Description
July 27, 2022
Tour de Wallonie 2022 – Stage 5 – Le Roeulx – Chapelle-lez-Herlaimont : 214,8 km
The VOO-Tour de Wallonie is a five-day stage race held in the Wallonia region of Belgium,
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July 27, 2022
Tour de Wallonie 2022 – Stage 5 – Le Roeulx – Chapelle-lez-Herlaimont : 214,8 km
The VOO-Tour de Wallonie is a five-day stage race held in the Wallonia region of Belgium, a French-speaking area located in the south of the country. Like these one-day races, the Tour de Wallonie is characterised by an abundance of short sharp climbs and fatiguing, rolling roads. As a result, this race often favours the Classics specialists and those riders with a killer uphill sprint. While the stage start and finish locations change from edition to edition, the format of each Tour de Wallonie remains very much the same with five rolling stages held in and around Belgium’s Wallonia region. Several of these stages also tend to end on a short sharp climb, opening the door to those riders with a strong uphill kick, or those brave enough to attack from far out.
Jan Bakelants (Intermarché-Wanty-Gobert Matériaux) won stage 5 of the Tour de Wallonie from a bunch sprint as race leader Robert Stannard (Alpecin-Deceuninck) sewed up the overall title with his second-place finish in Chapelle-lez-Herlaimont, trailed by Axel Laurance (B&B Hotels-KTM) in third.
The Australian overall champion, who also secured the sprint classification, came away with two podiums and one fourth across the five days of racing.
Loic Vliegen (Intermarché-Wanty-Gobert Matériaux) secured second in the final standings, 10 seconds back, and Matthias Skjelmose (Trek-Segafredo) was third, another two seconds down.
Before the awards ceremony, Bakelants was extremely emotional, as this was his first stage race victory since 2015.
“This victory is a proof for old riders to keep believing. After so many difficult years,” Bakelants said. “Today I worked hard for the team, I wanted to launch Lorenzo Rota for the sprint. But I made the gap. This victory is incredible.”
The fifth and final day of racing in Belgium was the longest, 214.8 kilometres, and provided 20km of cobbled sections. After 60km of flat terrain, 14 riders had distanced themselves at the front but the gap had dropped below one minute.
The list of riders who did not finish stage 5 was also long, 27 not surviving to the finish in Chapelle-lez-Herlaimont, including Biniam Girmay (Intermarché-Wanty-Gobert), who was involved in a crash on the second cobbled sector and abandoned. His team later said the Eritrean rider did not sustain any serious injuries and can, as planned, continue his preparation for his next goals.
It was not long after Girmay’s departure that the gap continued to fade and riders fell off the pace. Five riders took up an assault from the peloton – Sep Vanmarcke (Israel-Premier Tech), Ben Healy (EF Education-EasyPost), Patrick Gamper (Bora-Hansgrohe), Luc Wirtgen (Bingoal Pauwels Sauces WB) and Aaron van Poucke (Sport Vlaanderen-Baloise).
After more reshuffling and with 30km to go there were eight leaders at the front – Edward Theuns (Trek-Segafredo), Healy, Ben Turner (Ineos Grenadiers), Vanmarcke, Davide Ballerini (QuickStep-AlphaVinyl), Matteo Trentin (UAE Team Emirates), Wirtgen and Dries van Gestel (TotalEnergies). In the group, Healy was best placed at 2:58 behind race leader Stannard.
On the final of eight cobbled sectors, just under 10km from the finish, four riders in the peloton crashed – Larry Warbasse (AG2R Citroën), Lindsay De Vylder (Sport Vlaanderen-Baloise) Quentin Jauregui (B&B Hotels-KTM), Pim Ronhaar (Baloise-Trek Lions).
With 5.5km to go, Ballerini and Trentin attacked and Vanmarcke took up the chase behind and they were joined by Theuns. Then Theuns launched his own attack, with Vanmarcke countering.
Inside 1.5km the leaders had been caught by the bunch and Bakelants hit the front and held off Stannard for the victory.
Results :
Final General Classification :