Race thread: ๐ฎ๐น Tour of Italy 2026 (Southern Italy week), May 12โ17
Here is the situation after 3 days of apathy and hospitalisations in Bulgary:
General time classification
It was only determined by the punchy 2^nd^ stage and a couple of time bonuses.
- Guillermo Silva ๐บ๐พ Astana
- Florian Stork ๐ฉ๐ช Tudor: +4โณ
- Egan Bernal ๐จ๐ด Ineos: '
- Thymen Arensman ๐ณ๐ฑ Ineos: +6โณ
- Julio Ciccone ๐ฎ๐น Lidl-Trek: '
- 29 riders: +10โณ ... and about the same number at 1โฒ
Points classification
- Paul Magnier ๐ซ๐ท Soudal-QS: 105 pts
- Jonathan Milan ๐ฎ๐น Lidl-Trek: 64
- Tobias Andresen ๐ฉ๐ฐ Decathlon: 42
- Madis Mihkels ๐ช๐ช EF: 32
- Diego Sevilla ๐ช๐ธ Polti: 28
Mountain classification
- Diego Sevilla ๐ช๐ธ Polti: 42
- Manuele Tarozzi ๐ฎ๐น Bardiani: 12
- Jonas Vingegaard ๐ฉ๐ฐ Visma: 9
- Mirco Maestri ๐ฎ๐น Polti: 8
- Allessandro Tonelli ๐ฎ๐น Polti: 6
Teams classification
- Astana ๐ฐ๐ฟ
- Tudor๐จ๐ญ '
- Uno-X ๐ณ๐ด '
- Movistar ๐ช๐ธ '
- RB Bora ๐ฉ๐ช '
- EF ๐บ๐ธ '
Stages
Stage 4, Tuesday 12
138 km, low difficulty (50 pts), 5 km sprint zone, 3โณ splits
An even shorter course than stage 1, with the same profile as stage 3, but a nastier last mile. A sprint is to be expected again, favouring the sprinters who can handle an uphill finish; even though a breakaway could have its chances in theory, as the line is closer to the climb than it was in stage 3.
::: spoiler finish map and profile
:::
Stage 5, Wednesday 13
203 km, medium difficulty (25 pts), 3km sprint zone, 1โณ splits
This stage is made for breakaways or punchers-climbers, but will they take their chance this time?
::: spoiler finish map and profile
:::
Stage 6, Thursday 14
141 km, no difficulty (50 pts), 5 km sprint zone, 3โณ splits
After the long stage on Wedneday, this is again a short one, purely for sprinters, that arrives in Napoli.
::: spoiler finish map and profile
:::
Stage 7, Friday 15
244 km, high difficulty (15 pts), no sprint zone, 1โณ splits
This is the most difficult stage of the week. Before the long and difficult top finish at the Blockhaus, there is a series of shorter and smoother climbs without too much flat over 60 km or more, and the whole is packed inside a 244 km course! Good luck...
::: spoiler finish map and profile :::
Stage 8, Saturday 16
256 km, medium difficulty (25 pts), no sprint zone, 1โณ splits
A short costal stage for punchers, with all climbs packed inside the last 60 km, long after a start with a few turns and false-flats to help a breakaway to form.
::: spoiler finish map and profile :::
Stage 9, Sunday 17
184 km, high difficulty (15 pts), no sprint zone, 1โณ splits
Another finish on top this week after the Blockhaus 2 days earlier, but this time without much difficulty before the final climb and a regular length.
::: spoiler finish map and profile :::
Stage 6, Thursday 14
Summary: your typical pure sprinters stage: not a single bit of racing, and a mass crash.
And when I say 'no racing', I am not kidding: this stage was ridden 5 and 7 km/h slower than the first two stages of the Tour of Hungary (where I was surprised to also see quite some interesting action today).
Unibet lead the peloton in the final miles in a very dangerous manner. It serves them right that they crashed.
