tax. The limiter isn’t durability. It’s repeatability. Can you punch above 120% FTP for 60-90 seconds, recover for 8-10 minutes on a flat connecting road, and then do it again? Thirty-three times?
The physiological demand is VO2max power, not muscular endurance. Flanders is a diesel event with a turbo finish. Amstel is thirty-three drag races separated by recovery laps.
If you’ve spent March training low-cadence, sustained cobble efforts, you’ve been building the wrong ceiling.
The Amstel Gold startlist tells you everything about what the Ardennes demands. Remco Evenepoel, a pure climber who struggled on cobbles in his early career, is one of the favorites. Tom Pidcock, a mountain biker and Alpe d’Huez stage winner, thrives here. Isaac del Toro, the young Mexican climber with a punch that terrifies everyone in stage races, is targeting this as his first monument.
Notice who’s not favored? The cobblestone monsters. Van der Poel can contend (he’s Van der Poel), but the Ardennes has historically been harder for pure power riders. Van Aert has never won Amstel. The riders who dominate here are lighter, punchier, and have VO2max numbers that let them recover between short maximal efforts faster than their competition.
This is the 60th edition. 257km through the rolling Limburg hills of the Netherlands and Belgium, with the final trio of Kruisberg, Eyserbosweg, and Cauberg deciding things in the last 20km. Smooth roads and short walls. Explosive finishes.
If that doesn’t sound like the race you’ve been training for all month, it shouldn’t. Because it’s not.
The distinction matters for training:
Duration: Ardennes climbs average 60-120 seconds at race pace. Cobbled hellingen average 2-4 minutes. Shorter efforts rely more on anaerobic capacity and VO2max power; longer efforts pull more from threshold and muscular endurance.
Cadence: Smooth tarmac means you choose your cadence. Most strong climbers attack Ardennes hills at 85-95rpm. Cobbled climbs force 55-70rpm because the surface breaks your pedal stroke. High-cadence, above-threshold work is a different neuromuscular pattern than low-cadence grinding.
Recovery profile: With 33 climbs spread over 257km, you average one climb every 7-8km. That’s roughly 8-12 minutes of flat or rolling road between efforts. Enough to bring your heart rate back to zone 2, partially clear lactate, and go again. The question is whether you can fully recover in that window — and do it thirty-three times.
Surface cost: Zero vibration tax on tarmac. Every watt goes to forward motion. This sounds easier, but it means the pace is higher. There’s no forced recovery section where everyone slows down to navigate cobblestones. The flat sections between Amstel’s climbs are raced at 42-45km/h in the pro peloton. For amateurs, that translates to higher group speeds on the flats, which means less actual recovery between climbs.
You have three weeks between now and April 19. That’s enough to pivot your training — not to build a new engine, but to tune the one you have.
The good news: if you trained well for Flanders, your aerobic base is huge. Hours of zone 2 work and threshold riding built a platform. What you’re adding now is the top end — VO2max repeatability and high-cadence punch.
This is the bread and butter of Ardennes prep. Short, hard, repeated.
Structure:
RPE: Efforts should be 8-9/10 for the first six repeats. The last two to four will feel like 9-10/10 — that’s the point. You’re training the tenth climb, not the first.
Why 90 seconds: That’s the race-pace duration of most Amstel climbs. The Cauberg takes about 90 seconds at pro race pace. The Keutenberg, maybe 2 minutes. Most of the other 31 climbs are under a minute. Ninety seconds is the median demand.
I ran this session every Tuesday for the last two weeks after switching off cobble-specific work. First session: I managed 8 repeats before the power cratered. By the third session, I held target power through 11 repeats. The adaptation is fast when you already have the aerobic base — you’re not building fitness from zero, you’re redirecting it.
Amstel’s climbs don’t start from a standing stop. You hit them at 40km/h after a fast flat section, then the road kicks up and you need to accelerate over threshold. The transition from tempo to VO2max is the specific demand.
Structure:
RPE: The 4-minute tempo blocks should feel like 6/10. The 60-second surges should feel like 9/10. The shock of going from “comfortable” to “lungs on fire” in five pedal strokes — that’s what the base of a Limburg climb feels like.
Similar concept to the Flanders long ride with late spice, but recalibrated for punchy climbs.
Structure:
The key difference from Flanders prep: higher cadence on the efforts (85rpm+, not 65rpm), shorter effort duration, and more repeats. You’re simulating the cumulative cost of 20+ climbs late in a long day, not the cobble-shaking sustained grind of a Kwaremont.
RPE for final efforts: If the last two efforts aren’t at 9-10/10, you started too conservatively on the endurance section or the efforts are too easy. The point is accessing VO2max power on fatigued legs. Sound familiar? Same principle as Flanders training, different application.
Here’s how to restructure your week from now to race day. This assumes you’re coming off a Flanders-focused block and have 8-10 hours available.
Week 1 (March 29 - April 4): Transition
Week 2 (April 5 - April 11): Build
Week 3 (April 12 - April 19): Taper
Five things to track on April 19:
The Cauberg cadences. Watch Evenepoel vs. Pidcock on the final Cauberg. Evenepoel will likely spin at 90+ rpm. Pidcock may attack at a slightly lower cadence with a mountain biker’s explosive torque. The one who crests first chose the right gear for their physiology. There’s a lesson in that for your own climbing.
Del Toro’s repeatability. He’s 20 years old racing 257km with 33 climbs. Watch how he handles climbs 25-33 vs. climbs 1-10. Power fade in young riders at monuments is the most honest data point about Ardennes fitness. If he’s still attacking at climb 30, his VO2max ceiling is absurd.
Which Flanders riders fade. Some riders will come straight from a strong Tour of Flanders on April 5. Two weeks later, watch if their punchy power holds or if the cobblestone-specific fatigue lingers. Riders who look flat on the Keutenberg after being explosive at Flanders are showing you the cost of not transitioning.
The flat sections between climbs. The Limburg parcours has fast, rolling roads between hills. Watch how hard those sections are raced. In recent years, teams have pushed the pace on flats to reduce recovery time — turning 10 minutes of rest into 6. That tactic favors deep rosters and punishes solo breakaway artists.
The Bemelerberg timing. This climb, 8km from the finish, is where Amstel often ignites. If the winning move starts here — not on the Cauberg — it means the attacker had enough VO2max repeatability to go with two climbs still remaining. That’s the fitness profile you’re training for.
Here’s what I didn’t expect when I first pivoted from cobbled training to Ardennes prep: it felt easier in the wrong ways. No cobblestone vibration. No fighting for traction. Smooth roads, clean pedaling, high cadence. My brain registered “easier ride” even though my heart rate and power were higher.
That’s the trap. Amstel’s climbs don’t hurt the way the Kwaremont hurts. They’re too short for that deep, grinding suffering. Instead, each one gives you a quick, sharp spike of pain that fades in two minutes. Manageable. Until climb 20, when each “manageable” spike costs more than the last, and you realize you’ve been draining an account you thought was full.
The cobbled classics teach you to survive. The Ardennes teaches you to punch — over and over, until the punches stop landing. Different skill. Different training. Same spring.
Train accordingly. April 19 is three weeks away, the cobblestones are behind you, and the Cauberg doesn’t care how strong you were on the Paterberg.
Based on personal experience transitioning from cobbled classics prep to Ardennes-style racing, and the specific physiological demands of repeated short climbs on tarmac. Race details from Amstel Gold Race official route information and climb profiles from ProCyclingStats. Your local version of the Cauberg is whatever 90-second hill you can find — ride it ten times and see what’s left on number eleven.