Lorena Wiebes (Team DSM) surprised herself by staying with the best over the hills of Limburg on stage 4 of the Simac Ladies Tour and defended her yellow jersey. In the end, only a late solo attack by Riejanne Markus (Jumbo-Visma) prevented Wiebes from taking another stage victory.
Wiebes finished the stage as runner-up, 14 seconds behind Markus, easily beating the rest of the peloton with another of her trademark sprints and pocketing six bonus seconds.
During the first stages, Wiebes had always been noncommittal about the race overall, taking it day by day and underlining that the general classification wasn’t a goal for her.
“I had a good day today, but it could just as well have been a bad day,” she explained. “Normally, the Cauberg isn’t exactly my friend, but today it went well.”
On the third ascent of the famous climb, Wiebes even went to the front of the peloton in a bid to maximise her chances. “I thought that if I set a steady pace, maybe they won’t attack, because then it would split again,” she explained.
Such a split had happened after the second ascent of the Kruisberg when Wiebes only just made it into the first group of 15 riders and was hanging on by a thread. Fortunately for Wiebes, things came back together again before the Cauberg, or the race could have gone very differently.
“I felt strong today,” Wiebes said after the stage. “And the team had worked so hard, I just had to keep going on the last climbs. The way Elise [Uijen] took turns, that was not normal for a first-year elite rider, and Leah [Kirchmann] was also super strong controlling the gap behind the front duo. It is a shame we lost Pfeiffer [Georgi] in a crash, but we got the best out of it today.”
Going into the time trial stage 5, 17.8 km around Sittard, Wiebes is 20 seconds ahead of Karlijn Swinkels (Jumbo-Visma), 27 seconds ahead of Audrey Cordon-Ragot (Trek-Segafredo), 29 seconds ahead of Alison Jackson (Liv Racing Xstra), and 30 seconds ahead of Anna Henderson (Jumbo-Visma). Seven riders sit at 33 seconds, while Markus is 58 seconds behind.
“I think it is to my advantage that the time trial course is quite technical, it goes up and down, left and right all the time. There aren’t many long straights, I don’t like these much. And there is rain forecast, that makes it even more technical. I hope to take my good legs there and be up there with the best. Usually during a stage race I feel I get better and better nine times out of 10, so hopefully…
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