Flemish Classics Women
The Flemish Classics form the beating heart of the spring season in women's cycling. Between late February and early April, Belgium's hills and cobbled passages become an arena for power, technique and tactical toughness. While the men have shaped the legendary Monuments and semi-classics in Flanders for over a century, women's cycling has built its own equally demanding classics universe over the past two decades – led by the Tour of Flanders Women as the crown jewel of the season.
What are the Flemish Classics?
Flemish Classics refer to one-day races in the Belgian region of Flanders, characterized by short, steep climbs (hellingen), cobbled passages (kasseien), narrow village roads and often unpredictable spring weather. In women's cycling, this block typically comprises four to six WorldTour races run in close succession, collectively testing the abilities of the best all-rounders and classics specialists.
Chronology of the Flemish Classics season
The Flemish Classics differ from Ardennes classics such as Liège-Bastogne-Liège through shorter but more explosive climbs and the dominant element of cobblestones. They require a different type of rider than pure climbing classics: a robust position on rough terrain, explosive acceleration on gradients of 10 to 22 percent, and the ability to attack again immediately after crashes and mechanical problems.
The most important races at a glance
Omloop Het Nieuwsblad Women – Season opener
Omloop Het Nieuwsblad traditionally marks the start of the Belgian classics season for women. Held in late February or early March, the race covers around 130 kilometres through East and West Flanders and provides a first benchmark for teams and riders.
Characteristics:
- First WorldTour test of the year in Flanders
- Several short hellingen and cobble-heavy passages
- High race pace through early attacks
- Often decisive for form assessment before the Ronde
Dwars door Vlaanderen Women – Dress rehearsal for the Ronde
Dwars door Vlaanderen takes place in the week before the Tour of Flanders and serves as a direct dress rehearsal. The route shares key hellingen with the Ronde – including the Oude Kwaremont and the Paterberg – and allows riders to test equipment and tactics under race conditions.
Gent-Wevelgem In Flanders Fields Women
Gent-Wevelgem combines Flemish hellingen with longer flat sections and the famous Kemmelberg. Wind plays a central role here: whoever loses the slipstream at the wrong moment can lose the race before the decisive climbs are even reached.
Tour of Flanders Women – The Monument of Flanders
The Tour of Flanders Women (Ronde van Vlaanderen voor Vrouwen) is undisputedly the most prestigious race among the Flemish Classics for women. Held since 2004, the route covers around 160 kilometres and more than 20 hellingen – including the icons Oude Kwaremont, Koppenberg and Paterberg.
Crown of Flanders
The Tour of Flanders Women is the women's equivalent of the men's Monument and ranks among the most widely covered one-day races in all of women's cycling. A victory here counts as much in a classics rider's career record as a Monument win for the men.
Brabantse Pijl Women – Closing race of the block
Brabantse Pijl closes the Flemish spring classics block. The race in the Flemish Brabant region offers a compact, hilly route and often serves as a final dress rehearsal before Paris-Roubaix Femmes or as a target race for riders who are particularly strong in Flanders.
Route data compared
The legendary hellingen
The hellingen are the defining element of all Flemish Classics. Each climb has its own characteristics that influence equipment choice, gear selection and positioning in the peloton.
Oude Kwaremont
At around 2.2 kilometres in length and an average gradient of 4 percent, the Oude Kwaremont seems harmless – until the steeper sections and cobblestones burn the legs. In the Tour of Flanders Women it is climbed multiple times and is one of the most important selection points.
Koppenberg
The Koppenberg is Flanders' most notorious climb: up to 22 percent gradient, narrow cobblestones and often room for only a single rider beside the spectators. Whoever leads here can decide the race – whoever crashes or comes to a standstill loses everything.
Paterberg
Short, steep and brutal: the Paterberg near the finish in Oudenaarde is the classic decisive climb of the Ronde. Riders who are alone or in a small group after the Paterberg have the best chances of victory.
