Gallery: La Course by Le Tour de France 2020

Gallery: La Course by Le Tour de France 2020


PHOTOS: SWPIX/ASO

There were some, including a certain rider who may or may not spend most of her time in a somewhat striking rainbow striped outfit, who had expressed the view that the parcours for this race was not befitting of the Women's WorldTour. In response others, who may or may not include the rider who triumphed today, suggested that the aforementioned individual was merely grumbling because the course was ill-suited to her particular strengths.

Who are we to say which of the two positions was correct? Well, as it happens, we're the world's finest cycling magazine, and we certainly know a good bike race when we watch one.

In the end, while the route was, not the most objectively challenging, there was enough in it to cause a shuffling of the pack. When the racing got going good and proper, it was half a dozen of the Women's WorldTour's finest who managed to separate themselves from the rest. They represented a variety of of different types of rider. Only two were from the same team. 

And it was that team - Trek-Segafredo, in case you haven't figured it out yet - which managed to make their margin count.

With neither Côte de Rimiez nor the subsequent, shallower climb up to Aspremont enough to reduce the six down to, well, less than six, once the group arrived back on Nice's Promenade des Anglais, unless one last dart could break the group apart, the sprint finish looked nailed on. AVV tried - and failed - for the final time; neither Kasia Niewiadoma not Demi Vollering had anything left in their legs; Vos and Deignan wanted to go heads-up; Longo-Borghini, more of a diesel, was all in for Deignan.

(That, by the way, reminds me to ask if we can please issue a temporary moratorium on the phrase "cat and mouse tactics"? Maybe play with poker metaphors for a while? No? Okay.)

Lizzie Deignan found herself on the front, with everyone looking at her. She needed her team-mate to do her thing. The Italian duly delivered, going from the back and forcing Vos to follow. Last year's winner looked to have stolen a march on the British rider but there was more road left, and Deignan was able to come back at her, stealing it on the line with an impeccably executed lunge. 

Hell of a race.

La Course

La Course

La Course

La Course

 

La Course

La Course

La Course

La Course

La Course

La Course

La Course

La Course

La Course

READ MORE

Frenchness and fifty years of hurt: Paul Seixas and the nation's next great hope

Frenchness and fifty years of hurt: Paul Seixas and the nation's next great hope

Ned Boulting on the fragile, self-mocking soul of French cycling — and a nation of nearly-men on the precipice of change.

Read more
Tim Merlier and Soudal Quick-Step teammates at the Tour de France team presentation in Barcelona

'I'm a sprinter, I need to survive': How the fastmen are shaping up at kilometre zero of the Tour

The 2026 route wants the sprinters dead by Paris. The points classification, reformed in their favour, might just keep them alive long enough to win...

Read more
Montjuïc: Back in the Game

Montjuïc: Back in the Game

The famous Barcelona climb has a long, storied history in cycling, from Bahamontes to Pogačar. Last featuring in 2009, the Tour returns to Montjuïc for...

Read more
A Linguistic Tour de France: A guide to the languages and dialects along the 2026 route

A Linguistic Tour de France: A guide to the languages and dialects along the 2026 route

The 113th Tour de France starts in Barcelona and finishes in Paris, covering 3,333 kilometres across two countries, five mountain ranges, and – if you...

Read more
Tadej Pogačar in the yellow jersey and Jonas Vingegaard cross the line together at the 2025 Tour de France

Tour de France 2026 preview: the contenders, sprinters and stage-hunters to watch

From four-time champion Tadej Pogačar to 19-year-old debutant Paul Seixas, a 3,333km route from Barcelona to Paris sets the stage. Here's who to watch across...

Read more
Yannick Talabardon portrait set inside a map of France

Yannick Talabardon: Thoroughly Modern Map Man

Former pro Yannick Talabardon is a rising star in the ASO firmament, modernising the Tour while respecting its history. He pores over the 2026 route...

Read more

READ RIDE REPEAT

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Get closer to the sport than ever before.

Enjoy a digital subscription to Rouleur for just £4 per month and get access to our award-winning magazines.

SUBSCRIBE