Description
May 18, 2023
Vuelta a Burgos Feminas 2023 – Stage 1 – Quintanaortuño – Medina de Pomar : 115,6 km
The Vuelta a Burgos Féminas is a four-day stage race held in the province of Burgos,
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May 18, 2023
Vuelta a Burgos Feminas 2023 – Stage 1 – Quintanaortuño – Medina de Pomar : 115,6 km
The Vuelta a Burgos Féminas is a four-day stage race held in the province of Burgos, an area of northern Spain renowned for its undulating terrain, sun-baked landscapes and imposing mountain passes. The race first took place back in 2015 but until 2018 it was held as a national-level event, meaning it was bypassed by most big-name pros in the peloton. In 2019, however, it was recognised by the UCI and assigned a 2.1 rating. This landmark edition saw riders from all over the world descend on Burgos to compete and, as a result, the race’s popularity boomed. In 2021 it was added to the Women’s WorldTour calendar alongside another Spanish stage race, Itzulia Women. The latter was originally due to take place first and kick off two exciting weeks of stage racing in mid-May, but after being cancelled the Vuelta a Burgos Féminas assumed its place as the first WorldTour-ranked stage race of the season. The multi-day event consists of four stages held within the province of Burgos. In 2019 these stages weren’t very dynamic and nearly all of them followed a similar hilly route. The 2021 race broke this predictable cycle by including a brutal summit finish on the final day of racing. This summit finish took place on the infamous climb to Lagunas de Neila, a climb that is often used on the Queen stage of the men’s race.
After a one-month break from racing, Lorena Wiebes (Team SD Worx) has come back with a victory on stage 1 of the Vuelta a Burgos Feminas, winning the sprint ahead of Elisa Balsamo (Trek-Segafredo) and Chloé Dygert (Canyon-SRAM).
The stage saw two solo breakaways that never troubled the peloton and a four-rider move that brought some excitement to the final but was reeled in 2.3 kilometres from the finish.
In the sprint, Wiebes had to come from behind and utilised her speed to pass everyone else and take the stage and the first leader’s jersey.
“It was really windy, but we also had a lot of headwinds. It was really fast into the last climb of the day, and the team did a good job to control the attacks. Our lead-out was not as planned because there was quite a lot of chaos in the final, but I found a good spot and was able to do my sprint as I wanted,” said the stage winner.
Wiebes then pointed out that defending the leader’s jersey will not be a priority for the team that instead wants to get their GC leader Demi Vollering to stage 4 without any time losses. Last year, Vollering won the queen stage but finished third overall as she had lost 49 seconds the previous day.
“Tomorrow it’s quite a hard finish, uphill. We go again for a stage win, and stage 4 will be for the GC. But our goal is also to not lose time with Demi,” Wiebes explained.
How it unfolded
The first attacker was Corinna Lechner (Massi-Tactic), who went off after 16km of the 115.6-kilometre stage. Her advantage increased to 1:11 minutes before dropping to just under a minute again.
Magdeleine Vallières (EF Education-TIBCO-SVB) bridged to the German at the start of the day’s only climb, the third-category Alto La Varga, but they were reeled in on the climb. Soraya Paladin (Canyon-SRAM) was first over the top and will wear the red mountain jersey on stage 2.
Lechner’s teammate Valeria Valgonen attacked after the descent to form another solo breakaway. She was up to 1:30 minutes ahead of the peloton until the race hit a crosswind section where Trek-Segafredo increased the pace, leading to Valgonen being caught 32 km from the finish.
After passing through the finishing town of Medina de Pomar with 29km to go, the peloton went on a loop southeast of the small, historic town that included the day’s only intermediate sprint near the top of an uncategorised climb.
Paladin, Cecilie Uttrup Ludwig (FDJ-SUEZ), and Shirin van Anrooij (Trek-Segafredo) sprinted to the bonus seconds and kept going, prompting a.o. GC favourites Vollering and Ashleigh Moolman-Pasio to bridge – but none of the seven riders in this move pressed on fully, and they were quickly reeled in.
Alicia González (Movistar Team) attacked on the descent, and when she was caught 11.5 km from the line, her teammate Aude Biannic and Valerie Demey (Liv Racing TeqFind) countered. Elena Pirrone (Israel-Premier Tech Roland) and Jade Wiel (FDJ-SUEZ) bridged to the front, and together they kept a ten-second gap on a peloton that could not get organised to close this small gap for some time.
Eventually, though, the four frontrunners were caught, and a chaotic sprint ensued. Wiebes was somewhat boxed in coming onto the finishing straight, only finding a gap when Tereza Neumanová (Liv Racing TeqFind) launched her sprint.
Balsamo jumped off the wheel of her teammate Lucinda Brand, but Wiebes was now winding up her speed and passed the Italian champion on the final 50 metres to win the stage.
Results :