Giro d’Italia 2024: Stage routes and start times, TV and live stream schedule

The start of cycling’s Grand Tour season is here.

The Giro d’Italia is the first of the three Grand Tours in 2024 and will see some of the biggest names in the sport doing battle over 21 stages.

Two-time Tour de France winner Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates) is the standout favourite on his Giro debut, with Geraint Thomas (Ineos Grenadiers), Romain Bardet (dsm-firmenich-PostNL) and Dani Martinez (Bora–Hansgrohe) among the challengers.

Primoz Roglic (Bora–Hansgrohe) will not be back to defend his title as he focuses his efforts on the Tour de France, while Remco Evenepoel (Soudal Quick-Step) and Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease a Bike) are also absent.

The sprinters at the race include Jonathan Milan (Lidl-Trek), Caleb Ewan (Jayco–AlUla), Fernando Gaviria (Movistar), and Fabio Jakobsen (dsm–firmenich PostNL).

The race starts in Turin on May 4 and finishes in Rome on May 26.

How can I watch the Giro d’Italia on TV and live stream?

Every stage will be broadcast in its entirety on Eurosport 1, while you can watch ad-free on discovery+ and eurosport.co.uk.

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.

Giro d’Italia 2024 TV schedule and route details

Stage Date Start/Finish Distance Breakaway on-air time (UK time)
Stage 1 May 4 Venaria Reale -Torino 140km (hilly) 12:30
Stage 2 May 5 San Francesco al Campo -Santuario di Oropa (Biella) 161km (hilly) 11:30
Stage 3 May 6 Novara – Fossano 166km (flat) 11:30
Stage 4 May 7 Acqui Terme – Andora 190km (flat) 11:00
Stage 5 May 8 Genova – Lucca 178km (hilly) 11:00
Stage 6 May 9 Viareggio – Rapolano Terme 180km (hilly) 11:30
Stage 7 May 10 Foligno – Perugia 40.6km (individual time trial) 11:30
Stage 8 May 11 Spoleto – Prati di Tivo 152km (mountains) 11:00
Stage 9 May 12 Avezzano – Napoli 214km (hilly) 10:30
Stage 10 May 14 Pompei – Cusano Mutri 142km (mountains) 11:30
Stage 11 May 15 Foiano di Val Fortore – Francavilla al Mare 207km (flat) 10:30
Stage 12 May 16 Martinsicuro – Fano 193km (hilly) 11:00
Stage 13 May 17 Riccione – Cento 179km (flat) 11:30
Stage 14 May 18 Castiglione delle Stiviere – Desenzano del Garda 31.2km (individual time trial) 11:45
Stage 15 May 19 Manerba del Garda – Livigno 222km (mountains) 08:45
Stage 16 May 21 Livigno – Santa Cristina Valgardena 202km (mountains) 10:00
Stage 17 May 22 Selva di Val Gardena – Passo del Brocon 159km (mountains) 11:00
Stage 18 May 23 Fiera di Primiero – Padova 178km (flat) 11:45
Stage 19 May 24 Mortegliano – Sappada 157km (mountains) 11:30
Stage 20 May 25 Alpago – Bassano del Grappa 185km (mountains) 10:30
Stage 21 May 26 Rome – Rome 125km (flat) 10:35

Giro d’Italia 2024 route map

Giro d'Italia 2024 route
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+

Giro d’Italia 2024: Stage routes and start times, TV and live stream schedule

The start of cycling’s Grand Tour season is here.

The Giro d’Italia is the first of the three Grand Tours in 2024 and will see some of the biggest names in the sport doing battle over 21 stages.

Two-time Tour de France winner Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates) is the standout favourite on his Giro debut, with Geraint Thomas (Ineos Grenadiers), Romain Bardet (dsm-firmenich-PostNL) and Dani Martinez (Bora–Hansgrohe) among the challengers.

Primoz Roglic (Bora–Hansgrohe) will not be back to defend his title as he focuses his efforts on the Tour de France, while Remco Evenepoel (Soudal Quick-Step) and Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease a Bike) are also absent.

The sprinters at the race include Jonathan Milan (Lidl-Trek), Caleb Ewan (Jayco–AlUla), Fernando Gaviria (Movistar), and Fabio Jakobsen (dsm–firmenich PostNL).

The race starts in Turin on May 4 and finishes in Rome on May 26.

