• Giro d'Italia

The latest news and race results from Italy's Grand Tour, covering everything from the start lists to the race winners.

Primoz Roglic kissing the Giro d'Italia trophy. Who will reach the top step of the podium at Giro d'Italia 2024.

The Giro d'Italia 2024 marks the 107th edition of the Italian Grand Tour. Starting on May 4th, 2024, at the Venaria Reale, just outside Turin, the route heads south towards Naples before travelling back north and into the Dolomites. Day 21 and the final stage sees a city circuit around the streets of Rome.

The three-week event is the opener in the trio of Grand Tours, followed by the Tour de France and the Vuelta a España .

The key riders for the Giro were influenced by a series of high profile crashes, with  Wout van Aert crashing at Dwars door Vlaanderen , putting him out of contention for the race in May. Read the whole start list here .

Wales' own Geraint Thomas has set his sights on a Giro/Tour double , and rode the Tour of the Alps in April in preparation. However, he'll have incredibly stiff competition from Slovenian Tadej Pogačar, who announced his intention to ride the Giro in December 2023 , and has proven unstoppable so far this year, winning Liège-Bastogne-Liège and Strade Bianche , the latter in an 81 kilometre attack.

This year, Cycling Weekly will be covering the race with daily race reports, reactions following each stage, and analysis as the Italian showdown progresses. 

  • Giro d'Italia 2024 route: Stelvio, gravel sectors and a new climb confirmed as race presented

Wout van Aert to miss Giro d'Italia due to injuries suffered at Dwars door Vlaanderen

  • Geraint Thomas to race Giro d’Italia and Tour de France in 2024
  • Tadej Pogačar to ride Giro d'Italia in 2024
  • 'I don't know if I'll be at this team or in cycling next year': Julian Alaphilippe on the Giro d'Italia, finding his form, and his relationship with Patrick Lefevere
  • Pray to the weather gods, Philippe Gilbert advises Tadej Pogačar's Giro d'Italia rivals

Giro d'Italia 2024 contenders: Can anyone stop Tadej Pogačar?

  • Giro d'Italia 2024 start list: Tadej Pogačar's UAE Team Emirates squad confirmed

Giro d'Italia 2024: Overview

Giro d'italia 2024: the route .

Giro d'Italia route map 2024

The Giro d'Italia 2024 route was unveiled on October 13, 2023. 

The race will begin in Piemonte on 4 May - and will include two time trials, six mountain finishes, and a final week in the Dolomites.

The iconic  Passo dello Stelvio will make an appearance, as well as a new climb, and the route also includes gravel sections. 

For full details, see our Giro d'Italia 2024 route page. 

Giro d'Italia 2024 route: Stage-by-stage

Giro d'italia 2024: the jerseys.

The rider wearing the pink jersey (maglia rosa) at the Giro d'Italia 2024 will be the one leading the general classification. This is the rider who has accumulated the fastest time around the route so far, inclusive of time bonuses collected. On the final day, it is awarded to the overall general classification winner along with the Trofeo Senza Fine.

There are other jerseys up for grabs too. The purple (ciclamino) jersey is awarded to the rider who has accumulated the most points. More points are offered at the end of flatter, punchier stages than on mountain finishes, so this is a jersey for the sprinters. The blue (azzura) jersey goes to the rider who accumulates the most points on classified climbs, and the white (bianca) jersey is like the pink jersey but given to the best young rider under 26.

Read about the Giro d'Italia jerseys here.

More about the Giro d'Italia 2024

  • Giro d'Italia 2024 route
  • Giro d'Italia jerseys
  • How much prize money does the winner of the Giro d'Italia get?
  • How to watch the Giro d'Italia 
  • Giro d'Italia 2024 start list

Giro d'Italia: Past winners

Wout van Aert

From 'best condition ever' to 'worst' - Wout van Aert reflects on crashing out of Classics

Visma-Lease a Bike rider rues his misfortune in team documentary after Spring campaign wiped out by crash

Cian Uijtdebroeks

Complete Giro d'Italia 2024 start list: Cian Uijtdebroeks and Olav Kooij lead Visma-Lease a Bike

All the teams and riders for the 107th Giro d'Italia

By Adam Becket Published 2 May 24

Lennard Kamna

Tour de France stage winner leaves hospital, one month after being hit by car driver

Lennard Kämna to fly home to Germany to begin rehabilitation after incident in Tenerife last month

By Tom Thewlis Published 1 May 24

Primoz Roglic

How to watch the Giro d'Italia live stream 2024

All the information you need in order to tune into the Italian Grand Tour this May

By Tom Thewlis Published 30 April 24

Emanuel Buchmann

'I can not describe my disappointment and frustration': Bora-Hansgrohe rider hits out at non-selection for Giro d’Italia

German champion Emanuel Buchmann says he was promised "co-leadership" of Bora team, but he has not been picked

By Tom Thewlis Published 29 April 24

Tadej Pogacar

The Slovenian is the outright favourite for overall victory but there are plenty of other riders capable of having a say on the start line

Giro d'Italia route map 2024

Giro d'Italia 2024 route: Stelvio, gravel sectors and a new climb all on the menu

The Italian Grand Tour takes place 4-26 May, building up to tough Dolomites crescendo

By Tom Davidson Published 29 April 24

Tadej Pogacar at Liege-BAstogne-Liege

'Tadej Pogačar is capable of winning every stage of the Giro d'Italia', says Ineos Grenadiers DS

Zak Dempster expects the Slovenian to 'go after it from the start', but that won't stop Ineos Grenadiers trying to win the pink jersey

The jerseys of the Giro d'Italia

What do all the Giro d'Italia jerseys mean? Pink, purple, blue and white explained

There are no polka dot or green jerseys in this race

By Adam Becket Last updated 26 April 24

Wout van Aert

The Visma-Lease a Bike rider was set to ride the Italian Grand Tour for the first time

By Adam Becket Published 11 April 24

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tour of italy 2022 winner

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tour of italy 2022 winner

  • Date: 29 May 2022
  • Start time: 14:00
  • Avg. speed winner: 46.607 km/h
  • Race category: ME - Men Elite
  • Distance: 17.4 km
  • Points scale: GT.B.Stage
  • UCI scale: UCI.WR.GT.B.Stage - TM2022
  • Parcours type:
  • ProfileScore: 30
  • Vert. meters: 317
  • Departure: Verona
  • Arrival: Verona
  • Race ranking: 12
  • Startlist quality score: 817
  • Won how: Time Trial
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2022 Giro d'Italia

105th edition: may 6 - 29, 2022.

Giro d'Italia Podium history | 2021 Giro | 2023 Giro | Stage list, route description, start list, team presentation photos Stage 1 | Stage 2 | Stage 3 | Rest Day 1 | Stage 4 | Stage 5 | Stage 6 | Stage 7 | Stage 8 | Stage 9 | Rest Day 2 | Stage 10 | Stage 11 | Stage 12 | Stage 13 | Stage 14 | Stage 15 | Rest Day 3 | Stage 16 | Stage 17 | Stage 18 | Stage 19 | Stage 20 | Stage 21

tour of italy 2022 winner

2022 Giro d'Italia: 21 stages, 3,445.6 kilometers long. Average stage length is 164.1 kilometers.

Melanoma: It started with a freckle

Content continues below the ads

Sunday, May 29: 21st & Final Stage, Verona 17.4 km individual time trial

Stage 21 map & profile | Stage 21 photos

Jai Hindley

2022 Giro d'Italia winner Jai Hindley. Bora-hansgrohe photo.

Story of the Giro d'Italia, volume 1

Bill and Carol McGann's book The Story of the Giro d'Italia, A Year-by-Year History of the Tour of Italy, Vol 1: 1909 - 1970 is available in print, Kindle eBook & audiobook versions. To get your copy, just click on the Amazon link on the right.

Weather at the race city of Verona at 1:30 PM, local time: 18C (64F), mostly cloudy, with the wind from the east at 14 km/hr (9 mph). There is a 2% chance of rain except for a time around 3:00 PM when it goes up to 17%, and then drops back down to 2%.

Info about the route: An individual time trial on the Torricelle Circuit (the same as in the World Championships), covered counter-clockwise. The first part is on broad, straight boulevards, followed by an ascent sloping for 4.5 km at 5% in a series of steps, on narrower roadway. Split time is taken past the Torricella Massimiliana summit. The route then descends for 4 km, still on wide and straight roads. The last 3 km along the city streets, with some sharp bends, lead all the way to the finish in Piazza Bra and the Verona Arena.

Final kilometers: The final kilometers are on broad, straight urban avenues. The final time is taken in Piazza Bra, before entering the Arena. The home straight is 150 m long, on 6.5 meter wide asphalt road.

The race: Roger Kluge (Lotto Soudal), last in GC, is scheduled to be the first rider off at 2:00 PM. Jai Hindley will start at 4:48 PM.

