Description
April 1, 2026
14th Dwars door Vlaanderen / A travers la Flandre WE 2026 🇧🇪 (1.WWT) WE – Waregem – Waregem : 128,8 km
Classified as a 1.WWT event by the UCI,
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April 1, 2026
14th Dwars door Vlaanderen / A travers la Flandre WE 2026 🇧🇪 (1.WWT) WE – Waregem – Waregem : 128,8 km
Classified as a 1.WWT event by the UCI, the Dwars door Vlaanderen WE is a premier one-day classic on the Women’s WorldTour that serves as the definitive final test before the Tour of Flanders. The 2026 edition follows a 129-kilometer route that begins and ends in Waregem, traversing the heart of the Flemish Ardennes with a challenging series of eight climbs and six cobbled sectors. The course features iconic ascents such as the Berg Ten Houte and Knokteberg-Trieu, alongside the newly introduced Hellestraat and a double passage over the Nokereberg. With its combination of technical, narrow roads and potential for heavy crosswinds on the open plains, the race rewards aggressive tactics and technical mastery, often culminating in a high-speed finish between a reduced group of elite classics specialists.
Marlen Reusser (Movistar) won the women’s Dwars door Vlaanderen, coming from behind to outsprint Demi Vollering (FDJ United-Suez) and Lieke Nooijen (Visma-Lease a Bike) after Nooijen almost caught the two superstars by surprise on the finishing straight.
Reusser attacked with 24km to go just after the Huisepontweg cobbles, and Vollering jumped after her, bridging across at the bottom of the Nokereberg 22km from the finish.
After a brief disagreement, the two riders traded turns to keep a slender advantage on a chase group of 21 riders where UAE Team ADQ did a lot of the chase work but eventually ran out of riders.
The gap was reduced to as few as eight seconds atop the last climb, the Nokereberg, but as the cooperation in the chase group went away, Reusser and Vollering could increase their advantage again, ensuring they would stay away.
Reusser forced Vollering to lead out the sprint, and their pace went out completely while Nooijen attacked from the chase group.
Nooijen came past Vollering and Reusser, who had to sprint after her to get in her wheel. Reusser and Vollering came around Nooijen in the last 50 metres, and Reusser just pipped Vollering to the line.
“I’m a bit surprised because I didn’t expect this, I’m so happy,” Reusser said after the finish. “In the beginning of the race, I really had trouble positioning and stuff, but I kept being confident, also to help the team. We have a super strong team, and it felt so good to know that I had Liane [Lippert] and Cat [Ferguson] in the group behind, they are so fast, so if we don’t make it, we can probably still get a result with them.
“It was key to have Cat behind because I knew I don’t have to really keep pushing. I said to Demi, ‘I stay in the wheel’. We had the opposite in the Tour de Suisse, today I had the cards to say I can go in the wheel. She had to go, I could follow for quite a while and then I could make it,” Reusser described the sprint.
However, Nooijen almost threw a spanner in the works with her late attack. Reusser did not expect Nooijen to be as close as she was, flying past the two leaders at the 250-metre mark.
“I was like, ‘what the fuck?’. I heard it on the radio, but the TV is behind, so I hear ‘Visma is coming very fast’, and I was like, ‘yeah, I can see that’. I thought, give it a try. I was really lucky with the sprint because I had this injury, and my sprint isn’t great at the moment, but I could stay in the wheel for so long,” finished Reusser.
How it unfolded
The early breakaway was caught with 44km to go. Franzi Koch (FDJ United-Suez) had already led the peloton over the cobbles of the Mariaborrestraat, closing the gap to the break, and then hit the front again on the Eikenberg, splitting the peloton.
Vollering, Puck Pieterse (Fenix-Premier Tech), Letizia Borghesi (AG Insurance-Soudal), and Fleur Moors (Lidl-Trek) pulled away as Koch sat up, opening a 15-second gap.
UAE Team ADQ put Eleonora Gasparrini, Silvia Persico, and even Elisa Longo Borghini to work to close this gap, making the catch 36km from the finish. An attack by Mischa Bredewold (SD Worx-Protime) was reeled in by Koch, then Karlijn Swinkels (UAE Team ADQ) attacked just before the Huisepontweg cobblestone section.
Swinkels opened a seven-second gap over the cobbles but was then caught on the asphalt afterwards, and Reusser jumped away solo. Pieterse tried to close the gap but couldn’t follow Reusser’s acceleration. After a moment of regrouping, Longo Borghini launched from the group but had Ferguson on her wheel, and instead it was Vollering who could get clear and started a solo chase.
Vollering caught up with Reusser on the Nokereberg where Lotte Kopecky (SD Worx-Protime) attacked from the chase group. With Swinkels and Zoe Backstedt (Canyon-SRAM zondacrypto) on her wheel, they got a small separation as Longo Borghini couldn’t close the gap, but when Kim Le Court-Pienaar (AG Insurance-Soudal) took over, the three attackers were caught.
Up front, Vollering and Reusser had a little discussion but eventually worked together, increasing their gap to 19 seconds after the Herlegemstraat cobbles with 18km to go as UAE Team ADQ took up the chase in numbers with Persico, Gasparrini and Longo Borghini.
At the 10km mark, the chasers were ten seconds behind, but Persico had now given her all and dropped out of the chase group. After the Waregemsestraat climb, Vollering tried to attack but could not shake off Reusser, and the lack of cooperation in the chase group meant that the two frontrunners pulled away again.
On the final kilometre, Reusser sat on Vollering’s wheel, and Nooijen had attacked from behind, flying past with 250 metres to go and forcing Vollering to sprint after her which gave Reusser the edge in a close sprint to the line.
Backstedt won the group sprint for fourth place ahead of Eline Jansen (VolkerWessels) and Ferguson.
Results :










