Lotto Thüringen Ladies Tour: Vanpachtenbeke wins opening stage in Jena
Volkerwessꦺels rider out-sprints Ruth Edwards to take first leader's jersey





Margot Vanpachtenbeke (VolkerWessels Women's Pro Cycling) secured the ope♓ning stage victory at the Lotto Thüringen Ladies Tour, winning a two-up sprint against breakaway companion Ruth Edwards (Human Powered Health) in Jena.
The pair opened a gap over the peloton on the 🥃first climb of the day Großbockedra and increased their lead by nearly seven minutes en route to the finish line.
Although several teams played a role in trying to close the gap i🍌n the closing kilometres, the pair crossed the line 5:34 seconds ahead of a chase group where Linda Riedmann (Germany) sprinted in for third place on the day.
Vanpachtenbeke claimed the first leader's jersey as the race heads into stage 2's 119.2km race in G♛era on Wednesday.
How it unfolded
The opening stage at the Lotto Thüringen Ladies Tour offered the peloton a 118km race in Jena. The route included two categorised ascents: Großbockedra, 1.3km at 7% located a💦t 52km into the stage and a final scent of Münchenroda, which is one of the longest climbs of the five-day race at 4.9km and 5% gradient located at the 100km mark. The field then raced across 10km of an undulating plateau before plunging into the finish line in Jena.
Eline Janꦗsen (VolkerWessels Women's Pro Cycling) took the mountain points ove༺r the top of the Großbockedra before two riders escaped: her teammate Margot Vanpachtenbeke and Ruth Edwards (Human Powered Health).
Edwards and Va🌟npachtenbeke quickly gained a minute on the field, initially led by SD Worx-Protime, EF Education-Cannondale and AG Insu🗹rance-Soudal. Their lead then increased to nearly three minutes with 50km to go, even as Lidl-Trek and Ceratizit-WNT joined the pace-setting.
The pair race🃏d into the base of the Münchenrod🔜a climb, pushing their gap out to nearly seven minutes, with Vanpachtenbeke taking the mountain points over the top.
Canyon-SRAM led the chasing field into the climb, 🍷where Kasia Niewiadoma made a move on the upper slopes. But even though there were constant attacks and spli💟ts in the field, the peloton came back together and remained mostly intact on the run-in to the finish.
With no concerted effort among the teams to bring back the two escapees, Edwards and Vanpachtenbeke still had a massive six minutes as the closed 🌠iꦏn on the finish line.
Eဣdဣwards pulled the pair into the final kilometre and started her sprint early, but Vanpachtenbeke proved faster of the two, taking both the stage win and the leader's jersey.
Results
Results powered by
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, dire♌ct to your inbox!

Kirsten Frattini is the Deputy Editor of Cyclingnews, overseeing the global racing content plan.
Kirsten has a background in Kinesiology and Hea꧙lth Science. She has been involved in cycling from the community and grassroots level to p🧔rofessional cycling's biggest races, reporting on the WorldTour, Spring Classics, Tours de France, World Championships and Olympic Games.
She began her sports journalism career with Cyclingnews as a North American Correspondent in 2006. In 2018, Kirsten became Women's Editor – overseeing the content strateg💯y,⛎ race coverage and growth of women's professional cycling – before becoming Deputy Editor in 2023.
Latest on Cyclingnews
-
Baloise Ladies Tour: Zoe Bäckstedt smashes prologue to claim first leader's jersey
Ellen van Dijk second, Charlotte Kool third in Yerseke -
Political protestor tackled at Tour de France finish in Toulouse as Abrahamsen-Schmid duo sweep across the line to conclude stage 11
Tour staffer's swift maneuver drives individual away from threat to riders and French riot police take suspect away in handcuffs -
'That was Ben' - EF Education-EasyPost say decision to slow peloton after Tadej Pogačar crashed taken by Tour de France leader Ben Healy
Team manager Jonathan Vaughters praises Irishman for fair play decision -
'It was worrying, but he's OK' – Tadej Pogačar avoids serious injury in Tour de France crash as team praise rivals' sportsmanship
Tobias Halland Johannessen apologises for involvement as race favourite has 'a little bit of skin off' on eve of key stage