Jai Hindley

Here's race leader Jai Hindley inspecting the course before the race. RCS Sport photo

Here's the report from 2022 Giro d'Italia winner Jai Hindley's Team Bora-hansgrohe:

Giro dream comes true: Jai Hindley wins first Grand Tour for BORA-hansgrohe

The Giro concluded with a 17.4 km individual time trial in Verona, starting initially on flat terrain, then continuing over a 4.5 km long and 5 per cent steep climb before the riders then tackled the fast and technically demanding descent to the finish right in front of the old amphitheatre in Verona.

Jai Hindley, who claimed the pink jersey in spectacular fashion on yesterday's stage, took to the course today with a 1:25 minute cushion and crossed the finish line in a time of 23:55 minutes, with the day's win going to M. Sobrero. With this performance, Jai became the first Australian to win the Giro. This is his greatest win so far in his career and at the same time the first Grand Tour victory for BORA - hansgrohe.

The team from Raubling concluded the Giro very successfully with Emanuel Buchmann's 7th place in GC, Lennard Kämna's victory atop Mount Etna on stage 4 and Jai Hindley's win on the Blockhaus stage as well as his overall victory. Thanks to the strong performance and close cooperation of the whole team, BORA - hansgrohe was able to realise the long-awaited goal of a Grand Tour victory today.

"To have won the Giro, that's really incredible. I felt pretty good on the time trial bike today. When I heard the interval times, I knew I was doing well. I wase pretty cautious going downhill, but then I gave it my all until the end. Winning here is a wonderful feeling and I have so many emotions. In the back of my mind, of course, I was still thinking about what happened in 2020 at the Giro and to be honest, I didn't want that to happen again. Last year was very difficult and I fought really hard to be here again. But I didn't know I would be fighting for the win here. Two days ago I heard that my parents were coming here, and I haven't seen them since early 2020, so today was very special. I'm proud to be Australian and I'm happy to take home this trophy." - Jai Hindley

"Jai's win is a great success and we are all very happy. He has shown himself to be very strong during the three weeks and fulfilled all our hopes. It is our first overall victory in a Grand Tour and we are proud to have achieved this. The whole team worked well together and everyone gave their best every day to make this success possible. Our team finishes the Giro with the overall victory and two stage wins and we can be very, very happy with this." - Enrico Gasparotto, Sports Director

Complete results:

Stage 21 photos

17.4 kilometers raced at an average speed of 46.607 km/hr

  • GC winner: Jai Hindley (Bora-hansgrohe)
  • Mountains classification winner: Koen Bouwman (Jumbo-Visma)
  • Points classification winner: Arnaud Démare (Groupama-FDJ)
  • Best young rider: Juan Pedro Lopez (Trek-Segafredo)
  • Team classification winner: Bahrain Victorious

3,445.6 kilometers raced at an average speed of 39.824 km/hr

Stage 21 map & profile:

tour of italy 2022 winner

Stage 21 map

Stage 21 profile

Stage 21 profile

Giro stage 21 photos by Fotoreporter Sirotti:

Jai Hindley

Jai Hindley has every reason to smile.

Richard Carapaz

GC second-place Richard Carapaz

Mikel Landa

GC sixth place Jan Hirt

Emanuel Buchmann

Seventh place Emanuel Buchmann

Arnaud Demare

Points classification winner Arnaud Démare

Vincenzo Nibali

Probably the last Giro photo of Vincenzo Nibali I'll ever post.

Bahrain Victorious

Team classification winners Team Bahrain Victorious

Koen Bouwman

King of the Mountains Koen Bouwman

2022 Giro d'Italia podium

The final GC podium, from left: Richard Carapaz (2nd), Jai Hindley (1st) & Mikel Landa (3rd).

Jai Hindley and father

Jai Hindley and his father.

Jai Hindley

After coming so close in 2020 , Jai Hindley has won the 2022 Giro d'Italia.

Saturday, May 28: Stage 20, Belluno - Marmolada, 168 km

Stage 20 complete results, stage story, photos, map & profile

tour of italy 2022 winner

3 km to go, Jai Hindley has just dropped race leader Richard Carapaz on the Marmolada. There is a pink jersey waiting for Hindley at the top. RCS Sport photo

168 kilometers raced at an average speed of 35.175 km/hr

  • GC leader: Jai Hindley (Bora-hansgrohe)
  • Mountains classification leader: Koen Bouwman (Jumbo-Visma)
  • Points classification leader: Arnaud Démare (Groupama-FDJ)
  • Team classification leader: Bahrain Victorious

3,428.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 39.806 km/hr

Friday, May 27: Stage 19: Marano Lagunare - Santuario Castelmonte, 178 km

Complete stage 19 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

Koen Bouwman wins stage 19

Koen Bouwman gets his second stage win this Giro. RCS Sport photo

178 kilometers raced at an average speed of 39.133 km/hr

  • GC leader: Richard Carapaz (INEOS Grenadiers)
  • Mountains classification leader: Koen Bouwman (Jumbo-Visma). There are not enough KOM points left to to take the lead from him.

3,264.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 40.148 km/hr

Thursday, May 26: Stage 18: Borgo Valsugana - Treviso, 156 km

Complete stage 18 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

Dries De Bont

Dries De Bondt gets his first World Tour race win. RCS Sport photo

156 kilometers raced at an average speed of 46.486 km/hr

3,086.2 kilometers raced at an average speed of 40.244 km/hr

Wednesday, May 25: Stage 17, Ponte di Legno - Lavarone, 168 km

Complete stage 17 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

Santiago Buitrago

Stage winner Santiago Buitrago appears to be well-pleased with his day's work. RCS Sport photo

168 kilometers raced at an average speed of 37.655 km/hr

  • Best young rider: Joao Almeida (UAE Team Emirates)

2,930.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 39.960 km/hr

Tuesday, May 24: Stage 16, Salò - Aprica, 202 km

Complete stage 16 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

Jan Hirt

Jan Hirt wins stage sixteen. RCS Sport photo

202 kilometers raced at average speed of 35.569 km/hr

  • Team classification leader: Bora-hansgrohe

2,762.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 40.138 km/hr

Monday, May 23: Rest Day 3

Sunday, May 22: Stage 15, Rivarolo Canavese - Cogne, 178 km

Stage 15 complete results, stage story, photos, map & profile

Giulio Ciccone

No other riders in sight as Giulio Ciccone wins stage fifteen. RCS Sport photo

178 kilometers raced at an average speed of 38.461 km/hr

2,560.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 40.564 km/hr

Saturday, May 21: Stage 14, Santena - Torino, 147 km

Complete stage 14 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

Simon Yates

Simon Yates takes a solo win in Torino. RCS Sport photo

147 kilometers raced at an average speed of 39.422 km/hr

  • Mountains classification leader: Diego Rosa (Eolo-Kometa)

2,382.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 40.821 km/hr

Friday, May 20: Stage 13, Sanremo - Cuneo, 150 km

Stage 13 complete results, stage story, photos, map & profile

Arnaud Demare

Arnaud Démare wins his 8th Giro d'Italia stage. RCS Sport photo

150 kilometers raced at an average speed of 45.393 km/hr

  • GC leader: Juan Pedro Lopez (Trek-Segafredo)
  • Mountains classification leader: Diego Rosa (EOLO-Kometa)
  • Points classification leader: Arnaud Démare (Groupama-DJ)
  • Team classificaton leader: Intermarché-Wanty-Gobert

2,235.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 40.920 km/hr

Thursday, May 19: Stage 12, Parma - Genova, 204 km

Complete stage 12 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

Stefano Oldani

Stefano Oldani wins stage twelve. Alpecin-Fenix photo

204 kilometers raced at an average speed of 46.004 km/hr

  • Mountain classification leader: Diego Rosa (EOLO-Kometa)
  • Team classification leader: Intermarché-Wanty-Gobert

2,085.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 40.632 km/hr

Wednesday, May 18: Stage 11, Santarcangelo di Romana - Reggio Emilia, 203 km

Complete stage 11 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

tour of italy 2022 winner

Alberto Dainese wins stage eleven, the first Italian winner this Giro. RCS Sport photo.

203 kilometers raced at an average speed of 47.015 km/hr. This is the 10th fastest road stage in Giro history.

