Vollering grasps Women's Tour de France lead with fog-bound victory
Last updated on: 30 July,2023 09:51 am
The Dutch rider leads the overall standings by 1min 50sec from Kasia Niewiadoma
Col du Tourmalet (France) (AFP) – Demi Vollering powered through the mountain-top fog on Saturday to win the most demanding stage in the women's Tour de France and grab the leader's yellow jersey.Vollering, seventh overnight, pulled away in the final 6km of the 17km final climb in the Pyrenees to take the yellow jersey from team-mate Lotte Kopecky.
The Dutch rider leads the overall standings by 1min 50sec from Kasia Niewiadoma, who was second in the stage. Defending champion Annemiek van Vleuten is third, but 2min 28sec back with only Sunday's 22.6km eighth-stage time trial to come.
Vollering started the short but brutal Pyrenean stage more than a minute behind race leader and Worx team-mate Kopecky and 12sec behind Dutch rider Van Vleuten. The trio were part of an elite group that pulled clear on the first of two tough climbs, the Col d'Aspin. Niewiadoma attacked first.
"I could see that Demi didn't want to work with Annemiek, so I knew that they would look at each other and I decided to take my chance on the downhill," the Polish rider said. With less than 6km to go On the final foggy 17km final ascent of the Tourmalet, Vollering set off in pursuit, quickly passed the Pole.
"Demi showed how strong she is when she passed me," said Niewiadoma. Vollering powered away. "I went full gas to the finish. I felt good," she said. "I kept on pushing." She battled slowly across the finish line standing on her pedals, a shadow in the mist silhouetted by the headlights of a cortege of officials vehicles.
Niewiadoma finished second 1min 58sec behind. Van Vleuten wobbled across the line at 2:34 in third place. Vollering who had plopped on the tarmac panting, rose to her feet beaming to embrace team-mate Kopecky, who had finished sixth.
"This is why we came here, to win the Tour with Demi," said Kopecky. "I think the way she did it, she showed she is the best. I wanted to enjoy my last day in yellow...But it was pretty painful."
Vollering had dropped to seventh after she was hit with a 20-second penalty on Thursday for drafting behind the Worx team car that was deemed to be driving dangerously. She had climbed a place before the start of Saturday's 90km mountain stage when Elisa Longo Borghini, who was fourth overall overnight, withdrew before the start.
The Italian veteran was suffering from a "skin infection on the upper left thigh", said her Lidl-Trek team and had to go to hospital on Friday at the end of stage 6. "The infection is now under control, but Elisa is still in a lot of pain.".