For the second time in a week, Kim Le Court-Pienaar buried her face in her hands. Wearing the yellow jersey at the Tour de France was a fantasy that had never even crossed her mind growing up, 9,000km away, on an island in the Indian Ocean. Now, with a stage victory in the town of GuΓ©ret, she had achieved it twice.
A smile beaming across her face, she took to the podium to receive her honours. βI think just having it on my shoulders is already a dream come true for me,β she said. βWell, stage three, having it on my shoulders, was really a dream come true β I was living it like it wouldnβt happen again, and now itβs happening again. Itβs really amazing.β
Le Courtβs pro career, still only 18 months old, has been one of historic firsts. Sheβs the first Mauritian β male or female β to compete at cyclingβs highest level, after signing for WorldTour squad AG Insurance-Soudal. Sheβs the first African to win a Monument. And, only as of Sunday, sheβs the first African woman to lead the Tour. βTo be honest, I think Iβm still a little bit shocked,β she said at the time.
Her path to the yellow jersey has been unconventional and unique. From overcoming a malaria scare, to abandoning her road racing career, and later emailing teams to ask for a contract, hereβs how she worked her way to the Tourβs top step.
Born in Curepipe, the second biggest town in Mauritius, Le Court jokes that her childhood consisted of βbeaches and coconutsβ. She was brought up by a Scottish mother and a Mauritian father, of French descent, alongside an older brother, who too would later become a road cyclist.
At three years old, however, Le Courtβs life came under threat. Diagnosed with malaria on a trip to France, she ended up in a coma, given a 10% chance of survival. βIn France, they didnβt really know what malaria was,β she told Sporza. βThey kept saying it was a fever. Because of this, they caught it very late, and the disease had already penetrated deep into my body.β
In time, the doctors were able to treat her and find a cure β βmiraculously,β her father told Le Parisien. The day after she woke up, she rode a bike through the corridors of the hospital. βIt was as if I was destined to be a cyclist,β she said.
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Le Court’s Tour de France Femmes stage win in GuΓ©ret brought a second stint in the yellow jersey.
(Image credit: Getty Images)
Inspired by her brother, Le Court got her first proper bike when she was 12. She raced against the boys at home in Mauritius, for lack of a large enough girlsβ field, before moving to South Africa in her teenage years. There, she dived into mountain biking, a discipline in which she now counts multiple Continental-level medals.
In 2015, then only nineteen, Le Court joined her first UCI road team, a British squad called Matrix Fitness. One of her first races was the UK’s Women’s Tour, where she finished dead last, an hour down. The following season, she swapped to a Spanish team, but the level still proved too high.
βIt didnβt go very well at all,β she remembers. βI was a DNF or last place in every race, so it really wasnβt a memory to remember.β
Her European dream over, she packed her bags and moved back to South Africa. Sheβd then spend the next seven years competing on her mountain bike β winning big races like the Cape Epic and Swiss Epic β and working part-time as a bike fitter.
Come the summer of 2023, however, and Le Court was ready to give road racing another stab. βIβd achieved all my mountain bike goals, so I wanted a new challenge,β she says.
βMy husband started sending emails [to teams] in August, which was actually very late β I only realised it was extremely late once I was in a team in 2024, and contracts were already getting signed in March. I donβt know how I got the chance. I think I maybe reached the right person at the right time.β
That person was Natascha Knaven-den Ouden, the then manager of Le Courtβs current AG Insurance-Soudal. βWhen I βdiscoveredβ her, she was already older than most development riders,β says Knaven-den Ouden. βWhat stood out wasnβt just her numbers, it was how she raced: smart, committed, instinctive. It was with incredible mindset. Thatβs the kind of talent you see when you look beyond power numbers and truly understand racing.β
Within months of joining the squad, Le Court was winning big. She did the double at the Mauritian National Road Championships in June, and the following month, won her first Grand Tour stage at the Giro dβItalia Women. Less than a year later, she took a momentous victory at LiΓ¨ge-Bastogne-LiΓ¨ge β βI only knew I was the first African to win a Monument after the race,β she says.
The victory, celebrated in her national jersey, thrust Mauritius into the global spotlight. An island, smaller in size than the English county of Worcestershire, had produced one of the best talents in the sport.
LiΓ¨ge-Bastogne-LiΓ¨ge was only Le Court’s second pro victory.
(Image credit: Getty Images)
Having targeted stage wins in last year’s edition, Le Court came to this Tour de France Femmes with the goal of winning the yellow jersey. βSheβs focused and she knows what she wants,β says her team-mate Sarah Gigante. βSheβs also really kind and appreciative as well. I think thatβs super important in a leader.β
Second on stage one, a third place the following day was enough to move her into the race lead. So special was the feat that she refused to believe it at the time, telling her team staff at the finish line in Quimper that she βwanted to see it for myselfβ. The confirmation soon came, and so did the tears.
Back home, the prime minister of Mauritius, Navin Ramgoolam, toasted the βremarkable achievementβ of Le Courtβs yellow jersey on social media. βShe is an inspiration to our youth, and a source of immense national pride,β he wrote. βThank you for flying the flag for our country so high.β
Le Courtβs first stint in yellow would only last a day. Now, after outsprinting her GC rivals to win stage five, sheβs taken the jersey back. Can she keep it until the end? βWeβre going into the mountains now and I donβt know how Iβll do against the pure climbers,β she says. Still, she adds: βAnything can happen.β
It all feeds into Le Courtβs ongoing, wider goal β something that transcends the Tour and the colour of the threads that make up her jersey. βI want to keep on growing African cycling for women, and for men, in general, and try and motivate the young women out there that itβs possible,β she says.
βTen years ago, I was barely finishing races β I almost gave up on the sport β and now Iβm sitting here with yellow on my shoulders at 29 years old. It really is possible.β
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