Cloaked in clouds and doused in drizzle, the Swartberg Pass proved pivotal on Stage 3 of the Garden Route Giro on Wednesday, 15 April 2026. Cronje Beukes once again proved himself to be the strongest climber in the men’s race, putting time into his nearest rivals, Wessel Botha and Marco Joubert, over the summit and holding on to some of those gains to the Prince Albert finish line. Mariëlle Trouwborst also used the pass to great effect, snapping the elastic that had bound her to Lisa Bone en route to an emphatic, but not entirely drama-free stage victory.

Mariëlle Trouwborst powered over the Swartberg Pass and soloed to the Prince Albert finish line to gain 2 minutes and 16 seconds on Lisa Bone in the battle for the women’s race lead at the 2026 Garden Route Giro, on Stage 3. | Photo: Shift Media Co

Stage 3 featured an 89-kilometre-long route, from Calitzdorp on the South of the Swartberg Mountain Range to Prince Albert, on the Northern side of the Klein-Great Karoo divide. Though the early kilometres were undulating, they trended steadily uphill to Kobus se Gat at the base of Swartberg Pass, 56 kilometres into the stage. Die Top, as the summit is known, came 68 kilometres into the stage, and after a six-kilometre-long plateau, the descent to Prince Albert began. From the foot of the final descent, the run into the finish was a nine-kilometre blast on a pan-flat road.

Cronje Beukes proved himself the strongest climber in the men’s race at the Garden Route Giro, before time trialling to victory in Prince Albert on Stage 3. | Photo: Shift Media Co

Knowing that the climb would be challenging, Bone seized an early opportunity to steal a march on Trouwborst and Vera Looser. “As the neutral zone ended, I managed to jump on Kent Main’s wheel, and he pulled away with a small group of men,” she explained. “That advantage was short-lived as Mariëlle, Vera, and Cherise [Willeit] came across with another group of men.”

Lisa Bone claimed the first Sprint and Climbing points of Stage 3, before Mariëlle Trouwborst exerted her dominance on the day. | Photo: Shift Media Co

Once the top four women on the general classification standings were together in a group, the race settled down into a war of attrition. Willeit and then Looser were unable to follow when the rolling hills became longer and steeper, leaving Bone and Trouwborst to contest the intermediate Sprint and Queen of the Mountain hotspots. Bone took maximum points at the first Sprint and Climb locations, but Trouwborst showed her intent for the ascent to come by winning the Sprint at the base of Swartberg Pass.

On the climb, she continued to up the tempo until Bone could no longer follow. “I rode a tempo I believed I could hold all the way, and managed to get a good gap on Lisa,” Trouwborst said. “Luckily, I was able to gain enough to stay in front when I punctured on the descent. I had to stop to inflate the tyre, but it kept losing air. By the finish line, it was nearly completely flat again.”

Mariëlle Trouwborst won on a tyre which was rapidly deflating, yet still did enough to take the yellow and a handy 2-minute and 13-second lead into Stage 4.|  Photo: Shift Media Co

Despite riding on a tyre that was losing air, Trouwborst won the stage by two minutes and 16 seconds. Having held a slender two-second lead going into the day, Bone knew she had lost the yellow First Ascent jersey when she crossed the line in second. The result means that Trouwborst now leads Bone by two minutes and 13 seconds. Looser, who was third on the day, is 18 minutes and 28 seconds back. Cherise Willeit is fourth in GC, and Catherine Kruger, who enjoyed her best day of the race, moved up to fifth overall after Bianca Haw lost over half an hour.

Herman Fourie’s solo attack ignited Stage 3. | Photo: Shift Media Co

In the men’s race, Herman Fourie would have snapped up the combativity prize if an award of that nature were distributed daily. Having lost two hours with a puncture on Stage 3, Fourie was no threat to the general classification. As a result, he was given the space to build up a three-minute and 20-second advantage by the foot of Swartberg Pass.

The group on the road behind Fourie included Beukes, Joubert, Botha, Ignatius du Preez, Jan Withaar, Andre van Rooyen, Dan Loubser, Keagan Bontekoning, and Keegan Tullis. The Insect Science and Toyota Specialized Imbuko teams, who had strength in numbers in the pack, opted to leave the pace-making to the man in yellow.

Cronje Beukes (left) launched a stinging attack on the Swartberg Pass, which Marco Joubert (centre) and Wessel Botha (right) could not follow. | Photo: Shift Media Co

“The teams tried to work me over a bit,” Beukes stated. “But I kept the tempo steady and waited for Swartberg Pass. I’m pretty light at the moment and climbing well, so I was confident I could execute my plan on the Pass.”

As the gradients increased, the race leader cranked up the speed, and soon riders were being shed from the group; Fourie’s advantage rapidly dissolved. Visibility was limited in the rain, but that did not dampen Beukes’ performance. With Withaar, Loubser, Van Rooyen, Bontekoning, Tullis, and Du Preez dropped from the group, Fourie was passed. Then Beukes went on the offensive.

“I had targeted Stage 3 before the race already, and really wanted to gain time today,” Beukes admitted.

Marco Joubert used his superb technical skills to limit his time losses to Cronje Beukes and Wessel Botha on the descent to Prince Albert. | Photo: Shift Media Co

Joubert was the first of the top three to cede a metre, then a handful more. Moments later, Botha was distanced too. Despite Du Preez coming back to his Toyota Specialized Imbuko teammate, Joubert could not stop Beukes from gaining time to the summit.