  • GC leader: Juan Pedro Lopez (Trek-Segafedo)

1,881.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 40.265 km/hr

Tuesday, May 17: Stage 10, Pescara - Jesi, 196 km

Complete stage 10 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

Biniam Girmay

Biniam Girmay wins stage ten. RCS Sport photo

196 kilometers raced at an average speed of 43.217 km/hr

1,678.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 39.578 km/hr

Monday, May 16: Rest Day 2

Sunday, May 15: Stage 9, Isernia - Blockhaus, 191 km

Complete stage 9 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

tour of italy 2022 winner

Jai Hindley (on right) is fastest of the Blockhaus survivors. RCS Sport photo

191 kilometers raced at an average speed of 34.236 km/hr

1,482.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 39.142 km/hr

Saturday, May 14: Stage 8, Napoli - Napoli, 153 km

Complete stage 8 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

Thomas De Gendt

Thomas De Gendt enjoys his stage win. That's his teammate Harm Vanhoucke celebrating a few meters back. RCS Sport photo

153 kilometers raced at an average speed of 43.122 km/hr

  • Mountain classification leader: Koen Bouwman (Jumbo-Visma)

1,291.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 40.027 km/hr

Friday, May 13: Stage 7, Diamante - Potenza, 196 km

Complete stage 7 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

tour of italy 2022 winner

Koen Bouwman wins stage seven. RCS Sport photo

196 kilometers raced at an average speed of 37.632 km/hr

  • Team classification leader: Trek-Segafredo

1,138.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 39.726 km/hr

Thursday, May 12: Stage 6, Palmi - Scalea (Riviera dei Cedri), 192 km

Complete stage 6 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

Arnaud Demare beats Caleb Ewan to win Giro stage 6.

Could it be any closer? Arnaud Démare (left) just beats Caleb Ewan. 3rd-place Mark Cavendish's shoulder can be seen on the right edge of the photo. RCS Sport photo

192 kilometers raced at an average speed of 38.076 km/hr

  • Mountains classification leader: Lennard Kämna (Bora-hansgrohe)
  • Teams classification leader: Bora-hansgrohe

942.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 40.276 km/hr

Wednesday, May 11: Stage 5, Catania - Messina, 174 km

Complete stage 5 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

tour of italy 2022 winner

Arnaud Démare (head down, center) gets his sixth career Giro stage win. RCS Sport photo

174 kilometers raced at an average speed of 42.799 km/hr

750.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 40.881 km/hr

Tuesday, May 10: Stage 4, Avola - Etna/Nicolosi, 172 km

Complete stage 4 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

tour of italy 2022 winner

Lennard Kämna takes the stage while behind him Juan Pedro Lopez becomes the new Maglia Rosa. Photo: Bora-hansgrohe

172 kilometers raced at an average speed of 37.695 km/hr

  • Points classification leader: Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix)
  • Young rider classification leader: Juan Pedro Lopez (Trek-Segafredo)

576.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 40.335 km/hr

Monday, May 9: Rest day One: Race travels to Sicily

Sunday, May 8: Stage 3, Kaposvár - Balatonfüred, 201 km

Complete stage 3 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

Mark Cavendish

Mark Cavendish wins stage three. RCS Sport photo

201 kilometers raced at an average speed of 40.654 km/hr

  • GC leader: Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix)
  • Mountains classification leader: Rick Zabel (Israel-Premier Tech)
  • Best young rider: Matteo Sobrero (BikeExchange-Jayco)
  • Team classification leader: Jumbo-Visma

405.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 41.642 km/hr

Saturday, May 7: Stage 2, Budapest 9.2 km individual time trial

Complete stage 2 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

tour of italy 2022 winner

Simon Yates riding to his stage win. RCS Sport photo

9.2 kilometers raced at an average speed of 46.648 km/hr

  • Mountains classification leader: Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix)

204.2 kilometers raced so far at an average speed of 42.663 k/hr

Friday, May 6: Stage 1, Budapest - Visegrád, 195 km

Complete stage 1 results, stage story, photos, map & profile

Mathieu van der Poel wins Giro stage one

Mathieu van der Poel beats Biniam Girmay for the win while Caleb Ewan goes down hard close to the line. RCS Sport photo

195 kilometers raced at an average speed of 42.473 km/hr

  • Mountain classification leader: Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix)
  • Points classification leader: Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin Fenix)
  • Best young rider: Biniam Girmay (Intermaché-Wanty-Gobert)
  • Team classification leader: INEOS Grenadiers

© McGann Publishing

Giro d’Italia: Jai Hindley becomes Australia’s first winner of Italy’s cycling grand tour

After a ‘brutal’ near-miss two years ago, Jai Hindley has become the first Australian champion of the Giro d’Italia, one of cycling’s iconic grand tours.

Jai Hindley kisses the ‘Trofeo Senza Fine’ on the podium after winning the Giro d’Italia following the last stage, a 17.4 km individual time trial in Verona. Picture: Luca Bettini/AFP

Aussie star’s ‘miracle’ injury reveal

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Horror scenes unfold as star hospitalised

Olympian mobbed at court after wife’s death

Olympian mobbed at court after wife’s death

Jai Hindley’s Giro d’Italia win was earned in the country which gave him his start in cycling and led the Australian to becoming his country’s first ever winner of the Grand Tour.

Some 13,000 kilometres separate Hindley’s home town of Perth from Verona, where he made the jump to the highest ranks of cycling, but he has an affinity with the country.

The 26-year-old settled in the Mediterranean nation when he decided to make a go of professional cycling.

He owes his passion for the sport to his father Gordon, who fittingly was in Verona’s ancient Roman Arena to watch his son lift the Giro trophy.

“I was six years old and I wanted to be a footballer. Then I saw the Tour de France on television and my life changed,” Hindley said in 2020, when he lost the Giro in agonising fashion on the final stage.

“From that moment on I didn’t want to be anything other than a professional cyclist.

“My idols were the great Australian riders, Robbie McEwen and Stuart O’Grady, Cadel Evans … But it’s not easy to leave your country to go to the other side of the world.”

Jai Hindley crosses the finish line and waves to the crowd at the Arena di Verona after becoming Giro d'Italia champion. Picture: Tim de Waele/Getty Images

Just 18 when he left Australia, Hindley settled in Pescara on Italy’s Adriatic coast with Umberto Di Giuseppe, who welcomed him into his home and let him run in his team.

“Jai is a very serious boy who has never given me a problem. He knew what he wanted to do,” recalled Di Giuseppe.

Hindley says that he is stubborn and he scoured the Italian circuit for under-23 races he could take part in.

Jai Hindley sprints during the final stage of his Giro d'Italia win: Stage 21, a 17.4km individual time trial in Verona. Picture: Michael Steele/Getty Images

After a season in the reserves of Australian team Mitchelton (now BikeExchange), he convinced Sunweb (now DSM) to take him on and was introduced to the WorldTour in 2018.

He claimed his first major professional victory on home turf two years later, winning the Herald Sun Tour in Melbourne and then unknowingly saying goodbye to his parents for the last time until Sunday.

He couldn’t get back to Perth due to Covid-19 restrictions and only saw them at the final stage of this year’s Giro, the crowning moment of his career up to now.

Jai Hindley celebrates with the ‘Trofeo Senza Fine’. Picture: Luca Bettini/AFP

The year 2020 was the take off point of his career despite the pandemic, which squeezed the season into three months and cost him time with his family.

That October he won a Giro mountain stage then — just as this year — snatched the pink jersey in the penultimate stage, only to lose rather than win it in the climatic time-trial in Milan.

“I was devastated by it,” Hindley admitted after his victory overnight.

“After 2020 when I so close to win and it was brutal to lose on the last day, it took me a long time to get over that.

“Coming into the arena (today) knowing that I’d won the Giro was pretty special.”

Jai Hindley celebrates as final overall winner at the Arena di Verona. Picture: Tim de Waele/Getty Images

The next step for Hindley is to make a mark outside of Italy, his home away from home and where he earned the biggest victory of his career.

“The Giro has opened a lot of doors for me as a rider,” he said.

“This race opened my mind on what I can do as a pro cyclist. I’ll save the moment for a long time.”

Originally published as Giro d’Italia: Jai Hindley becomes Australia’s first winner of Italy’s cycling grand tour

Australian cycling star Jay Vine has revealed fears he wouldn’t walk again after a horror crash in Spain that hospitalised him and others.

A two-time Tour de France champion was rushed to hospital following a horror crash that ultimately saw the race cancelled.

The cyclist remained silent as he faced court for the first time charged with the shocking death of his wife and fellow world champion athlete Melissa Hoskins.

Giro d'Italia: Bouwman wins mountainous stage 7 in Potenza

Dumoulin gives Jumbo-Visma teammate major assist from Giro d'Italia breakaway as López keeps race lead

Koen Bouwman (Jumbo-Visma) claimed the first Grand Tour stage victory of his career on stage 7 of the Giro d’Italia, winning from the breakaway on a brutal and breathless stage to Potenza.

It took some 70km for the breakaway to form on a rugged parcours that totalled 4500 metres of elevation gain, but it went all the way and Bouwman’s celebrations were shadowed in the background by his teammate Tom Dumoulin.

Bouwman had in fact been dropped by a Dumoulin attack on the final categorised climb with just under 30km to go, but they came back together with Bauke Mollema (Trek-Segafredo) and Davide Formolo (UAE Team Emirates) for the run down into Potenza and the sharp fine kick to the line.

