This original oil painting of the battle at Milan San Remo has been scanned at high resolution to create these prints at various sizes on beautiul 310gsm Hahnemule photorag archival art paper. The intensity of the saturation of colour is as close to the original as a possible with a print. The original oil painting on aluminium panel is 100×70cm and available directly from the studio.
The battle between Tom Pidcock and Tadej Pogačar at the 2026 Milan–San Remo was a tense, high-speed chess match that unfolded over the final climbs.
After following Pogačar’s explosive move on the Cipressa, Pidcock proved to be the only rider able to match him when the race split apart. The pair then dropped Mathieu van der Poel on the Poggio, with Tadej repeatedly attacking but unable to shake Tom, who clung stubbornly to his wheel.
Their battle came down to a two-up sprint on the Via Roma, where Pidcock tried to play it tactically, forcing Pogačar to open first. Despite the pressure—and even after an earlier crash—Pogačar held his line and edged the sprint by half a wheel, sealing a dramatic and closely fought finale
This original oil painting of the battle at Milan San Remo has been scanned at high resolution to create these prints at various sizes on beautiul 310gsm Hahnemule photorag archival art paper. The intensity of the saturation of colour is as close to the original as a possible with a print. The original oil painting on aluminium panel is 100×70cm and available directly from the studio.
The battle between Tom Pidcock and Tadej Pogačar at the 2026 Milan–San Remo was a tense, high-speed chess match that unfolded over the final climbs.
After following Pogačar’s explosive move on the Cipressa, Pidcock proved to be the only rider able to match him when the race split apart. The pair then dropped Mathieu van der Poel on the Poggio, with Tadej repeatedly attacking but unable to shake Tom, who clung stubbornly to his wheel.
Their battle came down to a two-up sprint on the Via Roma, where Pidcock tried to play it tactically, forcing Pogačar to open first. Despite the pressure—and even after an earlier crash—Pogačar held his line and edged the sprint by half a wheel, sealing a dramatic and closely fought finale