‘Almost impossible to do properly’ – Kopecky to skip TDF, will focus on Olympics

World champion Lotte Kopecky will not be racing at the 2024 Tour de France Femmes, her team SD Worx has confirmed.

Instead, the Belgian superstar will put all her focus towards the 2024 Paris Olympic Games.

Ever since the schedule for 2024 was announced, it always seemed that the top cyclists were going to have to make a choice, with the Olympics finishing just a day before the Grand Depart of the Tour.

And speaking to Belgian outlet Sporza, SD Worx team manager Danny Stam said that the Tour just isn’t going to be possible for Kopecky.

“The omnium ends on Sunday afternoon, the Tour starts on Monday morning. It is almost impossible to do that properly,” explained Stam.

“Combining those two events would also be a very difficult task mentally.”

It has been a stellar season for Kopecky so far, having won Paris-Roubaix, Strade Bianche and Nokere Koerse, as well as the GC at the UAE Tour.

Last year she finished second at the Tour de France Femmes in dramatic fashion, leading the race until the penultimate stage when team-mate Demi Vollering passed her in the GC on the Col du Tourmalet.

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Stage 1 highlights: SD Worx one-two as Kopecky soars into yellow

Between now and the Olympics, Kopecky is scheduled to race at the Tour of Britain and the Giro d’Italia.

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Kopecky eyes Giro but Tour de France participation unclear in Olympic year

Lotte Kopecky will ride in the Giro d’Italia, as she sets her sights on a gold medal at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris.

That’s on the back of winning the Tour de France in 2023, but her participation in this year’s edition of the race remains unclear.

Danny Stam, Sports Manager for SD Worx-Protime told Dutch outlet Het Laatste Nieuws, via Cycling News, that the Giro is “an ideal race to score and improve stage wins yourself”.

“There is no long list for the Tour yet because certain riders are injured and it is not yet clear whether they will be fit.

“After Liege, I will sit down with Lotte and talk about the Tour. The most important thing is what she wants.”

Stam refers to the Liege-Bastogne-Liege Femmes on April 21, in which Kopecky will also participate as it is her home event.

But because the Tour de France takes so close to the Olympics this year, she remains uncertain over whether to saddle up.

The 28-year old is set to focus on the arduous Ominium at Paris 2024, so it is important she manages her schedule.

That makes the Giro an attractive proposition, given it runs from July 7-14, three weeks before the Olympics.

“Demi is our leader in the Ardennes,” added Stam. “We hope to win at least one victory with her.

“From now on, Demi is the leading lady and Lotte is a shadow leading lady. An important role. I still expect something from Lotte.

“There was a lot of pressure on our team and Lotte as world champion, but she won Strade Bianche and Paris-Roubaix. Then you can call it a successful campaign.

“It is not the course that will be decisive for Lotte in Liège, but the mental and physical freshness after a long spring.

“She has been working towards the Tour of Flanders and Roubaix. It remains to be seen how much is left in her tank compared to those who will be relatively fresh at the start.”

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Kopecky eyes Giro but Tour de France participation unclear in Olympic year

Lotte Kopecky will ride in the Giro d’Italia, as she sets her sights on a gold medal at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris.

That’s on the back of winning the Tour de France in 2023, but her participation in this year’s edition of the race remains unclear.

Danny Stam, Sports Manager for SD Worx-Protime told Dutch outlet Het Laatste Nieuws, via Cycling News, that the Giro is “an ideal race to score and improve stage wins yourself”.

“There is no long list for the Tour yet because certain riders are injured and it is not yet clear whether they will be fit.

“After Liege, I will sit down with Lotte and talk about the Tour. The most important thing is what she wants.”

Stam refers to the Liege-Bastogne-Liege Femmes on April 21, in which Kopecky will also participate as it is her home event.

But because the Tour de France takes so close to the Olympics this year, she remains uncertain over whether to saddle up.

The 28-year old is set to focus on the arduous Ominium at Paris 2024, so it is important she manages her schedule.

That makes the Giro an attractive proposition, given it runs from July 7-14, three weeks before the Olympics.

“Demi is our leader in the Ardennes,” added Stam. “We hope to win at least one victory with her.

“From now on, Demi is the leading lady and Lotte is a shadow leading lady. An important role. I still expect something from Lotte.

“There was a lot of pressure on our team and Lotte as world champion, but she won Strade Bianche and Paris-Roubaix. Then you can call it a successful campaign.

“It is not the course that will be decisive for Lotte in Liège, but the mental and physical freshness after a long spring.

“She has been working towards the Tour of Flanders and Roubaix. It remains to be seen how much is left in her tank compared to those who will be relatively fresh at the start.”

Stream all the top cycling action, including the Giro d’Italia, Tour de France and Vuelta a Espana, live and on-demand on Eurosport, the Eurosport app and discovery+.

Kopecky reveals unusual reason behind first Paris-Roubaix Femmes crown

Lotte Kopecky (SD-Worx – Protime) revealed an unusual reason behind her first Paris-Roubaix Femmes triumph – laughter.

The Belgian pushed the tempo on the front of the race for large parts, and though she did not get away from the bunch, she was in the leading group at the finish and emerged from the six-strong escapees to sprint to a famous win.

Speaking afterwards, she said: “This was the goal of the season, then to also do it is really nice.

“How much confidence the team gave me, actually already the whole season but especially the last week.

“My team-mates tried to make me laugh the last two days as much as possible. I could just really feel how much they believed in me being able to win this race.

“They did an amazing job, and then having Lorena Wiebes in the second group at the end was maybe the key.”

As the riders entered the famed Roubaix Velodrome for the culmination of the 148.5km race, Kopecky at one stage looked like she might have lost her chance, sitting at the back on the inside of the track and seemingly without a route to the front.

“It’s always nervous,” she reflected.

“You are here with two very fast sprinters like [Marianne] Vos and Balsamo.

“One moment I thought I am boxed in, but I had to start the sprint pretty early and I just could keep sprinting.”

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Kopecky times sprint to perfection to secure first-ever Paris-Roubaix Femmes victory

Kopecky ‘a great tactician’

Speaking on Eurosport’s The Breakaway, London 2012 gold medallist Dani Rowe analysed how Kopecky managed the closing stages of the race to give herself a greater chance of victory.

Rowe said: “She’s a great tactician isn’t she?

“We saw that really change when she had [team-mate] Lorena Wiebes there in the group, she was attacking, attacking, attacking – really trying to make the race as hard as she could.

“But then when Lorena Wiebes was dropped she was really, really patient, sat back and let the others do the work, let Lidl-Trek use up their firepower, their energy after being so dominant in the last few races.

“And then she said she was bunched in, but I think that worked perfectly in her favour because the sprint is so different.

“After 148km and all that pave, it’s almost like slow motion.”

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