Rissveds wins women's eliminator cross country
Engen, Stirnemann round out podium
Seventeen-year-old junior Jenny Rissveds of Sweden took the biggest win of her career in round three of the eliminator World Cup, beating countrywoman a✱nd mentor Alexandra Engen (Ghost). Held in the streets of the host village La Bresse, the French community embraced the event, with spectators lining the course.
The 725-metre course started on the main street of La Bresse, before cutting across a river via a footbridge, and over a steep bridge. From there the riders headed up a small climb to a church yard, where they hit what proved to be the biggest obstacle of the race - a set of stairs in front of the church that led to a number of crashes and flat tires when riders hit the base of t👍he stairs too hard. After a few tight turns through narrow streets, the riders then went down a narrow ramp and💜 into the town square, before circling around the end and hitting one final corner before the sprint to the line.
In the women's final, Rissveds was joined by Engen, Kathrin Stirnemann (Sabine Spitz Haibike) and Australia'ꦛs Rowena Fry. Not🦩 making the final were favourites Anneke Beerten (Milka-Superior), who flatted while leading her semi-final race, and Great Britain's Tracy Moseley, who crashed hard in her semi-final.
Rissveds had a very strong start i♎n the final, hitting the turn to the footbr☂idge first, just ahead of Engen. The two Swedish riders then held off Stirnemann to take the top spots, with Fry rolling in fourth.
Ris🅰sveds screamed as she crossed the finish line, ecstatic at her win. "It is awesome to win this race. It was very hard, I tried to take the lead at start because it was important to be very tough and be first through the first corner. Then it was just to to stay ahead to the finish. It is awesome 𒈔to have two Swedish riders on the podium. Alexandra (Engen) means a lot to me. She has taught me very much."
Full results
1 | Jenny Rissveds (Swe) |
2 | Alexandra Engen (Swe) Ghost Factory Racing Team |
3 | Kathrin Stirnemann (Swi) Sabine Spitz Haibike Team |
4 | Rowena Fry (Aus) |
5 | Cécile Ravanel (Fra) GT Skoda Chamonix |
6 | Anneke Beerten (Ned) Milka-Superior MTB Racing Team |
7 | Maaris Meier (Est) |
8 | Tracy Moseley (GBr) |
9 | Anne Terpstra (Ned) |
10 | Chloe Woodruff (USA) |
11 | Eva Lechner (Ita) Colnago Sudtirol |
12 | Sabrina Maurer (Swi) Bskgraf Rollmat-Koba MTB Team |
13 | Ramona Forchini (Swi) MTB Kader Zentralschweiz |
14 | Pavla Havlikova (Cze) |
15 | Ana Zupan (Slo) Energijateam.com |
16 | Joanna Petterson (USA) |
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buyin𓆉g guides, direct to your inbox!
Latest on Cyclingnews
-
'I expect fireworks' - Marianne Vos ready for her fourth Tour de France Femmes
Dutch phenom to support Ferrand-Prévot for the yellow jersey rather than try for another points classification win -
Demi Vollering finds Tour de France Femmes motivation with new FDJ-Suez colours
'The team’s values have an essential influence on our daily lives as athletes, in the hardest moments as well as the most beautiful' says 2025 Tour favourite -
'If Visma attack, that's OK' - UAE Team Emirates-XRG unfazed by prospect of Jonas Vingegaard launching assault on Tour de France yellow jersey Tadej Pogačar in Alps
'Jonas has to take a step if he wants to make Tadej suffer' says UAE sports manager -
Tour de France stage 17 final kilometre crash ends Tim Merlier's sprint hopes, leaves Biniam Girmay in pain
'I'm just happy I stayed on the bike' - Merlier credits cyclocross skills after missing out on a third win