The 15 Best Tour de France Riders of the Last 15 Years – Ranked

15. Alejandro Valverde, 14. Vincenzo Nibali, 12. Primož Roglič, 11. Romain Bardet, 10. Alberto Contador, 8. Geraint Thomas, 7. Julian Alaphilippe, 6. Wout van Aert, 4. Mark Cavendish, 3. Jonas Vingegaard, 2. Chris Froome

The last decade and a half of Tour de France history has brought unforgettable battles, emotional triumphs, and the emergence of generational talent. From pure sprinters to climbing legends and tireless all-rounders, these are the 15 riders who left the biggest mark on the world's greatest cycling race. We start from #15 and count our way to the very best.

15. Alejandro Valverde

15. Alejandro Valverde, 14. Vincenzo Nibali, 12. Primož Roglič, 11. Romain Bardet, 10. Alberto Contador, 8. Geraint Thomas, 7. Julian Alaphilippe, 6. Wout van Aert, 4. Mark Cavendish, 3. Jonas Vingegaard, 2. Chris Froome

While Valverde never stood on the podium in Paris, his consistency across 14 Tour appearances earned him immense respect. With four stage wins and numerous top-10 GC finishes, his class, endurance, and versatility made him a constant presence at the front of the race.

14. Vincenzo Nibali

15. Alejandro Valverde, 14. Vincenzo Nibali, 12. Primož Roglič, 11. Romain Bardet, 10. Alberto Contador, 8. Geraint Thomas, 7. Julian Alaphilippe, 6. Wout van Aert, 4. Mark Cavendish, 3. Jonas Vingegaard, 2. Chris Froome

Nibali's dominant 2014 Tour victory, where he won four stages and wore yellow for 19 days, remains one of the most complete GC displays of the modern era. A winner of all three Grand Tours, Nibali’s Tour legacy is sealed by that one near-flawless performance.

12. Primož Roglič

15. Alejandro Valverde, 14. Vincenzo Nibali, 12. Primož Roglič, 11. Romain Bardet, 10. Alberto Contador, 8. Geraint Thomas, 7. Julian Alaphilippe, 6. Wout van Aert, 4. Mark Cavendish, 3. Jonas Vingegaard, 2. Chris Froome

Roglič nearly won the 2020 Tour before a dramatic time trial defeat to Pogačar, a moment etched into cycling history. Despite that loss, his stage wins and GC consistency have confirmed his place among the elite.

11. Romain Bardet

15. Alejandro Valverde, 14. Vincenzo Nibali, 12. Primož Roglič, 11. Romain Bardet, 10. Alberto Contador, 8. Geraint Thomas, 7. Julian Alaphilippe, 6. Wout van Aert, 4. Mark Cavendish, 3. Jonas Vingegaard, 2. Chris Froome

Bardet thrilled French fans with his second place in 2016 and a podium in 2017, often animating mountain stages with brave attacks. Though he never took yellow in Paris, his emotional connection with the race and his country made him a Tour icon.

10. Alberto Contador

15. Alejandro Valverde, 14. Vincenzo Nibali, 12. Primož Roglič, 11. Romain Bardet, 10. Alberto Contador, 8. Geraint Thomas, 7. Julian Alaphilippe, 6. Wout van Aert, 4. Mark Cavendish, 3. Jonas Vingegaard, 2. Chris Froome

Despite controversy and a stripped 2010 title, Contador won the Tour twice and brought fearless, attacking racing to the GC fight. His presence always added tension and unpredictability to the mountains.

8. Geraint Thomas

15. Alejandro Valverde, 14. Vincenzo Nibali, 12. Primož Roglič, 11. Romain Bardet, 10. Alberto Contador, 8. Geraint Thomas, 7. Julian Alaphilippe, 6. Wout van Aert, 4. Mark Cavendish, 3. Jonas Vingegaard, 2. Chris Froome

A career-long workhorse turned champion, Thomas won the 2018 Tour with quiet determination and humility. He later added two more podium finishes, proving his staying power well into his 30s.

7. Julian Alaphilippe

15. Alejandro Valverde, 14. Vincenzo Nibali, 12. Primož Roglič, 11. Romain Bardet, 10. Alberto Contador, 8. Geraint Thomas, 7. Julian Alaphilippe, 6. Wout van Aert, 4. Mark Cavendish, 3. Jonas Vingegaard, 2. Chris Froome

Alaphilippe electrified the 2019 Tour with daring attacks and an unexpected stint in yellow deep into the race. His swashbuckling style, stage wins, and charisma revived romantic notions of French racing.

6. Wout van Aert

15. Alejandro Valverde, 14. Vincenzo Nibali, 12. Primož Roglič, 11. Romain Bardet, 10. Alberto Contador, 8. Geraint Thomas, 7. Julian Alaphilippe, 6. Wout van Aert, 4. Mark Cavendish, 3. Jonas Vingegaard, 2. Chris Froome

Van Aert redefined what one rider could do at the Tour — winning mountain stages, time trials, and bunch sprints. A green jersey winner and the ultimate super-domestique, he embodied versatility and power.

4. Mark Cavendish

15. Alejandro Valverde, 14. Vincenzo Nibali, 12. Primož Roglič, 11. Romain Bardet, 10. Alberto Contador, 8. Geraint Thomas, 7. Julian Alaphilippe, 6. Wout van Aert, 4. Mark Cavendish, 3. Jonas Vingegaard, 2. Chris Froome

Cavendish broke the all-time stage wins record with 35 victories, cementing his place in Tour history. A master sprinter with longevity and fire, his comeback in 2021 added emotional weight to his legend.

3. Jonas Vingegaard

15. Alejandro Valverde, 14. Vincenzo Nibali, 12. Primož Roglič, 11. Romain Bardet, 10. Alberto Contador, 8. Geraint Thomas, 7. Julian Alaphilippe, 6. Wout van Aert, 4. Mark Cavendish, 3. Jonas Vingegaard, 2. Chris Froome

Vingegaard won back-to-back Tours in 2022 and 2023 and pushed Pogačar to the absolute limit. A cool-headed climber with fierce determination, he became Denmark’s biggest cycling star.

2. Chris Froome

15. Alejandro Valverde, 14. Vincenzo Nibali, 12. Primož Roglič, 11. Romain Bardet, 10. Alberto Contador, 8. Geraint Thomas, 7. Julian Alaphilippe, 6. Wout van Aert, 4. Mark Cavendish, 3. Jonas Vingegaard, 2. Chris Froome

Froome’s four Tour titles were built on control, discipline, and metronomic pacing in the mountains. At his peak, he was almost untouchable, leading the way for Team Sky’s era of dominance.

15. Alejandro Valverde, 14. Vincenzo Nibali, 12. Primož Roglič, 11. Romain Bardet, 10. Alberto Contador, 8. Geraint Thomas, 7. Julian Alaphilippe, 6. Wout van Aert, 4. Mark Cavendish, 3. Jonas Vingegaard, 2. Chris Froome

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