Liège-Bastogne-Liège

Road · One Day
Location 🇧🇪 Belgium
When Fourth Sunday in April
Course One Day
Since 1892
Format One Day
Why watch?

The oldest Monument and the toughest of the Ardennes week, decided by short climbs, positioning, and who can still accelerate after 250 kilometers.

Race guide

Liège-Bastogne-Liège

Liège-Bastogne-Liège is the oldest Monument, held each April in Belgium's Ardennes region. The race runs roughly 250 kilometers through rolling terrain punctuated by short, steep climbs, finishing in or near Liège after a week of racing that tests endurance, timing, and nerve.

Eddy Merckx won five times. Bernard Hinault, Moreno Argentin, and Alejandro Valverde each won four. The roll call reflects endurance and tactical range.

Why this race matters

This is the race that closes the spring classics season and sorts the Ardennes hierarchy. It rewards patience and precision more than explosive power alone. The route accumulates fatigue through repetition rather than altitude, and the finale often comes down to who can still respond when the road tilts up for the tenth or twelfth time. It is the oldest Monument, first run in 1892, and it retains a distinct identity among the five: less mythic than the cobbled races, less spectacular than Lombardia, but unforgiving in its own way.

How this race is usually won

The race is defined by short climbs that repeat and accumulate rather than a single decisive ascent. The Côte de la Redoute, the Côte de la Roche-aux-Faucons, and a handful of others appear in the final 50 kilometers, but the exact sequence and finishing circuit vary by edition. What remains constant is the tactical pattern: teams try to control the middle kilometers, attacks begin on the Redoute or shortly after, and the finale rewards riders who can position well, respond to accelerations, and still sprint or solo after 250 kilometers of attrition. Breakaways rarely survive. The winner usually comes from a late selection or a small group that forms in the final 20 kilometers. Positioning into the climbs matters as much as power on them, and crashes or hesitation can end a contender's race in seconds.