At Die Top, Beukes had earned a 90-second advantage over Botha. Joubert was a further minute back. This allowed the race leader to descend more cautiously than his rivals, meaning Botha could reduce the gap slightly. For the second day in a row, Beukes hung on to win and gain time on the overall standings.

Botha was second on the day, losing 34 seconds to Beukes, but gaining one minute and 53 seconds on Joubert, who finished third. Du Preez was fourth on the day. Tullis led home Bontekoning and Van Rooyen in the battle for fifth. This means that Beukes leads Joubert by three minutes and 12 seconds going into Stage 4. Botha is a further 81 seconds back in third, ahead of Bontekoning and Tullis in the GC standings.

Cronje Beukes’ stage win is his second in a row and sees him gain 34 seconds on Wessel Botha and 2 minutes and 27 seconds on Marco Joubert. | Photo: Shift Media Co

Another Swartberg Pass ascent awaits on Stage 4. Having climbed from the south, the fourth day will see the Garden Route Giro ascend from the north – the steeper of the two directions. Thereafter, the 87-kilometre course trends downhill to De Rust on the Oude Muragie gravel road. In total, the stage features 1 650 metres of climbing, and the day should be a fast one ahead of the Queen Stage on Friday, 17 April.

To follow the action, as it unfolds on Stage 4, like the Garden Route Giro Facebook page and follow @gardenroutegiro on Instagram. Cycling fans can also tune in for daily highlights on the Dryland Event ManagementYouTube channel and read the daily news releases on their favourite cycling platform.

The Nels River Valley is a fertile and green oasis in the arid Klein Karoo. | Photo: Shift Media Co

For more information, visit www.gardenroutegiro.co.za.

2026 Garden Route Giro Results

Men’s Stage 3 Results:

  1. Cronje Beukes: Specialized George Coimbra (3:01:06)
  2. Wessel Botha: Insect Science (3:01:40| +34)
  3. Marco Joubert: Toyota Specialized Imbuko (3:03:33 | +2:27)
  4. Ignatius du Preez: Toyota Specialized Imbuko (3:04:12 | +3:06)
  5. Keegan Tullis: Cape Vulture Nature Reserve (3:05:42 | +4:36)

Women’s Stage 3 Results:

  1. Mariëlle Trouwborst: KMC (3:26:11)
  2. Lisa Bone: Cycle Nation Enza Construction (3:28:27 | +2:16)
  3. Vera Looser: Efficient Infiniti Insure (3:36:12 | +10:01)
  4. Catherine Kruger: Hollard (3:37:12 | +11:01)
  5. Cherise Willeit: Toyota Specialized (3:37:12 | +11:01)
Men’s General Classification podium after Stage 3 of the 2026 Garden Route Giro (from left to right): Keagan Bontekoning, Marco Joubert, Cronje Beukes, Wessel Botha, and Keegan Tullis. | Photo: Ray Cox

Men’s General Classification after Stage 3:

  1. Cronje Beukes: Specialized George Coimbra (8:33:49)
  2. Marco Joubert: Toyota Specialized Imbuko (8:37:01 | +3:12)
  3. Wessel Botha: Insect Science (8:38:22 | +4:33)
  4. Keagan Bontekoning: Insect Science (8:49:10 | +15:21)
  5. Keegan Tullis: Cape Vulture Nature Reserve (8:50:42 | +16:53)

Women’s General Classification after Stage 3:

  1. Mariëlle Trouwborst: KMC (9:50:00)
  2. Lisa Bone: Cycle Nation Enza Construction (9:52:13 | +2:13)
  3. Vera Looser: Efficient Infiniti Insure (10:08:28 | +18:28)
  4. Cherise Willeit: Toyota Specialized (10:19:11 | +29:11)
  5. Catherine Kruger: Hollard (10:28:31 | +38:31)
Women’s General Classification podium after Stage 3 of the 2026 Garden Route Giro (from left to right): Cherise Willeit, Lisa Bone, Mariëlle Trouwborst, Vera Looser and Catherine Kruger. | Photo: Shift Media Co

Garden Route Giro Points Competitions

Men’s KOM Points after Stage 3:

  1. Cronje Beukes: Specialized George Coimbra (28 points)
  2. Marco Joubert: Toyota Specialized Imbuko (19 points)
  3. Wessel Botha: Insect Science (9 points)

Men’s Sprint Points after Stage 3:

  1. Ignatius du Preez: Toyota Specialized Imbuko (20 Points)
  2. Herman Fourie: Cape Vulture Nature Reserve (12 Points)
  3. Marco Joubert: Toyota Specialized Imbuko (8 points)
Ignatius du Preez leads the Sprint competition by 8 points from Herman Fourie. | Photo: Ray Cox

Women’s KOM Points after Stage 3:

  1. Lisa Bone: Cycle Nation Enza Construction (29 points)
  2. Mariëlle Trouwborst: KMC (25 points)
  3. Vera Looser: Efficient Infiniti Insure (12 points)

Women’s Sprint Points after Stage 3:

  1. Lisa Bone: Cycle Nation Enza Construction (22 Points)
  2. Vera Looser: Efficient Infiniti Insure (14 Points)
  3. Mariëlle Trouwborst: KMC (12 Points)
Lisa Bone holds a 4-point advantage over Mariëlle Trouwborst in the Queen of the Mountain points classification. | Photo: Shift Media Co

For the full results from the Garden Route Giro, click here.

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