Climb requirements compared
Successful riders and race history
The Flemish Classics have produced a handful of dominant riders in recent years – while still leaving room for surprise victories.
Milestones of the Tour of Flanders Women
Tactics and race characteristics
Flemish Classics follow a recurring dramatic pattern that differs fundamentally from stage races.
Typical race progression:
- Early breakaway forms after 20 to 40 kilometres
- Teams with favourites control the pace in the peloton
- First hellingen select the field – crashes and mechanical problems amplify the effect
- Decisive attack on Koppenberg, Kwaremont or Paterberg
- Final phase: solo, duo or sprint from a selected group
Key tactical factors:
- Position in the peloton before each hellingen passage
- Equipment choice: wider tyres, lower pressure on cobbles
- Slipstream management at Gent-Wevelgem
- Teamwork: domestiques set the pace, captain waits for the decisive moment
- Recovery between races in the tight classics block
The tight schedule between Omloop and Flanders allows little recovery. Riders who want to compete in all Flemish Classics must manage their form precisely over weeks – overtraining in preparation is a common mistake.
Women vs. men: parallels and differences
The men's race Tour of Flanders remains the older and larger media event. Yet the women's edition shares the same route culture, the same crowds on the hellingen and the same emotional climax in Oudenaarde – and has developed into an indispensable WorldTour highlight in the 2020s.
Preparation for the Flemish Classics
Riders who want to succeed in Flanders go through a specific preparation cycle:
Checklist: Flanders classics preparation
- Cobbles technique training on cobblestones or rough gravel
- Strength-endurance intervals on short climbs (30 sec. to 3 min.)
- Position training in large groups at high pace
- Equipment testing: tyre pressure, wheelset, compact crankset for steep hellingen
- Race simulation with multiple hellingen repetitions
- Recovery plan for the tight race block (Omloop to Brabantse Pijl)
- Tactics briefing: role allocation in the team for each race
Classics form build-up
- Base endurance (December–January)
- Strength block (January/February)
- Cobbles technique
- First races (February)
- Hellingen simulation
- Tapering Omloop
- Peak Flanders
Significance for women's cycling
The Flemish Classics are more than sporting competitions – they are a driving force for the professionalisation of women's cycling. The high spectator numbers along the hellingen, growing TV presence and increasing equalisation of prize money show that Flanders as a region is actively advancing the equality process in cycling.
Spectator development Flanders Women
Since 2015, spectator numbers at the Oude Kwaremont and in the finish area in Oudenaarde have been rising continuously. At the same time, TV reach of the Women's WorldTour is growing – a trend that makes the Flemish Classics economically relevant events with sponsors, live broadcasts and professional logistics.
The development of prize money also directly affects the Flemish Classics: what was once considered a side programme is today an economically relevant event with sponsors, live broadcasts and professional logistics. The development since 2000 in women's cycling is particularly evident in the Flemish Classics.
Connection to the wider spring classics
Immediately after the Flemish block come the cobbled classics of northern France. Riders who were strong in Flanders are also considered favourites at Paris-Roubaix Femmes – cobblestone riding technique and toughness are transferable qualities. The entire spring classics calendar forms a connected series of tests for women and men alike, awarding the title of strongest spring all-rounder to the world's best classics riders.
Tip
For newcomers to women's cycling, Gent-Wevelgem is a good entry point: spectacular images, manageable duration and a clear dramatic climax on the Kemmelberg – ideal for understanding the fascination of the Flemish Classics.
Frequently asked questions about Flemish Classics Women
Which is the most important race?
Tour of Flanders Women (Ronde van Vlaanderen).
When do the races take place?
Late February to mid-April.
Do women ride the same hellingen as men?
Yes, central icons such as Kwaremont, Koppenberg and Paterberg are identical.
Who is the most successful rider?
Anna van der Breggen and Lotte Kopecky dominate recent history.
How do Flemish and French classics differ?
Flanders: short hellingen and cobbles; Roubaix: long pavé sectors in northern France.