Who is Isabella Holmgren, the 21-year-old Canadian climbing with Vollering at the Giro d'Italia Women

Cycling
Wednesday, 03 June 2026 at 21:52
Isabella-Holmgren
She can climb with Vollering and Van der Breggen, time trial with the best in the world, and she just only turned 21. Isabella Holmgren is having the Giro d'Italia Women ride of her life. But who is the Canadian rider currently wearing the young riders jersey?
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Five stages into the 2026 Giro d'Italia Women, only three riders have proven they can follow Demi Vollering up a mountain. Anna van der Breggen. Antonia Niedermaier. And Isabella Holmgren — a 21-year-old from Ontario, Canada, who most casual cycling fans had probably never heard of at the start of the week.
On stage 5, a brutal 146-kilometre mountain stage from Longarone to Santo Stefano di Cadore with 3,000 metres of climbing, Holmgren was one of just three riders able to respond when Vollering attacked on the final climb. She even launched her own attack with less than two kilometres to go. The group finished together, but it was a statement of intent.
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White jersey is not the main goal for Holmgren

“It was a super tough day,” Holmgren said in her flash interview after stage 5. “It was not necessarily my favourite terrain, and I’m still learning how to race in the final like that with a small group, so I’m super happy with today. I'm really looking forward to the coming days with some of the longer climbs. It’s such a long race you have to see every day how you’re feeling.
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Holmgren holds the white jersey as the best young rider in the race, but the Ontarian is very clear that it isn’t her main goal at this Giro d’Italia Women. “The main goal is still the GC. If the white jersey comes at the end of the week that’s a super nice bonus.”
She now sits fourth overall in the general classification, just under two minutes down on race leader Van der Breggen. — and with four mountain stages still to come, she is very much in the fight.

Holmgren can climb and time trial

Holmgren's stage 5 ride might have been the moment that caught the most attention, but it was not the most surprising thing she did this week.
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That came on stage four’s 12.7-kilometre uphill time trial to Nevegal. Holmgren clocked in at 33:33, good enough for third place on the stage, behind only world time trial champion Marlen Reusser and a dominant Van der Breggen. She moved into the top 10 overall and pulled on the white jersey for the first time.
"I did my best effort today so I am really happy with that,” Holmgren said on the team’s website after the time trial. “We’ve had a really good start to the Giro with the team, I hope it keeps going up from here. I think holding on to the white jersey would be a nice goal but we just have to see how we’ll play it. There’s still a lot of stages to come and you never know what can happen.

Who is Isabella Holmgren?

If the name sounds vaguely familiar, there is a reason. Holmgren finished sixth at Liège-Bastogne-Liège in April, matching moves on La Redoute alongside Pieterse, Niewiadoma, and eventual winner Vollering. Before that, she was ninth at La Flèche Wallonne. Neither result made huge waves at the time, but in hindsight they were clear signals.
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Born in Oro-Medonte, Ontario, on 22 May 2005, Holmgren did not come up through the traditional road cycling pathway. She is, first and foremost, a mountain biker. A very good one. Between 2023 and 2025, she won four UCI world championship titles across the junior and under-23 cross-country and short track disciplines. She won the under-23 XCO world title in both 2024 and 2025, and added the short track world title at the 2025 championships for good measure.
She is also not the only Holmgren in the pro peloton. Her twin sister Ava rides alongside her at Lidl-Trek. Brother Gunnar races mountain bike and cyclo-cross in Canada.

Road results that back up the hype

The transition to road racing has been seamless. In 2024, her debut road season, Holmgren finished second overall at the Tour de l'Avenir Femmes — the race considered the most important stage race for the next generation of women's cycling talent.
In 2025, she came back and won it outright, beating a field that included Paula Blasi and Célia Géry. She also finished seventh overall at last year's Giro d'Italia Women. That result barely registered at the time. It is starting to look more significant by the day.

Four stages to go

The 2026 Giro d'Italia Women does not get easier from here. Stages 7 and 8 both offer serious climbing, and the legendary Colle delle Finestre looms on the penultimate stage, one of the highest climbs in Italian cycling.
Van der Breggen, a four-time race winner, will be difficult to dislodge. Vollering will attack again. But Holmgren has shown she belongs in the top 5. If she can climb any higher remains to be seen.

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