Giro d’Italia Stage 4 LIVE – Sprinters to the fore again as Pogacar resumes in pink

LIVE: Acqui Terme – Andora

Giro d’Italia – May 7th, 2024

Follow the Giro d’Italia Acqui Terme – Andora stage live with Eurosport. Acqui Terme – Andora starts at 10:35 AM on May 7th, 2024.

Catch the latest cycling news and find Giro d’Italia results, standings and routes. After Acqui Terme – Andora is done, be sure to check out the full schedule of stages and get live updates for the next stage. You can also find a list of previous winners.

Follow Rui Costa, Mathieu van der Poel, Mark Cavendish and other key riders to see who is dominating this season. See the hottest cycling teams in action – Bora-Hansgrohe, Ineos Grenadiers and Cofidis to name a few.

Cycling fans can read breaking Giro d’Italia news headlines, interviews, expert commentary, replays & highlights. Keep up with all of this season’s top events, including the Tour de France, Giro d’Italia and Vuelta a España.

Make Eurosport your go-to source for sports online from cycling to football, tennis, snooker and more. Enjoy live updates from the biggest sports competitions.

How to watch Stage 4 of the Giro d’Italia as sprinters look to capitalise again

We’re only four days into the first Grand Tour of the year and the 2024 Giro d’Italia has already provided thrills galore.

Pre-race favourite Tadej Pogacar was perhaps surprisingly beaten to the maglia rosa on Stage 1 by Jhonatan Narvaez before eventually seizing it with victory on Stage 2.

What does Stage 4 have in store?

Read on for the stage profile, how to watch, and the overall stage guide…

Stage 4 profile

Giro d'Italia 2024 - Stage 4 profile
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Highlights: Merlier claims Stage 3 sprint win after late Pogacar, Thomas duel

How can I watch Stage 4 of the Giro d’Italia?

Watch Stage 4 of the 2024 Giro d’Italia on Tuesday, May 7 from 12:00 UK time on Eurosport 1, while you can watch ad-free on discovery+.

The UK coverage will be bookended by The Breakaway, presented by Orla Chennaoui, who has a string of esteemed guests joining her across the three weeks. Usual suspects Dan Lloyd, Adam Blythe and 12-time stage winner Robbie McEwen will return, with former Jumbo-Visma star Nathan van Hooydonck swooping in for the final week as Blythe resumes his duties on the motorbike in Italy.

And fans of Jonathan Vaughters are in for a treat on Stages 8 and 9, with the outspoken EF Education–EasyPost supremo joining our coverage.

Meanwhile, the charismatic Jens Voigt (Stages 1-9), former road star Daniel Oss (Stages 10-14), two-time winner Alberto Contador (Stage 15) and Blythe (Stages 16-21) will be doing their thing on the back of a motorbike to bring fans closer to the action.

Giro d’Italia 2024 TV schedule and route details

Stage Date Start / Finish Distance Breakaway on-air time (UK time)
Stage 1 Sat May 4 Venaria Reale – Torino 140km (hilly) 12:30
Stage 2 Sun May 5 San Francesco al Campo – Santuario di Oropa (Biella) 161km (summit finish) 11:45
Stage 3 Mon May 6 Novara – Fossano 166km (flat) 12:00
Stage 4 Tue May 7 Acqui Terme – Andora 190km (flat) 11:15
Stage 5 Wed May 8 Genova – Lucca 178km (hilly) 11:30
Stage 6 Thu May 9 Torre del Lago Puccini (Viareggio) – Rapolano Terme 180km (hilly) 11:30
Stage 7 Fri May 10 Foligno – Perugia 40.6km (ITT) 11:45
Stage 8 Sat May 11 Spoleto – Prati di Tivo 152km (summit finish) 11:15
Stage 9 Sun May 12 Avezzano – Napoli 214km (hilly) 10:45
Rest Day Mon May 13
Stage 10 Tue May 14 Pompei – Cusano Mutri (Bocca della Selva) 142km (summit finish) 11:45
Stage 11 Wed May 15 Foiano di Val Fortore – Francavilla al Mare 207km (flat) 10:45
Stage 12 Thu May 16 Martinsicuro – Fano 193km (hilly) 11:15
Stage 13 Fri May 17 Riccione – Cento 179km (flat) 11:45
Stage 14 Sat May 18 Castiglione delle Stiviere – Desenzano del Garda 31.2km (ITT) 12:00
Stage 15 Sun May 19 Manerba del Garda – Livigno (Mottolino) 222km (summit finish) 09:15
Rest Day Mon May 20
Stage 16 Tue May 21 Livigno – Santa Cristina Valgardena/St. Christina in Groden (Monte Pana) 202km (summit finish) 10:15
Stage 17 Wed May 22 Selva di Val Gardena/Wolkenstein in Gröden – Passo del Brocon 159km (summit finish) 11:15
Stage 18 Thu May 23 Fiera di Primiero – Padova 178km (flat) 11:45
Stage 19 Fri May 24 Mortegliano – Sappada 157km (hilly) 11:45
Stage 20 Sat May 25 Alpago – Bassano del Grappa 181km (mountainous) 10:30
Stage 21 Sun May 26 Roma – Roma 122km (flat) 14:15
Stream top cycling action, including the Giro d’Italia, Tour de France and Vuelta a Espana, live and on-demand on Eurosport, the Eurosport app and discovery+.