Dumoulin led it out and Bouwman, who’s showed a strong turn of speed to take mountains points throughout the day, showed his rivals a clean pair of heels, crossing the line with a sizeable gap. Mollema pipped Formolo to second place, while a celebrating Dumoulin rolled across for a fourth place and an assist that revives his Giro after falling out of overall contention on Mount Etna.

Davide Villella (Cofidis) trailed home in fifth as the last of the breakaway survivors after a series of mishaps, before the overall contenders arrived in a reduced peloton three minutes in arrears. Lennard Kamna (Bora-Hansgrohe), second overall, led the bunch home but race leader Juan Pedro Lopez (Trek-Segafredo) survived a treacherous day to retain the overall lead.

Despite the chaotic start, which included a brief attack from 2019 Giro champion Richard Carapaz (Ineos Grenadiers), the race eventually settled down as the breakaway stayed away, and there were no time gaps between the pre-race favourites.

"It's unbelievable. I can't believe it," said Bouwman. "It was such hard day. We were in the final with four riders and two of us. Tom did a superb job in the last 2km.

"I was feeling good all day. One time on the climb I was in trouble but I came back and actually I was confident for the sprint. It was steep but when I started to sprint I felt so much power left. I looked behind with 50 metres to go and saw I had a big gap - perfect."

Bouwman ended up with the stage win but also the blue jersey, collecting maximum points on three of the four categorised climbs - including the big mid-stage cat-1 Monte Sirino - to take the lead in the mountains classification.

For a while, it looked as though he could end up in pink, starting the day 5:30 down on López as the best-placed rider in what was initially a seven-rider breakaway that also featured Wout Poels (Bahrain Victorious) and Diego Camargo (EF Education-EasyPost). Despite Trek-Segafredo controlling the gap for Lopez - even though they had Mollema in the break - the gap yawned out to six minutes at the top of the cat-2 Montagna Grande di Viggiano with 60km to go, putting Bouwman into the virtual lead of the Giro.

Ineos Grenadiers, however, soon appeared at the front of the bunch, perhaps wary of letting former Giro winner such as Dumoulin recover too much time, the Dutchman having started the day eight minutes down at the start of the day. Dumoulin looked to rip the breakaway up on the final climb - a cat-3 test at La Sellata - attacking three times. The first dropped Camargo, the second dropped Villella, and the third dropped Bouwman. However, Dumoulin then found himself under attack from Mollema and Formolo. Bouwman ground his way back on a kilometre shy of the summit, where he once again sprang clear for mountains points in an indication that his legs hadn’t gone completely.

From there, Dumoulin switched to domestique mode, setting tempo while Bouwman responded effortlessly to attacks. Dumoulin was dropped three times before coming back in the final 2km to set up a win that finally kickstarts Jumbo-Visma’s Giro.

How it unfolded

After such little interest in the breakaway on stage 6, this one saw attacks from the gun. However, they didn't last long, and after a few kilometres the peloton was bunched up with no one moving. It was not a sign of things to come - more a calm before a storm that would last for 60km.

Thomas De Gendt (Lotto Soudal) went solo, while Mathieu Van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix) was active behind but didn't manage to force a group clear. There was brief lull when Lopez had to stop for a bike change, but it then kicked off again. De Gendt was swamped by a group that was soon reeled in, while Alessandro De Marchi (Israel-Premier Tech) had a brief foray alone before a new group went clear ahead of the day's first climb.

However, on the lower slopes of the category-3 Passo Colla - 9.3km at 4.5% - everything came back together but stretched out once more. Wout Poels (Bahrain Victorious) went clear on his own after a steep section. Several moves came and went behind - including from Van der Poel, EF's Merhawi Kudus, and Ineos' Ben Tulett - but nothing stuck until Davide Formolo (UAE Team Emirates) went near the top and took Anthony Perez (Cofidis) with him. At the summit, Poels led by 17 seconds over that duo, with the stretched peloton 10 seconds back and the race far from settled.

On the subsequent 10km descent, Formolo and Perez linked up with Poels, and the group grew to five when Fabio Fellini (Astana) and Vincenzo Albanese (Eolo-Kometa) skipped away. Soon after, it grew to 12, as Bauke Mollema (Trek-Segafredo) made his way across in a seven-man group. 

And soon after that, Richard Carapaz (Ineos Grenadiers) made his way over in a shock early attack from one of the top overall favourites. He was piloted by teammate Jhonatan Narvaez and had Van der Poel for company as they made their way across to the front of the race with 140km to go. Trek-Segafredo sensed the danger and shut the move down.

As that happened, Formolo attacked again, taking Jorge Arcas (Movistar) with him before going it alone. Further back, Lennard Kamna (Bora-Hansgrohe), second overall, applied some pressure, with Lopez following his wheel closely. They briefly went clear in a move with Ineos' Pavel Sivakov but then drifted back.

The road then tilted up for the imposing climb of Monte Sirino, a first-category climb some 24.4km in length. With gentler stretches mixed in with steeper slopes, the gradient averaged out to 3.8%. The climb finally saw the day's breakaway form.

There was a flurry of attacks on the lower slopes, but it was Davide Villella (Cofidis) who succeeded in bridging across to Formolo. Further back, Poels bridged across to a group of attackers before dropping them, while Koen Bouwman (Jumbo-Visma) joined him and the pair went across to Formolo and Villella. That wasn't case closed. 

Behind, Tom Dumoulin (Jumbo-Visma) suddenly became very active and went clear with Diego Camargo (EF Education-EasyPost). Mollema was late to the party but soon burned a string of second-division team riders off his wheel as he made his way across. A few kilometres later, that trio linked up with the leading quarter to form a seven-man break: Dumoulin, Bouwman, Poels, Mollema, Formolo, Camargo, Villella.

And that was that. With 120km to go, and the gap at one minute, Lopez called for a comfort break in the peloton and the race settled down at last. When the gap hit four minutes, Trek-Segafredo came to the front to control proceedings through Jacopo Mosca. They seemed keen to defend the pink jersey, even though they had a rider in the breakaway, with Mollema appearing to do less work than his companions.

At the top of Monte Sirino, with 106km to go, Bouwman was quickest in the dash for the mountains points, helping himself to the full haul of 40 ahead of Poels and Mollema. The peloton reached the summit 5:30 in arrears, which just put Bouwman into the virtual lead of the Giro as the best-placed rider in the break.

After a short descent, the road tilted uphill towards the day's first intermediate sprint, where Bouwman led the lead group through. Another shorter descent followed ahead of the day's third climb, and it saw Villella misjudge a corner and take himself out of the running briefly.

The third climb was the cat-2 Montagna Grande di Viggiano, 6.1km at a savage 9.6%. Poels, who'd briefly dropped on the uphill approach to the sprint, lost contact again, and would only slip further and further back - his chances over. Villella managed to skip past the Dutchman on his way back but was soon stopped again as he required mechanical assistance following his earlier crash. Camargo was also dangling but got back on.

At the steep top section of the climb, with 60km to go, Bouwman produced a zippy sprint to grab the full haul of 18 mountains points ahead of Formolo, putting himself into the blue jersey for Saturday's stage. The peloton had appeared to speed up on the previous descents but took its foot off the gas and reached the summit nearly six minutes in arrears.

The final climb and finale

On the descent, Ineos began to take control of the peloton, while Villella remarkably managed to regain contact up front. Ineos continued to work on an uncategorised climb that led towards the final categorised climb, the cat-3 ascent to La Sellata. As that climb began, with 31km to go, the remaining six riders in the breakaway led the bunch by 3:35. Chances of the stage win hung in the balance.

Dumoulin took responsibility to set the pace on the climb, with Camargo soon struggling but hanging on. Dumoulin then turned his effort into an attack, which dropped Camargo for good and then Villella. With 30km to go Dumoulin kicked again, Formolo, Mollema, and Bouwman grimacing but following. In the bunch behind, Ben Swift led an Ineos train.

After a short lull, Dumoulin attacked for a third time. Formolo and Mollema were alive to it and the move only distanced Dumoulin's own teammate Bouwman. Mollema looked to profit from that situation with a counter-attack of his own. Dumoulin set about steadily dragging it back and Formolo in turned profited from that to launch an attack of his own. He lasted nearly 2km, but Dumoulin and Mollema eventually worked their way over. A brief lull allowed Bouwman to regain contact 1km from the summit.

At the top of the climb, with 23km to go, Bouwman still had enough zip to skip away again to go clear and take the maximum haul of mountains points, once again ahead of Formolo, who tried to steal a march onto the descent. Behind, the peloton crested the climb 3:12 in arrears, Ineos simply setting a pace that allowed the breakaway the stage win but not a dangerous overall time gap.

