Tour de France Femmes 2022 stage eight preview - final showdown on La Super Planche des Belles Filles

Tour de France Femmes 2022 stage eight preview - final showdown on La Super Planche des Belles Filles

The steep, savage climb is the finale of the Tour de France Femmes 2022

Words: Katy Madgwick

Tour de France Femmes 2022, stage eight
Distance: 123.3km
Start location: Lure
Finish location: La Super Planche des Belles Filles
Start time: 12:55 BST
Finish time (approx): 16.25 BST

The final stage of the Tour de France Femmes promises explosive racing despite GC contest which looks under the control of Annemeik van Vleuten (Movistar).

The day sees the race’s only summit finish, atop the formidable Super Planche des Belles Filles – a climb seen most recently in the men’s Tour de France, and a place where yellow jerseys have been won and lost over the years.

Tour de France Femmes 2022 stage eight route

The race rolls out from Lure, a city built around a Benedictine Abbey, in the Haute-Saône region of eastern France. The route heads north and then east for around 50km over rolling countryside that should allow the day’s early break to form, before the green jersey contenders take on an intermediate sprint in Faucogney-et-la-Mer. 

From there it’s a short run-in of around 5km to the first categorised climb of the day, the second category Côte d'Esmoulières. At 2.3km, the ascent is relatively short, and steep at an average pitch of 8.5%, which may favour the likes of Annemiek van Vleuten and Marta Cavalli. 

It doesn’t get easier from there, continuing uphill for another 10km or so instead of pitching onto a descent, which will hurt the legs as the GC contenders must dig deep to hold any ground they may have gained on the climb.

The route turns south after that and a short descent leads onto a section of false flat as the peloton travels along the Moselle River valley. There really is no respite on today’s stage, and the climb of Ballon d’Alsace is next up. It’s a longer test at 8.7km and the gradient is relatively steady all the way up. Once the women have crested the climb, they begin a long descent heading into the final test of the Tour – La Super Planche des Belles Filles.

It’s one of those climbs where the facts belie the reality – 7km at 8.7% sounds pretty tough, but the average hides within it fearsome pitches of 20% and more. The already daunting ascent has a new twist, with the addition of a gravel sector around 500m from the summit, which will add pressure and increase the difficulty right at the crux of the race.

Tour de France Femmes 2022 stage eight contenders and prediction

The climb suits race leader Annemiek van Vleuten down to the ground, and she should be able to cement her place in yellow here. Second place Vollering and Italian Elisa Longo Borghini are all likely to be up there and challenging on the stage and could perform well on this gruelling uphill slog. The final section soars up at an eye-watering 24% - it’s less than a kilometre in length but it will feel like the longest climb of the riders’ lives, and if any of them have not judged their efforts well, it may prove their undoing. 

The route has been planned to deliver fireworks right to the very end, and there’s every chance we could see a few surprises as teams make last ditch attempts to dethrone Van Vleuten.

Words: Katy Madgwick

READ MORE

Portrait of Lukas Nerurkar

‘An altitude camp at the age of seven’ – Lukas Nerurkar on the power of doing things differently

The British rider had a unique upbringing, spending his early childhood in Ethiopia and learning from his marathon runner father – he tells Rouleur about...

Read more
Women's UAE Tour

Women’s UAE Tour 2025: Who will win the four-stage race in the Middle East?

The third edition of the Women's WorldTour race will begin on Thursday, February, 6 2025 

Read more
Rob Stannard

Robert Stannard: Lost, fined, and fighting for redemption

The Australian rider speaks to Rouleur about his turbulent past 18 months 

Read more
Wout van Aert says winning Flanders and Roubaix isn’t an obsession – but it is

Wout van Aert says winning Flanders and Roubaix isn’t an obsession – but it is

All eyes will be on the Belgian rider as he tries to finally win two of the biggest one-day races in the sport

Read more
Frank van den Broek: hobby DJ, part-time florist, and Tour de France star

Frank van den Broek: hobby DJ, part-time florist, and Tour de France star

Frank van den Broek hasn't had the most conventional rise to the top

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