How can I watch the Giro d’Italia on TV and live stream?

Every stage will be broadcast in its entirety on Eurosport 1, while you can watch ad-free on discovery+ and eurosport.co.uk.

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.

Giro d’Italia 2024 TV schedule and route details

Stage Date Start/Finish Distance Breakaway on-air time (UK time)
Stage 1 May 4 Venaria Reale -Torino 140km (hilly) 12:30
Stage 2 May 5 San Francesco al Campo -Santuario di Oropa (Biella) 161km (hilly) 11:30
Stage 3 May 6 Novara – Fossano 166km (flat) 11:30
Stage 4 May 7 Acqui Terme – Andora 190km (flat) 11:00
Stage 5 May 8 Genova – Lucca 178km (hilly) 11:00
Stage 6 May 9 Viareggio – Rapolano Terme 180km (hilly) 11:30
Stage 7 May 10 Foligno – Perugia 40.6km (individual time trial) 11:30
Stage 8 May 11 Spoleto – Prati di Tivo 152km (mountains) 11:00
Stage 9 May 12 Avezzano – Napoli 214km (hilly) 10:30
Stage 10 May 14 Pompei – Cusano Mutri 142km (mountains) 11:30
Stage 11 May 15 Foiano di Val Fortore – Francavilla al Mare 207km (flat) 10:30
Stage 12 May 16 Martinsicuro – Fano 193km (hilly) 11:00
Stage 13 May 17 Riccione – Cento 179km (flat) 11:30
Stage 14 May 18 Castiglione delle Stiviere – Desenzano del Garda 31.2km (individual time trial) 11:45
Stage 15 May 19 Manerba del Garda – Livigno 222km (mountains) 08:45
Stage 16 May 21 Livigno – Santa Cristina Valgardena 202km (mountains) 10:00
Stage 17 May 22 Selva di Val Gardena – Passo del Brocon 159km (mountains) 11:00
Stage 18 May 23 Fiera di Primiero – Padova 178km (flat) 11:45
Stage 19 May 24 Mortegliano – Sappada 157km (mountains) 11:30
Stage 20 May 25 Alpago – Bassano del Grappa 185km (mountains) 10:30
Stage 21 May 26 Rome – Rome 125km (flat) 10:35

Giro d’Italia 2024 route map

Giro d'Italia 2024 route
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+

Giro d'Italia Stage 11 – Route map, how to watch as Cavendish seeks 17th win

After Biniam Girmay’s historic victory on Tuesday, another chance for the fast men arrives on Stage 11. Only this time, Mark Cavendish (Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl) and Caleb Ewan (Lotto Soudal) will expect to feature.

The flat-track bullies were cruelly distanced by their more versatile, but slower, rivals during the early hills on Stage 10, but there should be no repeat on the pan-flat run from Santarcangelo di Romagna to Reggio Emilia.

Cavendish is chasing his second win at this year’s Giro, and his 17th in total, while Ewan is yet to get off the mark in Italy after a frustrating start.

Giro d’Italia

Opinion: Van der Poel’s magnificent gesture enhances significance of Girmay’s historic win

10 HOURS AGO

The pair were pipped by Arnaud Demare (Groupama-FDJ) in their last sprint opportunity on Stage 6, with the Frenchman currently leading the race for the maglia ciclamino.

Juan Pedro Lopez (Trek-Segafredo) will again start the day in pink and should have an easy day.

HOW CAN I WATCH THE GIRO ON TV AND LIVE STREAM?

Each and every stage will be broadcast in its entirety on Eurosport, discovery+ and GCN+, bookended by The Breakaway, presented by Orla Chennaoui and Dan Lloyd. Rob Hatch and Hannah Walker will be in the commentary box with regular contributions from pundits Robbie McEwen, Sean Kelly and Adam Blythe, with Bradley Wiggins doing his thing on the back of a motorbike.

WHEN IS STAGE 11?

It’s an earlier start! Tune in from 11:00-17:00 BST to watch Stage 11 of the Giro d’Italia. Watch the action on Eurosport 1, with uninterrupted coverage on discovery+

STAGE 11 PROFILE AND ROUTE MAP

https://i.eurosport.com/2021/11/11/3252471.jpg

– – –

Stream the Giro d’Italia live and on-demand on discovery+. You can also watch all the action live on eurosport.co.uk.