The situation remained stable on the subsequent 15km descent and the true finale was signalled by a short uncategorised climb to the second intermediate sprint with 7km to go. Dumoulin did most of the work on the approach and continued onto the kicker, but Mollema soon attacked. Bouwman quickly responded before Fromolow clawed his way across. Dumoulin was dropped but a lull allowed him back on and he quickly went back to the front to set the pace. Mollema went for a second time towards the top of the climb and through the sprint, with the same outcome - Bouwman following instantly, Formolo joining, and Dumoulin dropping. Before another lull allowed Dumoulin back on, Formolo accelerated. Mollema was distanced slightly but Bouwman didn't miss a beat. In the peloton behind, Pavel Sivakov took it up for Ineos, now three minutes behind the leaders.

A downhill run led into the final 2km, which steadily ramped uphill towards the line, reaching 8% in the final 800 metres and 13% in the final 100 metres. Mollema and Formolo both issued testing accelerations as things got tactical on the approach, but the games being played allowed Dumoulin back in once more. The Dutchman duly hit the front to set a steadier pace and ended up leading out. He too it to 300 metres to go, when Bouwman hit out furiously. Mollema and Formolo launched their responses but it wasn't much of a contest as Bouwman sailed clear to claim only the second win of his career.

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Patrick Fletcher

Patrick is an NCTJ-trained journalist, and former deputy editor of Cyclingnews, who has seven years’ experience covering professional cycling. He has a modern languages degree from Durham University and has been able to put it to some use in what is a multi-lingual sport, with a particular focus on French and Spanish-speaking riders. Away from cycling, Patrick spends most of his time playing or watching other forms of sport - football, tennis, trail running, darts, to name a few, but he draws the line at rugby.

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Giro d’Italia 2022 route and stages – Schedule and key dates in the battle for maglia rosa in Italy

Nick Christian

Updated 05/05/2022 at 22:04 GMT

Whisper it quietly, but the Giro d’Italia might be the best of cycling’s three Grand Tours. And while we might be without defending champion Egan Bernal when the peloton touches down in, erm, Hungary for Stage 1 on May 6, there are a host of big names ready to fight for the ‘endless trophy’. So where could the maglia rosa be won and lost? Nick Christian takes us through the key stages.

Giro d’Italia 2022 route – From Hungary to Verona

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GIRO D’ITALIA 2022 - THE ROUTE

  • May 6, Stage 1: Budapest - Visegrad (195km, flat)
  • May 7, Stage 2: Budapest - Budapest ITT (9.2km, ITT)
  • May 8, Stage 3: Kaposvár - Balatonfüred (201km, flat)
  • Travelling to Sicily
  • May 10, Stage 4: Avola - Etna-Nicolosi (Rif. Sapienza) (172km, mountains)
  • May 11, Stage 5: Catania - Messina (174km, flat)
  • May 12, Stage 6: Palmi - Scalea (Riviera dei Cedri) (192km, flat)
  • May 13, Stage 7: Diamante - Potenza (196km, hilly)
  • May 14, Stage 8: Napoli - Napoli (Procida Capitale Italiana della Cultura) (153km, hilly)
  • May 15, Stage 9: Isernia - Blockhaus (191 km, mountains)
  • May 16, first rest day
  • May 17, Stage 10: Pescara - Jesi (196km, hilly)
  • May 18, Stage 11: Santarcangelo di Romagna - Reggio Emilia Parmigiano Reggiano Food Stage (203km, flat)
  • May 19, Stage 12: Parma - Genova (204km, hilly)
  • May 20, Stage 13: Sanremo - Cuneo (150km, flat)
  • May 21, Stage 14: Santena - Torino (147km, hilly)
  • May 22, Stage 15: Rivarolo Canavese - Cogne (178 km, mountains)
  • May 23, Second rest day
  • May 24, Stage 16: Salo - Aprica (Sforzato Wine Stage) (202km, mountains)
  • May 25, Stage 17: Ponte di Legno - Lavarone (168km, mountains)
  • May 26, Stage 18: Borgo Valsugana - Treviso (152km, flat)
  • May 27, Stage 19: Marano Lagunare - Santuario di Castelmonte (177km, hilly)
  • May 28, Stage 20: Belluno - Marmolada (Passo Fedaia) (168km, mountains)
  • May 29, Stage 21: Verona (Cronometro delle Colline Veronesi) (17.4km, ITT)

GIRO D'ITALIA ROUTE MAP

Giro 2022 - route map

GIRO D'ITALIA 2022 - KEY STAGES

Stage 1, may 6: budapest - visegrad (195km, flat).

Stage 1, Giro d'Italia 2022

Stage 4, May 10: Avola - Etna-Nicolosi (Rif. Sapienza) (172km, mountains)

Stage 4, Giro d'Italia 2022

Stage 7, May 13: Diamante - Potenza (196km, hilly)

Stage 7, Giro d'Italia 2022

Stage 9, May 15: Isernia - Blockhaus (191 km, mountains)

Stage 9, Giro d'Italia 2022

Stage 14, May 21: Santena - Torino (147km, hilly)

Stage 14, Giro d'Italia 2022

Stage 16, May 24: Salo - Aprica (Sforzato Wine Stage) (202km, mountains)

Stage 16, Giro d'Italia 2022

Stage 21, May 29: Verona (Cronometro delle Colline Veronesi) (17.4km, ITT)

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GIRO D’ITALIA 2022 STAGE 21 RESULTS

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Jai Hindley won the Giro d’Italia on Sunday after making his way through the final stage time-trial in Verona to claim his first Grand Tour. Bora Hansgrohe rider Hindley put himself in an almost unassailable position when he snatched the pink jersey from Richard Carapaz on the final climb of Saturday’s brutal mountain stage. The Australian had a cushion of almost a minute and a half and rolled triumphantly past Verona’s ancient Roman Arena after easily holding off his Ecuadorian rival to become his country’s first Giro winner. He ended the Giro one minute, 18 seconds ahead of 2019 winner Carapaz after losing just seven seconds in Sunday’s time-trial on the Ineos rider and finishing 15th on the day.

“It’s a beautiful feeling, really, a lot of emotions out there today. To take the win is really incredible.” Hindley said after the race.

“It’s really incredible man, I’m really proud to be Australian and I’m going to take this one home.”

Australia already had a Tour de France winner in 2011 winner Cadel Evans but as yet has no winner in the Vuelta a Espana. Hindley, 26, banished the memory of his gutting final-stage defeat in 2020, where his weakness in time-trials cost him the overall victory at the death. Having taken the pink jersey also in that year’s 20th stage he was pipped in the climatic time-trial in Milan by Briton Tao Geoghegan Hart. However this year he had no such problems, his stunning display on the Passo Fedaia in the Dolomites on Saturday supplying him with enough room to relieve most of the pre-race pressure.

“I had in the back of mind what happened in 2020 and I wasn’t going to let that happen again,” added Hindley.

Italian Matteo Sobrero took the honors on the final stage on a cool day in northeastern Italy, setting the fastest time of 22 minutes, 24.54 seconds early in the day.

“It’s an amazing feeling, I still need to recognise everything,” Sobrero said.

“I’m really happy with the team, we win on the first day and we win on the last day. All the work is paying off.”

French rider Arnaud Demare claimed the points classification for the second time in his career, winning three stages and asserting himself as the best sprinter in the peloton despite the presence of Mark Cavendish. Dutchman Koen Bouwman won two stages and also claimed the mountain’s classification blue jersey for his team Jumbo-Visma.Trek-Segafredo rider Juan Pedro Lopez, who held the pink jersey for 10 days of this year’s Giro, earned the white jersey for best young rider in front of Colombia’s Santiago Buitrago.

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GIRO D’ITALIA 2022 STAGE 21  RESULTS

Giro d’italia 2022 standings.

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RBA/AFP Photos: Sprint Cycling Agency

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How to Watch the 2022 Giro d’Italia

A Hungarian departure, two time trials, and lots of mountains (as usual) headline the 2022 Tour of Italy.

giro d'italis 2022 how to watch

It’s May, which means it’s time for one of the sport’s hardest races in one of the world’s most beautiful locations: the Giro d’Italia, the first of pro cycling’s trifecta of three-week “Grand Tours.”

Here’s everything you need to know about this year’s race, from the route to its history to the riders to watch and predictions for 2022.

What: The 2022 Giro d’Italia

When: Friday, May 6 - Sunday, May 29

Where: Stage 1 begins in Budapest, Hungary, and ends in Verona, Italy.

Course preview

Overall, the 2022 Giro d’Italia covers 3,410km (2,114 miles) spread over 21 stages, with two individual time trials, six mountain stages (four of which end with summit finishes), six “hilly” stages that look perfect for breakaways, seven days that should end in field sprints, and three rest days.

The race opens with three stages in Hungary, starting with a 195km road stage from Budapest to Visegrád on Friday, with an uphill finish that should make for an exciting sprint. Stage 2 brings the Giro’s first individual time trial (ITT) with a 9.2km city circuit that visits both Pest and Buda on either side of the Danube. Stage 3 covers 201km from Kaposvár to Balatonfüred with a flat finish that should produce the first pure field sprint of the race. A Monday Rest Day gives the race a chance to fly from Hungary to Sicily, where two stages await including a Stage 4 summit finish on Mount Etna, the first of this year’s four mountaintop finishes.