How to watch Stage 4 of the Giro d’Italia as sprinters look to capitalise again

We’re only four days into the first Grand Tour of the year and the 2024 Giro d’Italia has already provided thrills galore.

Pre-race favourite Tadej Pogacar was perhaps surprisingly beaten to the maglia rosa on Stage 1 by Jhonatan Narvaez before eventually seizing it with victory on Stage 2.

What does Stage 4 have in store?

Read on for the stage profile, how to watch, and the overall stage guide…

Stage 4 profile

Giro d'Italia 2024 - Stage 4 profile
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Highlights: Merlier claims Stage 3 sprint win after late Pogacar, Thomas duel

How can I watch Stage 4 of the Giro d’Italia?

Watch Stage 4 of the 2024 Giro d’Italia on Tuesday, May 7 from 12:00 UK time on Eurosport 1, while you can watch ad-free on discovery+.

The UK coverage will be bookended by The Breakaway, presented by Orla Chennaoui, who has a string of esteemed guests joining her across the three weeks. Usual suspects Dan Lloyd, Adam Blythe and 12-time stage winner Robbie McEwen will return, with former Jumbo-Visma star Nathan van Hooydonck swooping in for the final week as Blythe resumes his duties on the motorbike in Italy.

And fans of Jonathan Vaughters are in for a treat on Stages 8 and 9, with the outspoken EF Education–EasyPost supremo joining our coverage.

Meanwhile, the charismatic Jens Voigt (Stages 1-9), former road star Daniel Oss (Stages 10-14), two-time winner Alberto Contador (Stage 15) and Blythe (Stages 16-21) will be doing their thing on the back of a motorbike to bring fans closer to the action.

Giro d’Italia 2024 TV schedule and route details

Stage Date Start / Finish Distance Breakaway on-air time (UK time)
Stage 1 Sat May 4 Venaria Reale – Torino 140km (hilly) 12:30
Stage 2 Sun May 5 San Francesco al Campo – Santuario di Oropa (Biella) 161km (summit finish) 11:45
Stage 3 Mon May 6 Novara – Fossano 166km (flat) 12:00
Stage 4 Tue May 7 Acqui Terme – Andora 190km (flat) 11:15
Stage 5 Wed May 8 Genova – Lucca 178km (hilly) 11:30
Stage 6 Thu May 9 Torre del Lago Puccini (Viareggio) – Rapolano Terme 180km (hilly) 11:30
Stage 7 Fri May 10 Foligno – Perugia 40.6km (ITT) 11:45
Stage 8 Sat May 11 Spoleto – Prati di Tivo 152km (summit finish) 11:15
Stage 9 Sun May 12 Avezzano – Napoli 214km (hilly) 10:45
Rest Day Mon May 13
Stage 10 Tue May 14 Pompei – Cusano Mutri (Bocca della Selva) 142km (summit finish) 11:45
Stage 11 Wed May 15 Foiano di Val Fortore – Francavilla al Mare 207km (flat) 10:45
Stage 12 Thu May 16 Martinsicuro – Fano 193km (hilly) 11:15
Stage 13 Fri May 17 Riccione – Cento 179km (flat) 11:45
Stage 14 Sat May 18 Castiglione delle Stiviere – Desenzano del Garda 31.2km (ITT) 12:00
Stage 15 Sun May 19 Manerba del Garda – Livigno (Mottolino) 222km (summit finish) 09:15
Rest Day Mon May 20
Stage 16 Tue May 21 Livigno – Santa Cristina Valgardena/St. Christina in Groden (Monte Pana) 202km (summit finish) 10:15
Stage 17 Wed May 22 Selva di Val Gardena/Wolkenstein in Gröden – Passo del Brocon 159km (summit finish) 11:15
Stage 18 Thu May 23 Fiera di Primiero – Padova 178km (flat) 11:45
Stage 19 Fri May 24 Mortegliano – Sappada 157km (hilly) 11:45
Stage 20 Sat May 25 Alpago – Bassano del Grappa 181km (mountainous) 10:30
Stage 21 Sun May 26 Roma – Roma 122km (flat) 14:15
Stream top cycling action, including the Giro d’Italia, Tour de France and Vuelta a Espana, live and on-demand on Eurosport, the Eurosport app and discovery+.

