Domination is the buzzword coming out of this year鈥檚 Tour de France Femmes, which wrapped up on Sunday, July 30, with a short individual time trial in the town of Pau. Dutch super-team SD Worx bulldozed the competition, sweeping the podium in the final stage and winning the yellow jersey with star rider Demi Vollering of The Netherlands. Vollering, 26, finished the eight-day race with a comfortable 3:03 lead on her own teammate, Lotte Kopecky of Belgium. Of the eight stages, SD Worx won four.
But SD Worx鈥檚 performance was hardly the only talking point to emerge from the second edition of the Tour de France Femmes, which has quickly become the biggest single event in women鈥檚 professional road cycling. Here are five other major storylines from this year鈥檚 race.
The Annemiek van Vleuten Era Ends
From 2017 until 2023, women鈥檚 cycling鈥檚 biggest rivalry pitted SD Worx (formerly called Boels-Dolmans) against whichever team employed Dutch phenom Annemiek van Vleuten (who was on our 国产吃瓜黑料rs of the Year list in 2022), the current world and Olympic champion. A one-woman powerhouse, van Vleuten can climb, time trial, and ride flats better than almost any rider in the peloton. She thoroughly drubbed SD Worx for much of 2022, winning women鈥檚 cycling鈥檚 biggest stage races: Tour de France Femmes, Giro d鈥橧talia Donne, and Ceratizit Challenge by La Vuelta a Espa帽a. After the season, the 40-year-old van Vleuten announced that 2023 would be her swan song. Many journalists鈥攎yself included鈥攁ssumed she would steamroll the competition again this season. She appeared ready to repeat, winning the Vuelta Feminina (which replaced the Ceratizit Challenge) and the Giro d鈥橧talia Donne. But domination comes at a price, and van Vleuten looked noticeably off her game during the Tour de France Femmes. During the race鈥檚 big climbing stage in the Pyrenees, van Vleuten tried again and again to drop Vollering. But the younger rider hung tough, and accelerated on the final ascent of the day, the legendary Col du Tourmalet. Cameras caught sight of van Vleuten fading off the back into the thick fog鈥攑erhaps a fitting end to her era of dominance. She finished third on the stage and fourth overall in the race for the yellow jersey. All reports say she still plans to retire at the end of the season.

Breakaways Thwart the Peloton
Critics sometimes blast the men鈥檚 Tour de France for being boring and formulaic鈥攄isapproval tied to the peloton chasing down each day鈥檚 breakaway with relative ease. Most professional road cycling races feature a battle between the main group of riders and the small break, which is comprised of riders who bolt away early and attempt to reach the finish line ahead of the peloton. At the Tour, where every stage win brings cash prizes and international fame, teams directors calculate exactly how hard the peloton must ride in order to bring the breakaway聽 back before a sprint. Most breaks are doomed, so watching the cat-and-mouse battle play out often feels like a foregone conclusion. That鈥檚 not the case in women鈥檚 pro road cycling, where breakaways regularly surprise the peloton and make it all the way to the line. There are many opinions on why this is鈥攅ach team has fewer riders than in the men鈥檚 race, for example鈥攂ut longtime cycling fans can agree that the peloton鈥檚 battle with the breakaway聽in women鈥檚 road racing produces more surprises. That was the case at the 2023 Tour de France Femmes, where four of the seven road racing stages (stage 8 was an individual time trial) were won by breakaway riders. Kopecky won stage 1 after attacking solo inside the final 10 miles; Yara Kastelijn of team Fenix-Deceuninck won stage 4 after a daylong break; Ricarda Bauernfeind of Canyon-SRAM held off a charging peloton to win stage 5 by just 22 seconds; Emma Norsgaard of Movistar, one of four riders to break away, finished just 1 second ahead of the charging bunch.