The race then works its way north with three tough stages at the end of the Giro’s first week: Stage 7, a lumpy stage with four categorized climbs and almost 4,500 meters of elevation gain; Stage 8, a short stage with five hilly finishing circuits around Naples; and Stage 9, a high mountain trek through the Apennines that ends with the climb to Blockhaus, one of the longer, steeper climbs in this year’s Giro. By the summit, the Giro’s real contenders should emerge.

The second week begins along the Adriatic coast and heads north and then west through Emilia-Romagna for Stages 10 and 11. Stage 12 begins in Parma and ends along the Mediterranean in Genova; Stage 13 starts in Sanremo, a town known for hosting the finish to the season’s first one-day Monument, Milano-Sanremo. On paper, these stages should favor sprinters and breakaway specialists.

The real action should come on Stages 14 and 15, which close the Giro’s second week. Stage 14 takes the riders on a short but intense ride from Santena to Trentino, with two-and-a-half laps of a challenging circuit featuring five categorized climbs. Stage 15 brings the race into the Western Alps and ends with two First Category climbs before the Second Category climb to the summit finish in Cogne. It’s not the hardest summit finish of the Giro, but after two weeks of racing there will be time gaps. By this point, only a handful of riders should still be in contention to win the race overall.

The Giro always saves its hardest stages for the final week, and this year’s no different. The week opens with two mountain stages (Stages 16 and 17) that aren’t true summit finishes, but might as well be since their finish lines both come fewer than 10km downhill from the First Category summits at the end of each stage.

But even with an ITT looming on Stage 21, the race should all come down to Stage 20, a classic mountain stage through the Dolomites that’s easily the hardest in this year’s race. Ending with a trio of classic summits—the Passo San Pellegrino, the Passo Pordoi (the highest climb in this year’s race), and the Passo Fedaia—this stage should blow the race apart and most likely, determine the Giro’s final champion.

And just in case it doesn’t, Stage 21’s 17km individual time trial in Verona will finish things once and for all.

What happened last year

104th giro d'italia 2021 stage 21

Colombia’s Egan Bernal (INEOS Grenadiers) won the 2021 Giro d’Italia after taking the pink jersey on Stage 9 and defending it all the way to the finish in Milan. But despite wearing the maglia rosa for 13 days, Bernal’s victory was far from easy. The Colombian—who also won the 2019 Tour de France—suffered through a few tough days during the Giro’s third week. Without the support of his teammates—especially fifth-place finisher Daniel Martinez—Bernal might not have won his second Grand Tour.

Italy’s Damiano Caruso (Bahrain-Victorious) finished second, and Great Britain’s Simon Yates (Team BikeExchange) finished third. Slovakia’s Peter Sagan (Bora-Hansgrohe) won the Points Classification, France’s Geoffrey Bouchard (AG2R Citroën Team) won the King of the Mountains Classification, and Bernal, 24 at the time, was the Giro’s Best Young Rider. INEOS Grenadiers was the Giro’s best team, placing two riders in the Giro’s top-5 overall and winning four stages.

Riders to watch

INEOS-Grenadiers (formerly Team Sky) has won three of the last four Tours of Italy, including the last two in a row. However, neither of the past two winners–Bernal (2021) and Great Britain’s Tao Geoghegan Hart (2020)–will be racing this year’s edition. Instead, the team turns to Ecuador's Richard Carapaz, the reigning Olympic road race champion, to lead the way. Carapaz won the Giro for Movistar back in 2019 and has since finished second at the Tour of Spain (2020) and third at the Tour de France (2021) for INEOS. He’s the top favorite.

His toughest competitors should be last year’s third-place finisher, Yates (Team BikeExchange-Jayco), who recently took two impressive stage wins at the Vuelta Asturias, and Portugal’s João Almeida (UAE Team Emirates), who finished sixth in 2020, fourth in 2021, and looks ready to challenge for the overall win.

Other General Classification contenders include Spain’s Mikel Landa (Bahrain-Victorious), who always looks the part but succumbs to either bad luck or crashes, France’s Romain Bardet (Team DSM), a two-time Tour de France podium finisher who’s rejuvenated his career with the Dutch team, and the Netherlands’ Tom Dumuolin (Jumbo-Visma) who returns to the race that he won in 2017 as more of a dark horse than a favorite.

68th circuit cycliste sarthe pays de la loire 2022 stage 3

But there’s life beyond the Giro’s GC contenders. Cavendish (Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl) returns to the Giro after last racing it nine years ago. We’re hoping that Cav wins a few stages and earns himself a spot on his team’s Tour de France squad–which means we’ll get one more chance to see him try and set the record for the most stage wins in Tour history.

The Giro will also mark the Grand Tour debut of Eritrea’s Biniam Girmay (Intermarché-Wanty-Gobert Matériaux) who’s been one of the season’s biggest revelations. The 22-year-old became the first African to win a Belgian classic when he took Ghent-Wevelgem in March, and now he sets his sights on winning a stage at the Giro. (He’s our pick to win Stage 1 and take the race’s first pink jersey.)

And speaking of the classics, the Netherlands’s Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix) makes his Giro debut as well. Winner of two of the last three Tours of Flanders, the Dutchman is hoping to use the Giro to build a solid foundation for his goals later in the season after a back injury ruined most of his off-season. (Not that it showed.)

Last but not least, the 2022 Giro should feature several North Americans, including the USA’s Joe Dombrowski (Astana) who won a stage last year (before crashing out the next day), Will Barta (Movistar), who’s supporting Alejandro Valverde in his final ride at the Giro, and Lawson Craddock (Team BikeExchange-Jayco), who’s hoping to help Yates in his bid to finally win it.

Canada’s Alexander Cataford (Israel-Premier Tech) will also be on the starting line in Budapest. The 28-year-old has started two Grand Tours in his career but has yet to finish one, so keep an eye on his progress once the race gets into its second and third weeks.

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Giro 2022: Ciccone solos to victory, Carapaz still in pink

Giulio Ciccone - Giro 2022: Ciccone solos to victory

Results 15th stage 2022 Giro

1. Giulio Ciccone 2. Santiago Buitrago + 1.31 3. Antonio Pedrero + 2.19 4. Hugh Carthy + 3.09 5. Martijn Tusveld + 4.36 6. Luca Covili + 5.08 7. Natnael Tesfatsion + 5.27 8. Bauke Mollema s.t. 9. Gijs Leemreize s.t. 10. Guillaume Martin + 6.06 – GC riders + 7.50

GC after stage 15 1. Richard Carapaz (ecu) 2. Jai Hindley (aus) + 0.07 3. João Almeida (por) + 0.30 4. Mikel Landa (spa) + 0.59 5. Domenico Pozzovivo (ita) + 1.01 6. Pello Bilbao (spa) + 1.52 7. Emanuel Buchmann (ger) + 1.58 8. Vincenzo Nibali (ita) + 2.58 9. Juan Pedro López (ita) + 4.04 10. Guillaume Martin (fra) + 8.02

Race report After more than 70 kilometres of hard racing Thymen Arensman and Merhawi Kudus initiate the breakaway. Erik Fetter, Lawson Craddock and Rémy Rochas are the first riders to bridges across. A huge group regains contact later, among others Koen Bouwman, Sam Oomen, Hugh Carthy, Mathieu van der Poel, David De La Cruz, Harold Tejada, Iván Sosa, Giulio Ciccone, Bauke Mollema, Davide Formolo, Lawson Craddock, Santiago Buitrago, Antonio Pedrero, and Rui Costa.

Bouwman accelerates on the first climb and he moves into the KOM lead at the top before Tusveld and Van der Poel join their compatriot on descent.

Bouwman can’t follow the pace on the climb, while Ciccone, Pedrero and Buitrago overhaul the other two. Carthy rejoins the trio just before the summit before Tusveld and Costa regain contact on descent.

Ciccone strikes early on the finish climb. Buitrago and Carthy go with him. But a number of accelerations later and the Italian is alone in the lead.

Ciccone opens a gap of more than a minute and takes a commanding victory.

The peloton finishes almost 8 minutes later. Carapaz keeps the maglia rosa.

Another interesting read: route 15th stage 2022 Giro d’Italia.

Giro d’Italia 2022 stage 15: routes, profiles, more

Click on the images to zoom

Giro d'Italia 2022 stage 15: climb to Les Fleurs - source: www.giroditalia.it

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Alberto Dainese wins Stage 11 sprint as Italy celebrate first victory at 2022 Giro d'Italia - Results

In a stage marred by crosswinds, Alberto Dainese of Italy sprinted to win in Reggio Emilia. 

2022-05-18T145426Z_1764463856_UP1EI5I15EOB6_RTRMADP_3_CYCLING-GIRO

Alberto Dainese won stage 11 of road cycling 's 2022 Giro d'Italia on Wednesday (18 May).