Magnier (๐ซ๐ท Soudal-QS) was stopped by this crash just 500 m from the line, restarted behind many other riders, and yet managed to finish 3^rd^! ๐ฒ
first good stage!
trek didn't defend ciccone's pink jersey the other day, and now they let ciccone ride away from derek gee (they finished in the same group so i'm not sure if ciccone waited or gee caught him) ::: spoiler spoiler bernal, :( i thought this was going to be his glorious return to GC racing :::
And today Ciccone dropped (on purpose, I suppose), despite being more than 1 minute ahead of Gee in GC this morning...
Also, Arrieta (UAE) and Beloki (EF) passed Gee in GC because they were in the breakaway (the chase group, more exactly) and Gee was in the peloton. I don't know whether Lidl-Trek pulled the peloton at some point? I know Visma and Bahrain did.
Trek is a mess. No wins for milan, no pink for ciccone, no GEE CEE.... what the hell are they doing??
Well, overall, Lidl-Trek is having a bit of an annus horribilis, due to injuries.
For Ciccone, I imagine they are returning to the original, official plan where he was supposed to go only for stages; and hope for a top-10 by Gee.
Another bad news for Milan is that Magnier started demonstrating an interest in the Cyclamen jersey today. (He was chasing Milan when the latter was trying to form or join breakaways, so that the Italian wouldn't score big points at the Intermediate Sprint farther.)
Stage 8, Saturday 16
A usual case of, after a day where nobody wanted to break away, everybody wanting to break away and neutralising each other, so that the breakaway never comes. Well, it came but the hills were already near, it was only made of a few strong men as all others killed each other for 80 km, and the big chase group never managed to catch them because all nobody wanted to pull (despite having teammates in the group) and preferred to attack each other.
Stage 9, Sunday 17
So, this was another day where everyone wanted to be in the breakaway, and on top of this, Decathlon wanted to win from the peloton.
Ciccone (๐ฎ๐น Lidl-Trek) had made so clear that he wanted to win the stage through a breakaway, that all his attempts were cancelled by others, and he wasn't in the breakaway that ultimately developed. But as a one-plan man/team, he tried again later in a climb at km 110 to jump from the peloton to the breakaway which was 2 minutes away. I thought that several strange things were happening:
Anyway, Ciccone๐ฎ๐น joined the breakaway and was brought into good position in the final climb, but of course he paid the sum of his efforts in the beginning of the stage, and in the chase. This was too much to beat the peloton which had always been kept at 2โ2ยฝ minutes by Decathlon.
Pellizari (๐ฎ๐น Bora), the GC favourite after Vingegaard (๐ฉ๐ฐ Visma) was dropped early; he is a bit sick. So Hindley surely becomes the team's leader.
A good surprise was the Pink jersey's Eulalio (๐ต๐น Barhain) performance. While he seemed to be struggling at first, he made a really good finish. Gee also was better. The shorter final climb was probably better for those guys with punchier capacities, than the long Blockhaus.
Sorry I've been absent with RL-stuff, nice to see you're keeping this thread/community alive @[email protected]
No problem ๐
Will you be able to pin the thread for next Giro week? (I haven't posted it yet.)
@Deschanel2027 @EvilCartyen Of course :) I will do it as soon as you post it.
Stage 4, Tuesday 12
First change: there was a bit of a fight for breaking away today. We can see that the Italian teams have a real know-how about that: there was no Polti and no Bardiani in the first attempts contrarily to the other days, but in the right one (5+1 men) they put 1 rider each.
Hmm, after that, the second half of the race didn't go as I expected.
