Description
September 4, 2025
27th Simac Ladies Tour 2025 🇳🇱 (2.WWT) WE – Stage 3 – Zeewolde – Zeewolde : 160,1 km
The Holland Ladies Tour is a women’s elite professional road bicycle racing stage race held annually in September since 1998 in the Netherlands.
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September 4, 2025
27th Simac Ladies Tour 2025 🇳🇱 (2.WWT) WE – Stage 3 – Zeewolde – Zeewolde : 160,1 km
The Holland Ladies Tour is a women’s elite professional road bicycle racing stage race held annually in September since 1998 in the Netherlands. It’s a tour with 6 or 7 stages. For sponsorship reasons the 2011 race was officially titled the Profile Ladies Tour, the 2012 race the BrainWash Ladies Tour, from 2013 to 2019 as the Boels Rental Ladies Tour, and since 2021 as the Simac Ladies Tour.
No one could answer Lorena Wiebes’ (SD Worx-Protime) dominant sprint as she took another commanding victory on stage 3 at the Simac Ladies Tour.
The European Champion was part of a 17-rider front echelon that split off the peloton through strong crosswinds in the first 40km of the race, and that gained more than seven minutes on the rest of the peloton.
In the final sprint, Wiebes launched off the wheel of Zoe Bäckstedt (Canyon-SRAM zondacrypto) and crossed the line first ahead of runner-up Megan Jastrab (Picnic PostNL) and third-placed Amalie Dideriksen (Cofidis) in Zeewolde.
With three stage wins, Wiebes extended her lead in the overall classification to Jastrab and Balsamo as the race heads into stage 4 on Friday.
How it Unfolded
The peloton raced a 160.1km flat race in and out of Zeewolde, and as expected based on previous stages, strong winds caused major splits and echelons forming in the peloton out on the roads.
A 17-rider, front group split off the front through the windy sectors in the first 40km in Ketelbrug, which included double stage winner and overall race leader Lorena Wiebes (Team SD Worx–Protime), along with her Team SD Worx–Protime teammate Femke Markus.
Other riders who made the front split with multiple teammates included overall leader Lorena Wiebes and Femke Markus (Team SD Worx–Protime), Karlijn Swinkels and Lara Gillespie (UAE Team ADQ), and Lieke Nooijen, Nienke Veenhoven, and Margaux Vigié (Team Visma–Lease a Bike).
Lone riders in the group included Nicole Steigenga (AG Insurance–Soudal Team), Zoe Bäckstedt (Canyon//SRAM Racing), Christina Schweinberger (Fenix-Deceuninck), Lily Williams (Human Powered Health), Elisa Balsamo (Lidl-Trek), Marie Le Net (FDJ-Suez), Cat Ferguson (Movistar Team), Megan Jastrab (Team Picnic PostNL), Babette van der Wolf (EF Education-Oatly) and Amalie Dideriksen (Cofidis Women Team).
The front echelon built a more than four-minute lead on the rest of the field with 30km remaining, while Lidl-Trek, Liv-AlUla-Jayco and Uno-X Mobility did the lion’s share of the work to try and manage that gap.
Inside the final 20km, attacks from the front echelon came from Jastrab, but she was quickly pulled back in by Team SD Worx–Protime and Team Visma–Lease a Bike support riders in the mix.
The attacks lulled, and the leaders settled into a collaborative pace heading into the final 10km with Wiebes positioned comfortably near the back as her teammate Markus led the group.
The pace slowed with 8km remaining, as all riders focused on Wiebes, aiming to disrupt the Team SD Worx–Protime efforts and bring her to a third consecutive win.
Team Visma–Lease a Bike’s Vigié and Team SD Worx–Protime’s Markus pulled the field into 5km to go, as the riders in the group prepared for both crosswinds and positioning, tossing their waterbottles on the roadside while racing toward the final stretch.
The gap blown out to more than seven minutes, the group raced onto the narrow, tree-lined roads, none attempting an attack with two kilometres remaining, and riders without teammates freelancing on the wheels of their rivals.
Steigenga jumped ahead of the last right turn with 1km to go, but she was caught before the final left turn with 500 metres to go.
Bäckstedt was the first to start her long-range sprint, but Wiebes jumped around her with Jastrab on her wheel, the pair stretching out their legs in the final 100 metres.
It was Wiebes who, again, stole the show, winning her third consecutive stage and extending her lead in the overall classification.
Results :