Paris – After two years of Sky dominance, 2014 was the season that the rest fought back and but for the Astana doping scandals, would have gone down as a vintage edition.
Team Sky had in many eyes taken the drama out of the Tour de France by guiding Bradley Wiggins and Chris Froome to dominant victories in 2012 and 2013 respectively.
But the British outfit's inability to maintain that level of performance in 2014 helped to make it a thrilling year in cycling.
Vincenzo Nibali was the main beneficiary as he emerged from the chaos of crashes during the Grand Boucle – that saw three former winners in Froome, Alberto Contador and Andy Schleck hit the deck and leave the race during the first 10 days – to streak away to victory.
The Grand Tours produced a high level of winner during the year with Nairo Quintana triumphing at the Giro d'Italia and Contador claiming a third Vuelta a Espana after a terrific battle with Froome.
It has all led to much excitement ahead of the 2015 Tour with people expecting the four best stage-racers in the world – Froome, Contador, Quintana and Nibali – to put on a nail-biting show on the way to Paris.
That should be the case now that the International Cycling Union (UCI) granted Nibali's Astana team a World Tour licence for 2015, despite a spate of doping scandals.
Five Kazakh riders tied to the Kazakh team's World and Continental Tour squads tested positive for either the banned-blood-booster EPO or steroids during 2014, leading to speculation the UCI would kicked Astana out of cycling.
But fortunately for Nibali, Astana were granted a licence under certain conditions that will see them closely monitored in 2015.
Away from the Grand Tours there was the start of a changing of the guard.
Spartacus Ä Fabian Cancellara Ä won his third Tour of Flanders with a masterful and patient ride, making his move at just the right time to deny Belgian duo Greg Van Avermaet and Sep Vanmarcke.
But a week later and it was Dutchman Niki Terpstra who claimed victory at Paris-Roubaix with Cancellara and Tom Boonen out-thought in the finale.
But it was the emergence of the likes of Norway's Alexander Kristoff in Flanders (fifth) and German John Degenkolb in Roubaix (second) that suggested the old guard are starting to be eased out.
There was more such evidence during the Ardennes Classics despite Philippe Gilbert (Amstel Gold), Alejandro Valverde (Fleche Wallonne) and Australian Simon Gerrans (Liege-Bastogne-Liege) claiming victories.
Young pretenders such as Pole Michal Kwiatkowski, who finished in the top five in all three, including taking two podium finishes, and Ireland's Dan Martin (Fleche Wallonne) and Jelle Vanendert of Belgium (Amstel Gold) both earning a second place finish.
Martin, in fact, would almost certainly have won a second straight title in Liege but for a crash on the final bend as he was streaking clear to victory.
But it was 25-year-old Pole Kwiatkowski who took the most confidence from his performance and went on to become world champion in September with a masterful late break in Ponferrada.
It was also the setting for Wiggins to demonstrate he is the only man capable of upsetting timetrial king Tony Martin.
The German had won three world titles against the clock in a row but Wiggins, who also beat Martin at the London Olympics, proved he is one of the greatest, and most versatile, riders of his generation.
The popular Brit finished the year by vowing to tackle the world hour record and Paris-Roubaix in 2015.
The hour record was thrust back into the limelight by the UCI changing the rules and allowing more modern bicycles to be used, meaning that the 49.7km mark set by controversial Czech Ondrej Sosenka in 2005 could now be attacked.
Veteran German Jens Voigt, to the delight of cycling fans, went first and pushed it out to 51.11km in September, although six weeks later Austrian Matthias Brandle went almost 750m further.
That record is sure to come under presure from more than just Wiggins in 2015, a year that promises fireworks on so many levels. – Sapa-AFP