‘He was kicking my head in’ – Thomas reacts to Pogacar’s late Stage 3 attack

UAE Team Emirates rider and race favourite Pogacar launched a late dash for the line alongside EF Education-EasyPost’s Mikkel Honore with 3.5 kilometres remaining.

Thomas (Ineos Grenadiers) elected to stay with his general classification rival and the leading pair left everyone else in their wake until the chasing pack started to reel them in at the death.

Speaking to reporters before the stage, Thomas suggested that the Slovenian might be plotting to break free. Afterwards, though, he said his team were not thinking of going as aggressively.

“It wasn’t the plan, we just wanted to stay well out of trouble, stay on the left,” Thomas said.

“We did that really well from quite early on, the boys set me up great, we were hoping that Pippo [Ganna] and Johnny [Narvaez] would be with me but they lost the wheel a bit somewhere along the way.”

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Highlights: Merlier claims Stage 3 sprint win after late Pogacar, Thomas duel

“Thymen [Arensman] set a great pace and then I saw Honore and Pogacar going for it, and I thought, I might as well just go. But jeepers, man, they were solid – he was kicking my head in.”

The 37-year-old admitted it was a taxing end to the stage, adding: “I was just thinking about holding his wheel.

“I tried to give him a turn, but he was solid, we were going. I looked back, I was surprised to see we had such a big gap, but I knew they [the sprinters] were going to come.”

“Especially with the way I was feeling I didn’t feel too confident about when we got to the line but yeah – a bit different.” He had, he said later, “just wanted it to finish, I was thinking – this is hurting.”

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‘It was great to see G fighting’ – Breakaway team wowed by Thomas-Pogacar battle

Thomas praised his rival for his tactics in going on the offensive relatively early on, saying: “It was a good move, there were some tired legs in the peloton, so it was worth a try. It was never in the plan, I wasn’t even thinking about it.

“I was the wrong side of Thymen’s wheel when Tadej went, I had to back out a bit and then go for it, but then when he did, I thought – sod it, I’ll try and follow,” he said.

The stage was ultimately won by Belgian’s Tim Merlier, who came out on top in a packed bunch sprint to the line.

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‘Happy to win this one’ – Merlier reacts to ‘hardest victory’ on Stage 3

Stream top cycling action, including all three 2024 Grand Tours, live on discovery+, the Eurosport app and at eurosport.com.

‘He was kicking my head in’ – Thomas reacts to Pogacar’s late Stage 3 attack

UAE Team Emirates rider and race favourite Pogacar launched a late dash for the line alongside EF Education-EasyPost’s Mikkel Honore with 3.5 kilometres remaining.

Thomas (Ineos Grenadiers) elected to stay with his general classification rival and the leading pair left everyone else in their wake until the chasing pack started to reel them in at the death.

Speaking to reporters before the stage, Thomas suggested that the Slovenian might be plotting to break free. Afterwards, though, he said his team were not thinking of going as aggressively.

“It wasn’t the plan, we just wanted to stay well out of trouble, stay on the left,” Thomas said.