As expected, the 200km flat route through Emilia Romagna resulted in a sprint to the finish, won by the 24-year-old riding for Team DSM.

It's the first stage win for Italy in the 2022 edition of the grand tour event.

Fernando Gaviria of UAE Team Emirates crossed the line in second, with Simone Consonni from Cofidis third.

Spain's Juan Pedro Lopez retains the overall lead as riders now prepare for the Parma-Genoa Stage 12 on Thursday (19 May): the 204km route features three KOM summits before a predominantly flat finale.

Tuesday's winner Biniam Girmay withdrew from the race after injuring his left eye with a cork while celebrating on the podium: "I need some rest to give more power to the eye," the Eritrean said.

Giro d'Italia: Stage 11 Results - Wednesday 18 May

  • Alberto Dainese (Italy) DSM - 04:19:04
  • Fernando Gaviria Rendon (Colombia) UAD - Same time.
  • Simone Consonni (Italy) COF - Same time.
  • Arnaud Demare (France) GFC - Same time.
  • Caleb Ewan (Australia) LTS - Same time.
  • 6. Mark Cavendish (Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl) - Same time.
  • 7. Edward Theuns (Trek-Segafredo) - Same time.
  • 8. Sacha Modolo (Bardiani-CSF-Faizanè) - Same time.
  • 9. Phil Bauhaus (Bahrain-Victorious) - Same time.
  • 10. Lawrence Naesen (AG2R Citroën) - Same time.

Full results are here .

Giro d'Italia: General Classification standings after Stage 11

  • Juan Pedro Lopez (Spain) Trek-Segafredo = 46:43:12
  • Richard Carapaz (Colombia) INEOS Grenadiers +0:12
  • Joao Pedro Goncalves Almedia (UAE Team Emirates) +0:12
  • Romain Bardet (Team DSM) +0:14
  • Jai Hindley (BORA-Hansgrohe) +0:20

Giro d'Italia race schedule in 2022

The 2022 Giro began on Friday 6th May 2022, and will conclude on 29th May.

6 May: Stage 1 - Budapest-Visegrad (195 km) - Won by Mathieu van der Poel , who claims overall lead.

7 May: Stage 2 - Budapest-Budapest (Time trial, 9.2km) - Won by Simon Yates. Mathieu van der Poel remains overall leader.

8 May: Stage 3 - Kaposvar-Belatonfured (201 km) - Won by Mark Cavendish. Mathieu van der Poel remains overall leader.

9 May: Rest day

10 May: Stage 4 - Avola-Etna (166 km) - Won by Lennard Kamna, Juan Pedro Lopez claims overall lead.

11 May: Stage 5 - Catania-Messina (172 km) - Won by Arnaud Demare, Juan Pedro Lopez remains overall leader.

12 May: Stage 6 - Palmi-Scalea (192 km) - Won by Arnaud Demare, Juan Pedro Lopez remains overall leader.

13 May: Stage 7 - Diamante-Potenza (198 km) - Won by Koen Bouwman, Juan Pedro Lopez remains overall leader.

14 May: Stage 8 - Napoli-Napoli (149 km) - Won by Thomas de Gendt. Juan Pedro Lopez remains overall leader.

15 May: Stage 9 - Isernia-Blockhaus (187 km) - Won by Jai Hindley. Juan Pedro Lopez remains overall leader.

16 May: rest day

17 May: Stage 10 - Pescara-Jesi (194 km) - Won by Biniam Gimay. Juan Pedro Lopez remain overall leader.

18 May: Stage 11 - Santarcangelo di Romagna-Reggio Emilia (201 km) - Won by Alberto Dainese. Juan Pedro Lopez remain overall leader.

19 May: Parma-Genova (186 km)

20 May: Sanremo-Cuneo (157 km)

21 May: Santena-Torino (153 km)

22 May: Rivarolo Canavese-Cogne (177 km)

23 May: rest day

24 May: Salo-Aprica (193 km)

25 May: Ponte di Legno-Lavarone (165 km)

26 May: Borgo Valsugana-Treviso (146 km)

27 May: Marano Lagunare-Santuario di Castelmonte (178 km)

28 May: Belluno-Marmolada (Passo Fedala)

29 May: Verona-Verona (Time trial, 17.1km)

How to watch Giro d'Italia 2022

Every stage of the race is filmed and made available for live TV coverage and streaming via local broadcast partners in different regions.

In Europe, this is via Eurosport and Discovery+, with RAI Sport in Italy showing the coverage for viewers in the host nation. GCN+ in USA/Canada, SBS TV in Australia, and BeIN Sports are other major broadcasters offering television and livestream coverage.

Full details of broadcasting and race updates are also on the official giroditalia.it website.

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Tour of Romandie win is career-best title for Carlos Rodriguez through rain-slicked final stage

VERNIER, Switzerland — Carlos Rodriguez protected his yellow jersey through a rain-soaked final stage Sunday to win the six-day Tour of Romandie for the biggest race victory of his career.

Four previous winners in the French-speaking region of Switzerland went on to win that season’s Tour de France, including Chris Froome in 2013. Rodriguez placed fifth in cycling’s marquee event last year and won a stage.

Rodriguez started Sunday’s flat stage that looped round the suburbs of Geneva — won in a sprint finish by Dorian Godon — with a seven-second lead he took by placing third in a mountain stage Saturday.

The 23-year-old Ineos Grenadiers rider kept that winning margin over runner-up Aleksandr Vlasov, the 2022 Romandie winner. Third-placed Florian Lipowitz was third, trailing Rodriquez by nine seconds.

Godon sealed his second stage win this week, edging Simone Consonni with Dion Smith third.

AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports

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TOURNAMENT RESULTS

{{tournament.sponsortitle}}, player results, internazionali bnl d'italia 2024: draws, dates, history & all you need to know.

The Internazionali BNL d'Italia is held at the Foro Italico.

The third clay-court ATP Masters 1000 event of the season will see the world's best players compete at the Internazionali BNL d'Italia , where World No. 1 Novak Djokovic , home favourite Jannik Sinner , Carlos Alcaraz and Rafael Nadal will be among those in action.

Here's what you need to know ahead of the tournament in the Italian capital:

When is the Internazionali BNL d'Italia ? The 2024 Internazionali BNL d'Italia  will be held from 8-19 May. The clay-court ATP Masters 1000 tournament, established in 1930, will take place at the Foro Italico in Rome, Italy. The tournament director is Paolo Lorenzi .

Who is playing at the Internazionali BNL d'Italia ? The Internazionali BNL d'Italia  will feature stars such as the No. 1 in the PIF ATP Rankings Djokovic, Sinner, Alcaraz, Nadal and defending champion Daniil Medvedev .

When is the draw for the Internazionali BNL d'Italia ? The Rome draw will be made on Monday, 6 May at 12 p.m. 

What is the schedule for the Internazionali BNL d'Italia ? * Qualifying: Monday, 6 May and Tuesday, 7 May at 10 a.m. * Main Draw: Wednesday, 8 May – Sunday, 19 May at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. * Doubles Final: Sunday, 19 May at 12 p.m. * Singles Final: Sunday, 19 May at 5 p.m. *View On Official Website

What is the prize money and points for the Internazionali BNL d'Italia ? The prize money for the Internazionali BNL d'Italia  is €7,877,020 and the Total Financial Commitment is €9,094,379.

SINGLES Winner: €963,225 / 1,000 points Finalist: €512,260 / 650 points Semi-finalist: €284,590 / 400 points Quarter-finalist: €161,995 / 200 points Round of 16: €88,440 / 100 points Round of 32: €51,665 / 50 points Round of 64: €30,255 / 30 points Round of 96: €20,360 / 10 points

DOUBLES (€ per team) Winner: €391,680 / 1,000 points Finalist: €207,360 / 600 points Semi-finalist: €111,360 / 360 points Quarter-finalist: €55,690 / 180 points Round of 16: €29,860 / 90 points Round of 32: €16,320 / 0 points

How can I watch the Internazionali BNL d'Italia ? Watch Live On Tennis TV TV Schedule

How can I follow the Internazionali BNL d'Italia ? Hashtag: #IBI24 Facebook: Internazionali BNL d'Italia X:  @InteBNLdItalia Instagram: @internazionalibnlditalia

Who won the last edition of the Internazionali BNL d'Italia  in 2023? Daniil Medvedev won the 2023 Internazionali BNL d'Italia  singles title, his first clay-court trophy, with a 7-5, 7-5 victory against Holger Rune in the championship match . Hugo Nys and Jan Zielinski lifted the doubles trophy in Rome with a 7-5, 6-1 triumph against Robin Haase and Botic van de Zandschulp in the final .

