Heroes of the Tour of Flanders

Tour of Flanders HeroesSteep slopes and cobble stones in early spring is like High Mass on two wheels to the Flemish people. A win in Flanders is enough to make a career, but just seven men have managed to win the revered 'Ronde' three times. Cyclingstage.com raises its glass of Belgian beer to the heroes of Flanders.

Eric Leman
Eric Leman won the Tour of Flanders for the first time in 1970 at the age of 23. A proper ‘Flandrien’, the race was perfect for him. Leman found himself competing that day with favourite Walter Godefroot and the great Eddy Merckx. In awful conditions, Merckx dropped back due to a flat and Leman made his name by winning the two-up sprint with Godefroot.

He went on to win three stages of the 1971 Tour de France, before winning Flanders again in 1972 and 1973.

In 1973 he was in a breakaway group with Eddy Merckx and Freddy Maertens but was not to be denied a record equalling third victory.

Despite a glittering career with multiple stage wins in Paris-Nice and the Tour, along with numerous other 1 day races, Leman will always be remembered for his three victories in Flanders.

Johan Museeuw

Johan Museeuw was a classics specialist, winning the Tour of Flanders of 1993, 1995 and 1998 riding for the famous Mapei team. Museeuw could actually have won six in a row were it not for mechanical problems in 1996 and 1997 and a costly mistake allowing Bugno to win in 1994. Known as the ‘Lion of Flanders’, Museeuw was a dogged classics rider with three Roubaix titles also to his name.

Like many champions of the 90’s, his involvement in doping eventually caught up with him and tainted the legacy of a great classics rider.

Achiel Buysse

Achiel Buysse was the first man to win the Tour of Flanders three times, his victories coming during World War II in 1940, 1941 and 1943. With the route modified by order of the occupying forces and only Belgian riders competing,  Buysse’s achievements were often not given credit.

He was recognised posthumously by the organisers for the 2009 edition, naming his hometown Wetteren as ‘Dorp van de Ronde’ – which means the ‘Village of the Tour’ – with a local bakery serving an Achiel Buysse pastry.

Fiorenzo Magni

Fiorenzo Magni is the only rider to win the Tour of Flanders three times in a row: in 1949, 1950 and 1951. The powerful Italian rider won 109 races in his career. Magni acquired numerous nicknames like ‘the colossus of Monza’, ‘The White Wolf’ and ‘The Tuscan Flandrien’. The latter suited him perfectly, he was Flemish at heart and that toughness was displayed most memorably in the 1956 Giro d’Italia where he famously finished second with a dislocated shoulder, steering his bike up mountains with a bandage wrapped around his bars and pulling with his teeth!

Tom Boonen

The rider from Mol claimed victory in 2005, 2006 and 2012. Like Paris–Roubaix, the Tour of Flanders seemed perfectly suited to him. In 2013 he had the opportunity to become the outright record holder, but a crash forced him out of the race early on. In the years that followed, he failed to add another win. In 2017, his final Tour of Flanders, he nevertheless played a decisive role in teammate Philippe Gilbert’s victory by tearing the race apart on the Muur van Geraardsbergen.

Fabian Cancellara

When the Swiss machine had set his mind on a target, he was almost impossible to stop. In 2010, he had already declared the Tour of Flanders his main goal of the year. The Bear of Bern outmanoeuvred Tom Boonen in a one-on-one duel before going on to win solo.

His 2013 victory was equally impressive, when he left Peter Sagan and Jürgen Roelandts behind on the Paterberg as if they were standing still. After two solo wins, he showcased his versatility in 2014 by reaching the finish alongside compatriots Van Avermaet, Vanmarcke and Vandenbergh and beating them in a dominant sprint.

Mathieu van der Poel

‘When the Swiss machine had set his mind on a target, he was almost impossible to stop,’ we noted earlier. The very same can be said of Van der Poel. Between 2020 and 2025, he finished on the podium of the Tour of Flanders six times — something no rider had ever achieved before.

In 2024 he was firmly determined to claim his third victory, and he did so in dominant fashion. It was a rain-soaked edition, and he launched his attack on the slippery cobbles of the Koppenberg with 45 kilometres still to go. From there, he rode solo all the way to the finish, joining the ranks of the race’s record holders after his wins in 2020 and 2022.

Tom BoonenFabian CancellaraMathieu van der Poel


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