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Grace Brown upsets Elisa Longo Borghini and Demi Vollering to win Liege-Bastogne-Liege sprint

Eurosport
ByEurosport

Updated 21/04/2024 at 18:07 GMT

After finishing runner-up in 2020 and 2022, Grace Brown got the victory she craved at Liege-Bastogne-Liege after timing her sprint to perfection. The Australian overhauled Elisa Longo Borghini on the line to take a famous win at the Monument, with two-time champion Demi Vollering caught too far back in the finale as the SD Worx-Protime star could only come through for third.

Highlights: Brown sprints to victory after off-road scare

Grace Brown (FDJ -SUEZ) landed the biggest win of her career as she edged a sprint containing Elisa Longo Borghini (Lidl-Trek) and Demi Vollering (SD Worx-Protime) at Liege-Bastogne-Liege.
After surviving a scare when misjudging a corner and having to briefly show off her cyclo-cross skills in the closing stages, Brown proved the strongest in a tactical finale against the two big favourites plus Kim Cadzow (EF Education-Cannondale) and the Canyon/SRAM pair of Kasia Niewiadoma and Elise Chabbey.
Brown, Chabbey and Cadzow were part of a strong group of nine riders that bridged across from the peloton to join early attacker Sarah Gigante (AG Insurance-Soudal) with 60km to go.
Gigante herself put in a mightily impressive performance as the lone breakaway rider for much of the race and even picked up a €3,000 bonus for being the lead rider over the first of six categorised climbs, but those efforts finally caught up with her on the fearsome La Redoute.
Chabbey dropped the hammer on the steep slopes and shredded the lead group to just three while behind, Fenix-Deceuninck showed the first signs of life in the peloton as it splintered into just the main favourites and a handful of their team-mates.
But while the peloton slowed and swelled again after the climb, the lead trio pressed on with a three-minute gap but now without SD Worx-Protime, Lidl-Trek and Visma-Lease a Bike represented at the front.
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'Is she going to snatch it on the line?' - Brown upsets Longo Borghini and Vollering

It was Longo Borghini who sent her troops to the front with Ellen van Dijk, and then Amanda Spratt, slashing the leaders' advantage to less than a minute before the decisive Roche-aux-Faucons.
The Italian - runner-up in this race 12 months ago in a head-to-head sprint with Vollering - was matched only by the Dutch champion and recent Fleche Wallone champion Niewiadoma when she attacked out of a dramatically reduced peloton.
The lead trio survived the Roche-aux-Faucons but were caught on the last uncategorised climb before the finish, with Longo Borghini looking like she had played a tactical masterclass when she attacked immediately as Vollering paused to draw breath.
She was pulled back through, and despite the indomitable Riejanne Markus (Visma-Lease a Bike) giving everything for Marianne Vos behind, it was clear that the winner would come from the lead six.
The Canyon/SRAM pair were the most active in the finale but neither could break free while Brown just looked happy to be there after almost crashing when she locked out on a roundabout in the final stages.
Niewiadoma attempted to go long in the final kilometre and initially pulled a gap of 10 metres but Cadzow dragged her back, before Longo Borghini launched past the Pole as the distance ticked down.
But Brown timed her jump to absolute perfection, opening her sprint with around 150 metres to go and benefitting from both riders’ slipstream to just sneak ahead of Longo Borghini for victory.
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A general view of Grace Brown of Australia and Team FDJ Suez, Elisa Longo Borghini of Italy and Team Lidl - Trek and Demi Vollering of The Netherlands and Team SD Worx - Protime

Image credit: Getty Images

Vollering completed the podium ahead of Chabbey, Niewiadoma and Cadzow while Vos won the sprint behind - 52 seconds behind Brown who picked the perfect stage for her first road race win of the season.
"It’s an amazing day, I wanted to be in the break, we always know a strong break can go in the middle section of the race and we worked really well together," Brown said afterwards. "I felt on my limit on the climbs towards the end but once I survived Roche-aux-Faucons I thought ‘it’s on’, so good."
"I was a little bit stressed of course [after the late scare], I lost out and almost crashed but thankfully saved it and caught back onto the group so then I just had to try and calm myself and be patient for the final.
"It’s been a tough spring for me and then this week I finally started feeling like my old self and I said to the team ‘I feel good for Liege’. It’s a race that I have good memories already here so I’m really happy we could pull it off today."
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