Who holds the Rome record for most titles, oldest champion, youngest champion and more? Most Titles, Singles: Rafael Nadal (10) Most Titles, Doubles: Brian Gottfried , Raul Ramirez , Daniel Nestor , Bob Bryan , Mike Bryan (4) Oldest Champion: Novak Djokovic , 34, in 2022 Youngest Champion: Bjorn Borg , 17, in 1974 Highest-Ranked Champion: No. 1 Ivan Lendl in 1986, 1988, Jim Courier in 1992, Pete Sampras in 1994, Rafael Nadal in 2009, Novak Djokovic in 2015, 2020, 2022 Lowest-Ranked Champion: No. 47 Felix Mantilla in 2003 Last Home Champion: Adriano Panatta in 1976 Most Match Wins: Rafael Nadal (69)

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COMMENTS

  1. Jai Hindley wins 2022 Giro d'Italia

    Final podium for general classification top 3 of 2022 Giro d'Italia (L-R): runner-up Richard Carapaz (Ineos Grenadiers), race winner Jai Hindley of Bora - Hansgrohe in Pink Leader Jersey and on ...

  2. 2022 Giro d'Italia

    The 2022 Giro d'Italia was the 105th edition of the Giro d'Italia, a three-week Grand Tour cycling stage race.The race started on 6 May in Budapest, Hungary, and finished on 29 May in Verona, Italy.. The race was won by Jai Hindley of Bora-Hansgrohe, taking his first Grand Tour victory and becoming the first Australian to win the Giro.Hindley came into the race as one of his team's three ...

  3. Giro d'Italia 2022 standings: Final results from the 105th edition

    Giro d'Italia general classification after stage 21. 1. Jai Hindley (Aus) BORA-hansgrohe, in 86-31-14 2.Richard Carapaz (Ecu) Ineos Grenadiers, at 1-18

  4. Giro d'Italia 2022: the ultimate guide to the Italian Grand Tour

    Giro d'Italia stage 21 - As it happened. Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe) placed inside the top 20 on the final day of racing in Verona and secured the overall 2022 Giro d'Italia title on Sunday. He ...

  5. The Winners and Losers of the 2022 Giro d'Italia

    France's Démare (Groupama-FDJ) has always scored his best wins in Italy. Winner of Milano-Sanremo in 2016, the 30-year-old sprinted to three stage wins this year to bring his career total to eight.

  6. Giro d'Italia

    The Giro d'Italia (Italian pronunciation: [ˈdʒiːro diˈtaːlja]; English: Tour of Italy; also known as the Giro) is an annual multiple-stage bicycle race primarily held in Italy, while also starting in, or passing through, other countries. The first race was organized in 1909 to increase sales of the newspaper La Gazzetta dello Sport, and the race is still run by a subsidiary of that paper ...

  7. Giro d'Italia: latest news and race results

    The latest news and race results from Italy's Grand Tour, covering everything from the start lists to the race winners. Latest. How to watch the Giro d'Italia live stream 2024

  8. Giro d'Italia 2022 Stage 21 (ITT) results

    Jai Hindley is the winner of Giro d'Italia 2022, before Richard Carapaz and Mikel Landa. Matteo Sobrero is the winner of the final stage.

  9. 2022 Giro d'Italia by BikeRaceInfo

    2022 Giro d'Italia winner Jai Hindley. Bora-hansgrohe photo. Bill and Carol McGann's book The Story of the Giro d'Italia, A Year-by-Year History of the Tour of Italy, Vol 1: 1909 - 1970 is available in print, Kindle eBook & audiobook versions. To get your copy, just click on the Amazon link on the right.

  10. Giro d'Italia: Jai Hindley becomes Australia's first winner of Italy's

    Giro d'Italia: Jai Hindley becomes Australia's first winner of Italy's cycling grand tour. After a 'brutal' near-miss two years ago, Jai Hindley has become the first Australian champion ...

  11. Giro d'Italia: Bouwman wins mountainous stage 7 in Potenza

    Here's how it works. Giro d'Italia: Bouwman wins mountainous stage 7 in Potenza. Koen Bouwman (Jumbo-Visma) claimed the first Grand Tour stage victory of his career on stage 7 of the Giro d ...

  12. Giro d'Italia 2022 route and stages

    giro d'italia 2022 - key stages Stage 1, May 6: Budapest - Visegrad (195km, flat) Two years on from the Grande Partenza claimed by Covid, we finally arrive in Budapest.

  13. List of Giro d'Italia general classification winners

    Fausto Coppi, who won the Giro d'Italia five times between 1940 and 1953. The Giro d'Italia is an annual road bicycle race held in May. Established in 1909 by newspaper La Gazzetta dello Sport, the Giro is one of cycling's three "Grand Tours"; along with the Tour de France and the Vuelta a España. The race usually covers approximately 3,500 kilometres (2,200 mi), passing through Italy and ...

  14. 2022 Giro d'Italia: stage two time trial

    Simon Yates won the second stage of road cycling's 2022 Giro d'Italia on Saturday (7 May).. The BikeExchange-Jayco rider, who won the 2018 Vuelta a Espana overall title, was fastest over the 9.2km time trial course in Budapest, Hungary, where this year's edition of the men's grand tour event is starting before moving on to Italy.

  15. GIRO D'ITALIA 2022 STAGE 21 RESULTS

    GIRO D'ITALIA 2022 STAGE 21 RESULTS. Jai Hindley won the Giro d'Italia on Sunday after making his way through the final stage time-trial in Verona to claim his first Grand Tour. Bora Hansgrohe rider Hindley put himself in an almost unassailable position when he snatched the pink jersey from Richard Carapaz on the final climb of Saturday's ...

  16. 2022 Giro d'Italia: Kamna wins stage 4 as Lopez claims pink jersey

    Cycling Road. Lennard Kamna (BORA-hansgrohe) won the first mountain stage of the 2022 road cycling 's Giro d'Italia atop Mount Etna on Tuesday (10 May). The German rider took his second career victory in a Grand Tour as he edged Juan Pedro Lopez (Trek-Segafredo) a few metres from the finish line after the duo emerged from a 14-rider attack.

  17. How to Watch the 2022 Giro d'Italia

    What: The 2022 Giro d'Italia. When: Friday, May 6 - Sunday, May 29. Where: Stage 1 begins in Budapest, Hungary, and ends in Verona, Italy. How to Watch: A subscription to GCN+ ($8.99/monthly or ...

  18. Giro 2022: De Gendt wins from the breakaway, López keeps pink

    foto: Cor Vos Thomas De Gendt outsprints Davide Gaburo, Jorge Arcas and his team mate Harm Vanhoucke in Naples, while Juan Pedro López stays in the maglia rosa. (Slideshow route/profile)Results 8th stage 2022 Giro. 1. Thomas De Gendt (bel) 2. Davide Gabburo (ita) s.t. 3. Jorge Arcas (spa) s.t. 4. Harm Vanhoucke (bel) + 0.04 5. Biniam Girmay (eri) + 0.15 6. . Mauro Schmid (swi)

  19. Giro 2022: Ciccone solos to victory, Carapaz still in pink

    foto: Cor Vos Giulio Ciccone wins from the breakaway in the first stage in the Alps. Santiago Buitrago finishes in second, while Richard Carapaz keeps the maglia rosa. (Slideshow route/profile)Results 15th stage 2022 Giro. 1. Giulio Ciccone 2. Santiago Buitrago + 1.31 3. Antonio Pedrero + 2.19 4. Hugh Carthy + 3.09 5. Martijn Tusveld + 4.36 6. Luca Covili + 5.08 7.

  20. Alberto Dainese wins Stage 11 at 2022 Giro d'Italia

    Cycling Road. Alberto Dainese won stage 11 of road cycling 's 2022 Giro d'Italia on Wednesday (18 May). As expected, the 200km flat route through Emilia Romagna resulted in a sprint to the finish, won by the 24-year-old riding for Team DSM. It's the first stage win for Italy in the 2022 edition of the grand tour event.

  21. Giro d'Italia 2024

    Visit the official website of Giro d'Italia 2024 and discover all the latest updates and info on the route, stages, teams plus the latest news

  22. Tour of Romandie win is career-best title for Carlos Rodriguez through

    The winner of the Tour de Romandie, Carlos Rodriguez, right, from Spain of team Ineos Grenadier, celebrates on the podium after the fifth and final stage, a 150,8 km race between Vernier and ...

  23. Giro di Lombardia

    The Giro di Lombardia (English: Tour of Lombardy), officially Il Lombardia, is a cycling race in Lombardy, Italy. It is traditionally the last of the five 'Monuments' of the season, considered to be one of the most prestigious one-day events in cycling, and one of the last events on the UCI World Tour calendar. Nicknamed the Classica delle foglie morte ("the Classic of the falling (dead ...

  24. Internazionali BNL d'Italia 2024: Draws, Dates, History ...

    The third clay-court ATP Masters 1000 event of the season will see the world's best players compete at the Internazionali BNL d'Italia, where World No. 1 Novak Djokovic, home favourite Jannik Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz and Rafael Nadal will be among those in action.. Here's what you need to know ahead of the tournament in the Italian capital: