fr Tour de France
WorldTeam Men 04 Jul '26 - 26 Jul '26
17/21 Évian-les-Bains › Thonon-les-Bains 26km
18/21 Chambéry › Voiron 174km
19/21 Voiron › Orcières-Merlette 185km
fr Tour de l'Ain
Development Team 28 Jul '26 - 30 Jul '26
1/3 Stage 1
2/3 Stage 2
3/3 Stage 3
dk PostNord Tour of Denmark
WorldTeam Men 29 Jul '26 - 02 Aug '26
1/5 Aalborg › Aalborg 197km
2/5 Glyngøre › Skive 182km
3/5 Fredericia › Vejle 202km
fr Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift
WorldTeam Women 01 Aug '26 - 09 Aug '26
1/9 Lausanne › Lausanne 137km
2/9 Aigle › Genève 149km
3/9 Genève › Poligny 157km
es DSSK (Donostia San Sebastian Klasikoa)
WorldTeam Men 01 Aug '26
1/1 San Sebastián › San Sebastián 221km
pl Tour de Pologne
WorldTeam Men 03 Aug '26 - 09 Aug '26
1/7 Gdynia › Koszalin 234km
2/7 Międzyzdroje › Szczecin 150km
3/7 Gorzów Wielkopolski › Zielona Góra 193km
es Vuelta a Burgos
WorldTeam Men 04 Aug '26 - 08 Aug '26
1/5 Gumiel de Izán › Alto del Castillo 165km
2/5 Arcos › Valle del Sol 178km
3/5 Espinosa de los Monteros › Corconte 184km
it Gran Premio Sportivi di Poggiana - Trofeo Bonin Costruzioni
Development Team 09 Aug '26
1/1

Lindeman’s attack fails in final metres of Catalunya’s stage 6

Bert-Jan Lindeman's long escape failed to withstand a hungry peloton in the sixth stage of Spain’s Volta Ciclista a Catalunya today. The Team LottoNL-Jumbo rider emerged from the original breakaway of nine men with three other riders, but a sprinting bunch passed them with only 200 metres remaining and Davide Cimolai (Lampre - Merida) won.

 

The Team LottoNL-Jumbo men already fought for their chance to be part of the leading group in yesterday’s fifth stage, and that wasn’t different on Saturday. Primoz Roglic, Robert Gesink and Bert-Jan Lindeman escaped in small groups. Lindeman succeeded eventually.

 

“It was a beautiful leading group with strong riders,” Sports Director Frans Maassen said after the race. “They didn’t get the space we were expecting, though. It’s quite a miracle that they still went that far. That they got caught in the sprint is annoying of course.”

 

No looking back

Lindeman was fed up. “When we had less than 15 kilometres remaining, the road went slightly uphill again and it became narrower,” he said. “That’s when I thought that we still had a chance to make it. We were distancing others in front, so the pace was high. We worked well together in the final kilometres. With two kilometres to go, I heard that we only had eight seconds over the group. From that moment, I refused to look back and gave it all for the stage victory.”

 

The prevalent feeling after the race was disappointment. “Yesterday, we already gave it all. We had a bad feeling about it because we didn’t make the leading group. Today, we have a bad feeling because Bert-Jan’s attack failed just before the finish.”

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