The best neo-pros of the 2022 season

The best neo-pros of the 2022 season

The young guns who made a name for themselves during the 2022 season

Words: Stephen Puddicombe

A neo-pro is a rider who is in the first year of their professional contract, experiencing life in WorldTour races for the first time and finding their feet on cycling’s biggest stages. Some neo-pros struggle to drop into the ebb and flow of the professional peloton, straining to keep up, or even position themselves in the bunch. Others, however, take to it like a duck to water. With the growing trend of young riders performing at the highest level, neo-pros are getting better than ever, both on the men’s and women’s side of the sport. Here are the neo-pros who stuck out to us in the 2022 season, riding with maturity beyond their years.

Arnaud de Lie, Lotto-Soudal

Easily the most prolific winner of this year’s take of neo-pros, Arnaud De Lie racked up a whole nine wins, a total bettered by only a select few in the pro peloton. Despite only turning 20 in March, his sprinting success in the Belgian semi-classics made him Lotto-Soudal’s most important rider in their fight for World Tour survival, even more so than the team’s established stars Philippe Gilbert, Tim Wellens and the injury-beset Caleb Ewan. His efforts weren't quite enough to retain the team’s World Tour status, but a bright future surely awaits. 

Tobias Halland Johannessen, Uno-X

Delivering on the promise shown by winning the Tour de l’Avenir in 2022, Johannessen was one of the breakthrough stage racers of the year. The Norwegian first caught the eye by placing third overall and winning a stage at Etoile de Bessèges, then competed alongside the very best at WorldTour level with top-ten finishes at the Volta a Catalunya and the Critérium du Dauphiné. Along with hi brother Anders, the Johannessens look poised to become the best pair of cycling twins since Simon and Adam Yates. 

Charlotte Kool, DSM

The NXTG Racing development squad has proven to be a fertile environment for promising talent to emerge, and of the 2021 graduates, both Shari Bossuyt and Charlotte Kool successfully stepped up to the elite level this year for Canyon-SRAM and DSM respectively. Kool mostly impressed as a lead-out rider for her team’s star sprinter Lorena Wiebes, but, when given the opportunity, flourished herself in the sprint finishes, winning the GP Eco-Struct, a stage of the Simac Ladies Tour, and registering a couple of runner-up finishes at the Giro Donne. She’s earned the right for more opportunities next year. Image: Getty

Ben Turner, Ineos Grenadiers

In a fruitful year for both new British talent like Lewis Askey and sprinter Ethan Vernon, and Ineos Grenadiers, where Magnus Sheffield and Luke Plapp were among those to emerge, Ben Turner rode both waves. It was during the spring that the versatile 23-year-old really made a name for himself, when his tall frame became a familiar sight in the business end of the classics, where he played a key role as a domestique, helping Dylan van Baarle win Paris-Roubaix. He also enjoyed success for himself, making the top-ten at Dwars door Vlaanderen, the top-five at Brabantse Pijl, and coming close to a stage win on Grand Tour debut with fourth on stage 19 of the Vuelta.

Ruby Roseman-Gannon, BikeExchange-Jayco

An explosive start to the season saw Australian rider Ruby Roseman-Gannon star on home roads with multiple victories on the domestic scene during January, then sprint for second-place behind Elisa Balsamo in her first race in Europe at the Setmana Ciclista Valenciana. Things cooled off a little after that, but she still put herself in the mix of the big classics, with top 20s at Strade Bianche and Het Nieuwsblad, and top-tens at the May-time Spanish classics. Then amid the competitive field of the Tour de France Femmes, she sprinted for an eighth-place finish on stage four (as well as featuring in an illustrious breakaway two days later), before later registering her first ever top-five at WorldTour level at the Simac Ladies Tour.

Luke Plapp, Ineos Grenadiers

In the space of just one year, Luke Plapp has already established himself as a key part of Ineos Grenadiers support squad in the mountains. The Australian was Adam Yates’ best performing domestique during his second-place finish at the UAE Tour, managing fifth-place on the final stage of the race atop Jebel Hafeet, and was even the team’s highest finisher at the Tour de Romandie where he finished ninth. Image: Getty

That was enough to earn him a spot on their Vuelta a España line-up; and now, with that Grand Tour in his legs, plus a seriously impressive time trial evidenced by twelfth place at the senior race at the Wollongong World Championships, he could already be ready to ride for a high GC placing in a stage race next year. 

Zoe Bäckstedt, EF Education-TIBCO-SVB

The latest member of the Bäckstedt cycling dynasty to become a pro might just be the best yet. Daughter of Magnus and Megan [Hughes] and younger sister of Elynor, Zoe Bäckstedt signed a professional contract with EF Education-TIBCO-SVB this summer at the age of just 17. She immediately looked at home at this level, forming part of the team time trial line-up that won the opening stage of CIC-Tour Féminin International des Pyrénées, and placing fifth at the Konvert Kortrijk Koerse classics. It was in the junior races that she showed her exceptional talent, though, doubling up at the World Championships in Wollongong with gold medals in both the road race and the time trial.

Cover image: Zac Williams/SWpix

Words: Stephen Puddicombe

READ MORE

Demi Vollering at Strade Bianche 2025

Trofeo Alfredo Binda 2025 preview: route, predictions, and contenders

Is Lidl-Trek’s four year dominance at the Lombardy race about to end?

Leggi di più
Gaia Realini: The joking assassin who is going to be the best in the world

Gaia Realini: The joking assassin who is going to be the best in the world

The young Italian rider is confident she is only a couple of years from being the best in the Women's WorldTour

Leggi di più
Ivan Romeo

‘One kilogram heavier but a better cyclist’ - Iván Romeo on big dreams, basketball and bringing fun back to cycling

The 21-year-old Movistar rider who is the current under-23 time trial world champion is making a name for himself in the WorldTour, but stresses the...

Leggi di più
‘The competition is higher than ever’ - Can Demi Vollering maintain her dominance over the women’s WorldTour peloton?

‘The competition is higher than ever’ - Can Demi Vollering maintain her dominance over the women’s WorldTour peloton?

Although the FDJ-Suez rider looked stronger than ever in this year’s recent edition of Strade Bianche, the progression of her rivals will ensure she does...

Leggi di più
Gallery: A Day in the Dust at Strade Bianche 2025

Gallery: A Day in the Dust at Strade Bianche 2025

Inside a brutal but beautiful day on Tuscany's white roads

Leggi di più
The WorldTour peloton at Milan-Sanremo in 2024

Milan-Sanremo: Everything you need to know

Key information on the first Monument of the season

Leggi di più

READ RIDE REPEAT

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Get closer to the sport than ever before.

Enjoy a digital subscription to Rouleur for just £4 per month and get access to our award-winning magazines.

SUBSCRIBE