Movistar started pushing hard as the main climb started. After 2 miles, all sprinters but C. Strong (๐ฆ๐บ NSN) had been dropped, and he was finally dropped half-way into the climb. The Pink jersey was dropped too, as well as the Blue one; De Lie (๐ง๐ช Lotto), dropped in the first 100 metres of the climb, withdrew. This was all the work of Milesi (๐ฎ๐น Movistar) who pulled for 10 km (and caught all the breakaway โ last surviovors: M. Bais (๐ฎ๐น Polti) and Rafferty (๐ฎ๐ช EF))! Finally, Bernal (๐จ๐ด Ineos) was dropped 2 km from the top, but that wasn't irredeemable.
Nobody went for the Mountain points at the top, so basically all of them were scored by the Movistar riders who were pulling the peloton.
Then Movistar kept on pulling until the finish line.
On the Bonus sprint, Visma tried to have Vingegaard๐ฉ๐ฐ get a few bonus seconds, but he was launched too far and failed scoring any, passed by Christen (๐จ๐ญ UAE), Pellizzari (๐ฎ๐น Bora) and Ciccone (๐ฎ๐น Lidl-Trek).
In the finish, Christen (๐จ๐ญ UAE) tried to leave 1 mile from the line but was caught about 500 m from it. Aular (๐ป๐ช Movistar), the only rider resembling a sprinter, failed to win and reward his team's work, as he started his sprint from too far, and was beaten by Narvaez (๐ช๐จ UAE).
I am not quite sure what the exact goal of Movistar was, to pull so regularly for 60 km... Was all this massive effort only for Aular๐ป๐ช?
Stage 5, Wednesday 13
There were much more events than I can remember. Heavy rainstorms started just after a few miles, and only stopped a couple of mile before the finish.
The Lidl-Trek team failed its Pink jersey wearer Ciccone who loses the jersey only one day after winning it ๐ข
Crash-wise, we had at least:
Those two guys were exhausted and a bit hurt, so it was a combat of snails in the last two miles (which allowed the Spaniard to make up for having also taken a wrong direction after a curve).
Stage 7, Friday 15
Summary: no racing for 5ยฝ hours, and a final climb that went more or less as expected.
The organiser has setup everything to stimulate both breakaways and attacks over what should have been a tappone, but the riders didn't use anything.
J. Milan (๐ฎ๐น Lidl-Trek) left at km 0 (after yesterday's sprint, he needed Cyclamen points). After a few seconds, he was joined by 3 riders, including the Blue jersey wearer Sevilla (๐ช๐ธ Polti). 1 extra joined a bit later. And that was it: no fight, no chase. FDJ and Unibet didn't bother, they have too good GC leaders for that ๐
Nobody tried anything in the little humps placed on the course in case a breakaway had not succeeded to form. Nobody tried anything in the 2^nd^ category climb or the hills after it. The stage turned into a simple one-climb race, with a slower-than-expected average speed before that last climb, the record of which was then beaten.
In that final climb, there weren't many surprises, the expected weakest riders dropped, the expected good riders were at the front, Vingegaard (๐ฉ๐ฐ Visma) did what was expected where it was expected.
If we sum up the surprises:
Hindley (๐ฆ๐บ Bora) sprinted in front of his teammate Pellizzari๐ฎ๐น and deprived him of the time bonus, in pure New Bora style.
Despite Sevilla๐ช๐ธ going in the breakaway again and scoring the 18 points of the 2^nd^ category climb again, as it was the only climb with points before the end, and there were 50 bloody points awarded on the finish line, he loses the Blue jersey to Vingegaard๐ฉ๐ฐ. For 1 point...
Nevertheless, he also scored points for the I.S. classification, for the RB classification, and the Fuga classification with already 721 km of breakaway! It wasn't all for nothing.
Eulalio (๐ต๐น Bahrain) keeps the Pink jersey with a still significant margin of more than 3 minutes. He lost about 3 minutes today; as he hanged to the top guys as long as he could, he lost time quickly when he dropped, but then kind of stabilised (as, ahead, Vingegaard๐ฉ๐ฐ was perhaps paying his efforts too) and he lost a bit more in the end again.