“We did that really well from quite early on, the boys set me up great, we were hoping that Pippo [Ganna] and Johnny [Narvaez] would be with me but they lost the wheel a bit somewhere along the way.”

picture

Highlights: Merlier claims Stage 3 sprint win after late Pogacar, Thomas duel

“Thymen [Arensman] set a great pace and then I saw Honore and Pogacar going for it, and I thought, I might as well just go. But jeepers, man, they were solid – he was kicking my head in.”

The 37-year-old admitted it was a taxing end to the stage, adding: “I was just thinking about holding his wheel.

“I tried to give him a turn, but he was solid, we were going. I looked back, I was surprised to see we had such a big gap, but I knew they [the sprinters] were going to come.”

“Especially with the way I was feeling I didn’t feel too confident about when we got to the line but yeah – a bit different.” He had, he said later, “just wanted it to finish, I was thinking – this is hurting.”

picture

‘It was great to see G fighting’ – Breakaway team wowed by Thomas-Pogacar battle

Thomas praised his rival for his tactics in going on the offensive relatively early on, saying: “It was a good move, there were some tired legs in the peloton, so it was worth a try. It was never in the plan, I wasn’t even thinking about it.

“I was the wrong side of Thymen’s wheel when Tadej went, I had to back out a bit and then go for it, but then when he did, I thought – sod it, I’ll try and follow,” he said.

The stage was ultimately won by Belgian’s Tim Merlier, who came out on top in a packed bunch sprint to the line.

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‘Happy to win this one’ – Merlier reacts to ‘hardest victory’ on Stage 3

Stream top cycling action, including all three 2024 Grand Tours, live on discovery+, the Eurosport app and at eurosport.com.

Highlights: Merlier claims Stage 3 sprint win after late Pogacar, Thomas duel

Tim Merlier sprinted to victory on an eventful Stage 3 of the 2024 Giro d’Italia on Monday. The Belgium came out on top of a packed bunch sprint, pipping Jonathan Milan over the line. But there was late drama when race favourite and maglia rosa Tadej Pogacar made an attack inside the final two kilometres, dragging rival Geraint Thomas with him in an unexpected finale.

Merlier wins thrilling bunch sprint to take Stage 3

Tim Merlier (Soudal–Quick-Step) took a thrilling victory in a bunch sprint to claim Stage 3 of the Giro d’Italia.

Race leader Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates) and his GC rival Geraint Thomas (Ineos Grenadiers) had a surprise late lead going into the final kilometre but they were reeled in by the sprinters 250m from the line.

As the group powered on, Merlier hit front and crossed the line just ahead of Jonathan Milan (Lidl-Trek). Biniam Girmay (Intermarche-Wanty) achieved a strong third place, his best Grand Tour result since taking his first win in Jesi two years ago.

Merlier wins thrilling bunch sprint to take Stage 3

Tim Merlier (Soudal–Quick-Step) took a thrilling victory in a bunch sprint to claim Stage 3 of the Giro d’Italia.

Race leader Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates) and his GC rival Geraint Thomas (Ineos Grenadiers) had a surprise late lead going into the final kilometre but they were reeled in by the sprinters 250m from the line.

As the group powered on, Merlier hit front and crossed the line just ahead of Jonathan Milan (Lidl-Trek). Biniam Girmay (Intermarche-Wanty) achieved a strong third place, his best Grand Tour result since taking his first win in Jesi two years ago.

Giro d’Italia Stage 3 LIVE – Sprinters look to capitalise as Pogacar holds on to maglia rosa

LIVE: Novara – Fossano

Giro d’Italia – May 6th, 2024

Follow the Giro d’Italia Novara – Fossano stage live with Eurosport. Novara – Fossano starts at 11:25 AM on May 6th, 2024.

Catch the latest cycling news and find Giro d’Italia results, standings and routes. After Novara – Fossano is done, be sure to check out the full schedule of stages and get live updates for the next stage. You can also find a list of previous winners.

Follow Rui Costa, Mathieu van der Poel, Mark Cavendish and other key riders to see who is dominating this season. See the hottest cycling teams in action – Bora-Hansgrohe, Ineos Grenadiers and Cofidis to name a few.

Cycling fans can read breaking Giro d’Italia news headlines, interviews, expert commentary, replays & highlights. Keep up with all of this season’s top events, including the Tour de France, Giro d’Italia and Vuelta a España.

Make Eurosport your go-to source for sports online from cycling to football, tennis, snooker and more. Enjoy live updates from the biggest sports competitions.