Danske Emma Norsgaard vinder 6. etape af TDF Femmes! 馃嚛馃嚢馃嚛馃嚢
— Eurosport Danmark (@eurosportdk)
Mountains Produce Excitement
The ascent of the Tourmalet was the most thrilling section of this year鈥檚 race, and it saw a major battle between Vollering, van Vleuten, and Polish rider Katarzyna Niewiadoma. As Niewiadoma attacked up the hulking climb solo, Vollering and van Vleuten battled each other a minute or so behind, with Vollering eventually bolting away to drop van Vleuten, catch and pass Niewiadoma, win the stage, and take the yellow jersey. The drama was amped up by the presence of thick fog on the climb, giving the stage聽an epic feel to it. The whole stage reinforced the opinion that women鈥檚 cycling absolutely needs to use the massive climbs used in men鈥檚 races. My hope is that future editions of the race go to other legendary ascents, like l鈥橝lpe d鈥橦uez, the Col du Peyresourde, and Mont Ventoux. Not that long ago, some women鈥檚 race directors intentionally steered away from these big climbs for fear that the disparity in climbing ability within the pack would lead to boring racing. These days, the women鈥檚 peloton is full of top climbers. Stages in the mountains produce thrilling, edge-of-your-seat battles that will capture the attention of even casual watchers.
Vimos momentos de frustraci贸n y fricci贸n, pero cuando Demi Vollering lanz贸 su ataque en el Tourmalet nadie pudo seguirla
Vollering lidera la general con 1:50" sobre Kasia Niewiadoma y 2:28" sobre Annemiek van Vleuten en el
Sigue el Tour en GCN+
— GCN en espa帽ol (@gcnespanol)
Must-See TV
Prior to the 2023 race, sponsor Zwift circulated viewership numbers compiled by Neilson Sports from the Tour de France Femmes鈥檚 2022 debut. The report came from regional TV and streaming studies across eight countries (USA, UK, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Australia, Japan). According to the report, the race had a cumulative live audience of 23.2 million people, with, on average, 2.9 million people watching each stage live. That number represented a huge accomplishment, and it placed the Tour de France Femmes ahead of the men鈥檚 Giro d鈥橧talia in terms of total live audience. Big and sweeping studies of this size and scope include plenty of estimation and back-of-the-napkin math, and in my previous role as a reporter with The SportsBusiness Journal,聽we were told to never glean fin-detail conclusions from them. But the macro findings of the report still speak to the event鈥檚 soaring popularity with TV audiences in its first year. Any sport that is working toward financial stability would salivate over TV numbers of this nature. I cannot wait to see the viewership statistics from the 2023 edition, and my prediction is that overall viewership will decline slightly, due to a slight drop in pre-race enthusiasm compared to its debut last season. But if the numbers are anywhere close to what the race achieved last year, organizers, sponsors, riders, and fans alike can all be extremely happy.
SD Worx Remains on a Roll
SD Worx has been the team to beat in women鈥檚 cycling for the past decade, and over the years it has employed some of the best riders in the sport鈥檚 history: Anna van der Breggen, Lizzie Deignan, Chantal van den Broek-Blaak, and Evelyn Stevens, among others. The 2023 Tour de France Femmes represents the official start of the team鈥檚 Vollering/Kopecky era of dominance, and I have no doubt that these two riders鈥攑lus star sprinter Lorena Wiebes鈥攚ill continue to win the biggest races on the calendar. I鈥檝e written about the team鈥檚 success on a few occasions and have interviewed current and former riders, as well as directors, about the team鈥檚 secret to success. To me, they are the women鈥檚 cycling equivalent of the San Antonio Spurs that won five NBA championships between 1999 and 2014. SD Worx has no clandestine weapon or gimmicky model for winning. They simply do the boring and basic fundamentals of bike racing better than the other teams, from talent identification, to rider retention, to race tactics. SD Worx hires raw talent away from smaller squads鈥擵ollering, Kopecky, and Wiebes all raced on smaller pro teams鈥攁nd then molds them into top professionals. Young riders have two seasons to show promise, or else the team cuts bait and lets them go. SD Worx has one of the bigger budgets in the sport, so it pays top dollar to keep the riders that show promise, and rarely lose stars to other squads. And the team has no room for flashy riders or those driven by ego. It鈥檚 a recipe for success that is far easier jotted down in a column than practiced in the real world. Perhaps that鈥檚 why SD Worx truly stands out.
Demi Vollering's celebration and immediately embracing Lotte Kopecky after she finished! 鉂わ笍
— NBC Sports Cycling (@NBCSCycling)