Racing
TDFF Daily | Stage 5 | Kristen Faulkner sprints into second overall
Magdeleine Vallieres forced to leave the race after crash in the final kilometers
Kristen Faulkner gained time on most of her GC rivals and is now placed second overall in the Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift.
Our double Olympic gold medalist and American road-race champ escaped unscathed from the chaos of the final kilometers of the Tour's fifth stage with the lead group and sprinted to fourth in Amneville.
It was a bittersweet day for Kristen and her EF-Oatly-Cannondale teammates however, as Magdeleine Vallieres fell in a mass crash in the final kilometers. Mags was unable to continue the race and is now being treated for concussion symptoms. We’re going to miss her, but are glad she is receiving the best possible care from our team’s medical staff.
Noemi Rüegg and Alison Jackson also went down in the crash, but were able to get up and race to the finish, while Kristen went for the win up ahead.
The American champion rode into the final kilometer with a group of four. Just after the red kite, she took advantage of a moment of hesitation and tried an attack, just like her winning move in the Paris Olympic road race. This time, her rivals were right on her wheel. Kristen poured her power into the pedals but couldn’t shake them before the line.
Tomorrow, she’ll go for it again. Stage six promises another hard day of racing, as the Tour covers 159.6 kilometers of hilly roads from Remiremont to Morteau. Most of the climbing is packed into the final half of the race. Although Kristen is just 19 seconds back from the GC lead right now, her main goal remains a stage win
Hear her thoughts from after today’s stage.
Kristen Faulkner
There were a lot of teams that wanted to get in a break, so every climb was, like, attack, attack, full gas. That made it really hard. It meant that you had to have a really good position going into every climb. Maybe a small group would get away, and then it would come back together. I tried to make the front selection every time it split on the climb, because I didn't know if it would stay away or not.
I was just trying to be as far forward as possible because I knew it was going to be a technical finish.
The other teams really drilled it up that last climb, and then Kasia made an attack. We got on her wheel, and then I tried to attack, but I had a short hesitation, which I think prevented me from getting the gap.
Then, I tried to just drill it to create a gap, but I noticed they were on my wheel. If I dragged them to the line, they were all going to beat me, so I sat up a bit, and they went, and that was that. I think I lost my shot when I tried to attack and just hesitated.
Every day I'm asked if I'm going for GC, and the answer is no, we’re going for a stage. For me, walking away with a stage win is more important than walking away top 10 on GC. We don't know how the mountains will change my legs. Maybe they'll be great, maybe not. We're just going to take it one day at a time.