Thursday, 21 August 2025
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‘I listened to my DS for a change’ – Rouleur

Puck Pieterse must have been wondering what else she would have to do to win a bike race this spring. The Fenix-Deceuninck rider hadn’t finished outside the top ten in all nine of the races she had started in 2025, but she had not yet raised her arms in celebration. Three fourth-place finishes, a second and then most recently a third-place at Sunday’s Amstel Gold Race are all commendable results, but how could the young Dutch superstar break her duck and get her first Classics win? 

The simple answer is get into a race where tactics would not dominate the way the finale would play out, where Pieterse can show off her pure ability. Step up the Mur de Huy. The iconic, brutal final climb of La Flèche Wallonne, where aerodynamics have very little effect, where teammates can’t offer much support, where it’s rider-against-rider up an agonisingly steep final kilometre.

Of course, pacing and timing are vital on the Mur and Pieterse joked in her post-race interview: “I listened to my sports director for once” about when to launch her winning attack. It’s as simple as that if you are the best young talent in the peloton, which Pieterse certainly is. Ever since her impressive fifth place at Strade Bianche in 2023 as a 20-year-old and then her Tour de France stage win last year, Pieterse’s talent has been obvious. However, she has often been hamstrung by the way races have played out, often where she worked too much for others in groups and lacked teammates in key moments in the finales of the major one-day races. On Sunday at Amstel, Pieterse worked too hard and was on the front too much, taking too much wind for others in the leading group and missed out as Mischa Bredewold disappeared up the road to victory

Puck Pieterse celebrating her Flèche Wallonne 2025 win

On Wednesday, there was no such mistake. Entering the final climb up the Mur and on its lower slopes, thanks to solid work from her team delivering her into position, Pieterse sat behind the favourite Demi Vollering and her FDJ-Suez teammate Juliette Labous, who set the pace on the unforgiving average of 9.7%. Riders were dropping like flies, including Lotte Kopecky and all her SD-Worx Protime teammates. Moments where Pieterse may have attacked previously — with 500m to go, 400m and then when Labous peeled off – came and went and she was still sitting comfortably in the lead bunch, but still behind Vollering. 

The group was whittled right down to the strongest challengers. Next up to be struggling, coming…

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