How to watch Stage 3 of the Giro d’Italia as Pogacar attempts to build on second stage victory

What a start it has been to the first Grand Tour of 2024!

The Ecuadorian was the only man still standing after Pogacar detonated a late attack on Stage 1, and then had the temerity to come past the Slovenian on the home straight, and the first maglia rosa of this, the 107th edition of the Giro.

What does Stage 3 have in store?

Read on for the stage profile, how to watch, and the overall stage guide…

Stage 3 Profile

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Giro d’Italia 2024 – Stage 3 profile

Image credit: From Official Website

How can I watch Stage 3 of the Giro d’Italia?

Watch Stage 3 of the 2024 Giro d’Italia on Monday, May 6 from 12:00 UK time on Eurosport 1, while you can watch ad-free on discovery+.

The UK coverage will be bookended by The Breakaway, presented by Orla Chennaoui, who has a string of esteemed guests joining her across the three weeks. Usual suspects Dan Lloyd, Adam Blythe and 12-time stage winner Robbie McEwen will return, with former Jumbo-Visma star Nathan van Hooydonck swooping in for the final week as Blythe resumes his duties on the motorbike in Italy.

And fans of Jonathan Vaughters are in for a treat on Stages 8 and 9, with the outspoken EF Education–EasyPost supremo joining our coverage.

Meanwhile, the charismatic Jens Voigt (Stages 1-9), former road star Daniel Oss (Stages 10-14), two-time winner Alberto Contador (Stage 15) and Blythe (Stages 16-21) will be doing their thing on the back of a motorbike to bring fans closer to the action.

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‘One of my dreams’ – ‘Super happy’ Pogacar reflects on winning Stage 2

Giro d’Italia 2024 TV schedule and route details

Stage Date Start / Finish Distance Breakaway on-air time (UK time)
Stage 1 Sat May 4 Venaria Reale – Torino 140km (hilly) 12:30
Stage 2 Sun May 5 San Francesco al Campo – Santuario di Oropa (Biella) 161km (summit finish) 11:45
Stage 3 Mon May 6 Novara – Fossano 166km (flat) 12:00
Stage 4 Tue May 7 Acqui Terme – Andora 190km (flat) 11:15
Stage 5 Wed May 8 Genova – Lucca 178km (hilly) 11:30
Stage 6 Thu May 9 Torre del Lago Puccini (Viareggio) – Rapolano Terme 180km (hilly) 11:30
Stage 7 Fri May 10 Foligno – Perugia 40.6km (ITT) 11:45
Stage 8 Sat May 11 Spoleto – Prati di Tivo 152km (summit finish) 11:15
Stage 9 Sun May 12 Avezzano – Napoli 214km (hilly) 10:45
Rest Day Mon May 13
Stage 10 Tue May 14 Pompei – Cusano Mutri (Bocca della Selva) 142km (summit finish) 11:45
Stage 11 Wed May 15 Foiano di Val Fortore – Francavilla al Mare 207km (flat) 10:45
Stage 12 Thu May 16 Martinsicuro – Fano 193km (hilly) 11:15
Stage 13 Fri May 17 Riccione – Cento 179km (flat) 11:45
Stage 14 Sat May 18 Castiglione delle Stiviere – Desenzano del Garda 31.2km (ITT) 12:00
Stage 15 Sun May 19 Manerba del Garda – Livigno (Mottolino) 222km (summit finish) 09:15
Rest Day Mon May 20
Stage 16 Tue May 21 Livigno – Santa Cristina Valgardena/St. Christina in Groden (Monte Pana) 202km (summit finish) 10:15
Stage 17 Wed May 22 Selva di Val Gardena/Wolkenstein in Gröden – Passo del Brocon 159km (summit finish) 11:15
Stage 18 Thu May 23 Fiera di Primiero – Padova 178km (flat) 11:45
Stage 19 Fri May 24 Mortegliano – Sappada 157km (hilly) 11:45
Stage 20 Sat May 25 Alpago – Bassano del Grappa 181km (mountainous) 10:30
Stage 21 Sun May 26 Roma – Roma 122km (flat) 14:15
Stream top cycling action, including the Giro d’Italia, Tour de France and Vuelta a Espana, live and on-demand on Eurosport, the Eurosport app and discovery+.