2022 Tour de France Femmes Avec Zwift

2022 Tour De France Femmes Gets First Two-Stage Winner

2022 Tour De France Femmes Gets First Two-Stage Winner

Lorena Wiebes blew away her rivals to cross ahead of world champ Elisa Balsamo and yellow jersey wearer Marianne Vos to win again at the 2022 TDF Femmes.

Jul 28, 2022
2022 Tour De France Femmes Gets First Two-Stage Winner

Lorena Wiebes demonstrated her impressive sprinting skills with victory in the fifth and longest stage of the women's Tour de France on Thursday in Saint-Die.

The Dutch rider blew away her rivals to cross ahead of Italian world champion Elisa Balsamo and yellow jersey wearer Marianne Vos to claim her second stage win after Sunday's opener in Paris.

"When Lorena started her sprint, we couldn't see her again, it was raw power," Vos said.

Jumbo-Visma's Vos nevertheless took four bonus seconds, thanks to her third place and gained time over all her rivals going into the final three days of racing.

"I felt strong in the sprint," said Wiebes of the 176.5km run from Bar-le-Duc to Saint-Die in northeastern France. "It was the longest race I've ever done. I've never even done such an outing even in training."

The Team DSM rider proved she is almost unbeatable in a sprint with only Balsamo managing to get the better of her twice this season.

"The aim is to take the green jersey," said Wiebes, 23, of the honor going to the top sprinter, as she claimed her 17th victory of the season and the 53rd of her career.

The 35-year-old Vos, one of the great names of cycling, leads Italy's Silvia Persico by 20 seconds in the general standings, after her fifth top-5  finish in as many stages.

But, several top sprinters lost out after being caught up in a mass crash 45km from the finish line.

Belgian Lotte Kopecky was delayed and then slowed down by mechanical problems, with Dane Emma Norsgaard taking a hard knock to her left shoulder, back and head and pulling out of the race.

Before the crash, involving some 30 riders, the day had been animated by a breakaway of four riders controlled by DSM and Trek-Segafredo with a cushion of four minutes on the peloton.

The last two survivors, French rider Victoire Berteau and the Cypriot Antri Christoforou, were swallowed up less than 3km from the line.

If they have any energy left, they can try their luck again on Friday, probably the last chance for those who are not aiming for the overall victory.

Friday's sixth stage covers 129km to Roshelm before the weekend climax in the Vosges mountains.