Description
July 25, 2023
Tour de Wallonie 2023 – Stage 4 ITT – Mons – Mons : 32,7 km
Founded in 1974 but raced by amateurs until 1996, the Ethias Tour de Wallonie is a five-day stage race held in the French-speaking south of Belgium.
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July 25, 2023
Tour de Wallonie 2023 – Stage 4 ITT – Mons – Mons : 32,7 km
Founded in 1974 but raced by amateurs until 1996, the Ethias Tour de Wallonie is a five-day stage race held in the French-speaking south of Belgium. The Wallonia region also plays host to one-day races, the Ethias Tour de Wallonie is characterised by an abundance of short, sharp climbs and rolling roads. Nine WorldTour teams, five ProTeams, two Continental teams and one Cyclo-cross pro team will line up at this year’s race, with Alpecin-Deceuninck, Soudal-Quick Step, Ineos Grenadiers and Lidl-Trek all bringing strong teams. Alpecin-Deceuninck took the overall title with Robert Stannard last year, but the 24-year-old Australian will not be back to defend his crown. Instead, the likes of Mauro Schmid (Soudal-Quick Step), Bauke Mollema (Lidl-Trek) and Lorenzo Rota (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty) may all vy for the win. Alongside one lengthy time trial of 32.7km, the race is more akin to four separate one-day races than an actual stage race and – for that reason – tends to favour the Classics specialists like Tim Wellens (UAE Team Emirates), Dylan Teuns (Israel Premier-Tech), Niki Terpstra and Greg Van Avermaet (AG2R Citroën) – all winners of this race in the past ten years. Since the race opened its doors to pro riders in 1996, only one has managed to win multiple editions – Van Avermaet in 2011 and 2013.
Italian national champion Filippo Ganna blasted across the cobbles in Mons to win the 32.7km individual time trial on stage 4 of the Tour de Wallonie. Teammates Josh Tarling and Ben Swift finished second and third, respectively, to make it a team sweep for Ineos Grenadiers.
Stage 3 winner and GC leader Timo Kielich (Alpecin-Deceuninck) saw the clock tick off 3:19 more than Ganna and he handed over the leader’s jersey to the Italian. With one stage remaining, Tarling is now second overall, 18 seconds back, and Swift is 40 seconds back in third. Kielich moved out of the top 10.
Swift was the eighth rider on the course and went into the hot seat with 38:31, and stayed there as 56 riders crossed the line and Tarling eclipsed him by 24 seconds.
It was not until the top 10 riders were on the course that the best time was challenged, first by Brent Van Moer (Lotto Dstny) who finished with the third best time, 27 seconds back, until Ganna dominated the course.
Ganna, the third-to-last starter, set the second-best time at the first time check, positioned on a descent of the mid-race climb and was four seconds behind Tarling. He continued to up the pace and finished in 38:01, eight seconds better than Tarling, who debuted his TT skinsuit as the British national champion.
A significant non-starter for the stage was Davide Ballerini, who was eight seconds behind race leader Timo Kielich (Alpecin-Deceuninck) in fourth overall. His Soudal-QuickStep team said he pulled out of the race due to knee pain, which was aggravated in a crash on stage 3.
Results :