Vilvoorde, 27 February 2026 – Flanders Classics and KPMG in Belgium are extending their collaboration within the Closing The Gap project, confirming their joint commitment to sustainable and equal women’s cycling. With the category upgrades of Dwars door Vlaanderen and Scheldeprijs, all women’s races will ultimately reach the same competition level as their male equivalents in 2026. Not only has the professional peloton benefited from the FLCS Women project in recent years, but a doubling of registrations among girls has also been recorded at the Tour of Flanders Youth Day. Building on this momentum, the collaboration will continue over the next three years.
What started in 2020 as an ambitious multi-year action plan has today become a structural pillar within the Flanders Classics organisation. The Closing The Gap programme was introduced in 2020 with clear ambitions and now, six years later, both KPMG and Flanders Classics look back on the collaboration and achievements with pride.
Stefanie Pauwels, partner at KPMG in Belgium: “We are proud of what we have achieved together within the Closing the Gap project. As an employer, educator, partner and client advisor, we understand that we play a crucial role in promoting equal pay, transparent compensation and equal opportunities for women. And we realize that the race is not yet finished, on the course and in the workplace. That is why we are continuing this collaboration with conviction, to keep investing in gender equality, so that everyone can race with the same tailwind.”
Tomas Van Den Spiegel, CEO of Flanders Classics: "This extension is a confirmation of the fantastic collaboration we have built with KPMG in the meantime, which is something of which we can be particularly proud. It underlines that with KPMG we have the right partner on our side. It also proves that we have found each other in the values we hold close to our heart, in which equality naturally comes first. With the support of KPMG and our other partners, we can now proudly look back on our investments in women’s cycling.”