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‘I couldn’t give up due to my own self respect’ – Rouleur

‘I couldn’t give up due to my own self respect’ 
– Rouleur

At the bottom of the Col de la Madeleine, Susanne Andersen knew that she would not make it to the end of the stage before the time cut in the Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift. She was dropped – very dropped – from the very back of the splintered peloton, over an hour behind stage winner Pauline Ferrand-Prévot who had already begun celebrating on the top of the mountain. There was no reason for the Uno-X Mobility rider to battle on to the finish line, there was not even a slim possibility that she would crest the summit before the 45 minute marker that signified the cut-off point for the queen stage. But this is the Tour de France, and you fight for the Tour de France.

“I’ve been struggling already for a few days. I have inflammation in my left leg, so that is already giving me some problems in earlier stages, and I think everything was just adding up, and then my crash on top didn’t make it any better obviously,” Andersen told journalists a few moments after crossing the line as the final fans were beginning to trod back to the foot of the climb in La Chambre. 

“I am just not able to push anymore like I really want to. I really tried my best, but this is just the maximum I could do at the moment.”

Image: Tornanti

The Norwegian rider was not angry, nor was she upset, but she was proud and honest. She had failed to finish the Tour de France Femmes, but this was beside the point. Andersen had made it to the top, she had fought demons and she had honoured the greatest bike race on the planet. Ferrand-Prévot had received the spotlights, the yellow jersey and the accolades an hour before her, but there was beauty in Andersen’s spirit.

“Already at the bottom I knew how far behind I was. Due to my own self respect but also to the team, and because we have a lot of people here from Norway, and I didn’t want to give up without giving it my all to the finish line and that’s what I tried to do,” she smiled ruefully.

It was the support of the French fans who had made it possible for Andersen to push herself to her limits and beyond. Every corner of the Col de la Madeleine was lined by spectators who enthusiastically encouraged their favourite riders to reach the summit. As the gradients kicked up, the fans shouted louder. This was all Andersen needed to make it.

Image: Tornanti

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