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Pauline Ferrand-Prévot wins women's Tour de France, a first French victory since 1989

Pauline Ferrand-Prévot wins women's Tour de France, a first French victory since 1989

France 2416 hours ago
Olympic champion Pauline Ferrand-Prévot won the women's Tour de France on Sunday, pushing through three punishing climbs to win the final stage ahead of 2023 champion Demi Vollering, who finished second overall.
The 33-year-old of team Visma-Lease a Bike held steady through the 124.1km ride from Praz-sur-Arly to Chatel, before launching a decisive attack in the last seven kilometres.
Vollering (FDJ–Suez) stayed in a group with Ferrand-Prévot for the majority of the ninth stage, but could not break away to make up her deficit of more than three minutes coming into the last day.
Ferrand-Prévot said she had achieved "the goal of (her) life as an athlete" after sealing victory in the mountains on the border with Switzerland.
She adds to her 15 world titles in several cycling disciplines including mountain biking, cyclo-cross and road racing.
She becomes the first French rider to win the modern women's Tour de France in its fourth edition. Jeannie Longo won the title 36 years ago in the former race, the Tour de France Feminin.
Ferrand-Prévot, who won gold in women's cross-country mountain biking at last year's Paris Games, had taken the yellow jersey from Kimberley Le Court on Saturday.
Lorena Wiebes (Team SD Worx–Protime), who has led the points classification since stage three, did not chase the leading group and was on track to win the green jersey to deny Dutch compatriot Marianne Vos (Visma-Lease a Bike) a third Tour title in the category.
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