Giro d’Italia

‘I’m in awe’ – Girmay lauded after seeing off Van der Poel in historic win

11 HOURS AGO

Giro d’Italia

‘Take the right way!’ – Girmay’s dream almost unravels after going wrong way

13 HOURS AGO

Giro d'Italia Stage 11 – Route map, how to watch as Cavendish seeks 17th win

After Biniam Girmay’s historic victory on Tuesday, another chance for the fast men arrives on Stage 11. Only this time, Mark Cavendish (Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl) and Caleb Ewan (Lotto Soudal) will expect to feature.

The flat-track bullies were cruelly distanced by their more versatile, but slower, rivals during the early hills on Stage 10, but there should be no repeat on the pan-flat run from Santarcangelo di Romagna to Reggio Emilia.

Cavendish is chasing his second win at this year’s Giro, and his 17th in total, while Ewan is yet to get off the mark in Italy after a frustrating start.

Giro d’Italia

Opinion: Van der Poel’s magnificent gesture enhances significance of Girmay’s historic win

10 HOURS AGO

The pair were pipped by Arnaud Demare (Groupama-FDJ) in their last sprint opportunity on Stage 6, with the Frenchman currently leading the race for the maglia ciclamino.

Juan Pedro Lopez (Trek-Segafredo) will again start the day in pink and should have an easy day.

HOW CAN I WATCH THE GIRO ON TV AND LIVE STREAM?

Each and every stage will be broadcast in its entirety on Eurosport, discovery+ and GCN+, bookended by The Breakaway, presented by Orla Chennaoui and Dan Lloyd. Rob Hatch and Hannah Walker will be in the commentary box with regular contributions from pundits Robbie McEwen, Sean Kelly and Adam Blythe, with Bradley Wiggins doing his thing on the back of a motorbike.

WHEN IS STAGE 11?

It’s an earlier start! Tune in from 11:00-17:00 BST to watch Stage 11 of the Giro d’Italia. Watch the action on Eurosport 1, with uninterrupted coverage on discovery+

STAGE 11 PROFILE AND ROUTE MAP

https://i.eurosport.com/2021/11/11/3252471.jpg

– – –

Stream the Giro d’Italia live and on-demand on discovery+. You can also watch all the action live on eurosport.co.uk.

Giro d’Italia

‘I’m in awe’ – Girmay lauded after seeing off Van der Poel in historic win

11 HOURS AGO

Giro d’Italia

‘Take the right way!’ – Girmay’s dream almost unravels after going wrong way

14 HOURS AGO

Groupama-FDJ propel Demare to thrilling victory on Stage 5 as Cavendish dropped

An enthralling fifth stage in Sicily saw favourites Mark Cavendish (Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl) and Caleb Ewan (Lotto Soudal) distanced on an early climb before France’s Arnaud Demare (Groupama-FDJ) powered to victory in Messina.

Demare, who fought back into contention after being dropped on the same climb, held off Fernando Gaviria (UAE Team Emirates) in a tight finish after the Colombian appeared to be hampered by a gearing issue on the home straight.

Italy’s Giacomo Nizzolo (Israel-Premier Tech) took third place ahead of compatriot Davide Ballerini, the only Quick-Step rider who had not dropped back to try and nurse Cavendish, the Stage 3 winner, back into the fold.

Giro d’Italia

Cavendish and Ewan dropped by ferocious peloton pace

AN HOUR AGO

Demare’s victory was the sixth of his career in the Giro and saw him move ahead Biniam Girmay (Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert) in the maglia ciclamino standings after the Eritrean rider was forced to settle for fifth place after being boxed in by the barriers.

Spain’s Juan Pedro Lopez (Trek-Segafredo) finished safely in the pack to retain the maglia rosa before the race heads across the Strait of Messina and onto the Italian mainland ahead of Stage 6.

More to follow…

– – –

Stream the Giro d’Italia live and on-demand on discovery+. You can also watch all the action live on eurosport.co.uk

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia Stage 5 as it happened – Cavendish and Ewan distanced as Demare takes win

6 HOURS AGO

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia 2022 Stage 5 – Route map, how to watch as Cavendish chases second win

8 HOURS AGO

Groupama-FDJ propel Demare to thrilling victory on Stage 5 as Cavendish dropped

An enthralling fifth stage in Sicily saw favourites Mark Cavendish (Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl) and Caleb Ewan (Lotto Soudal) distanced on an early climb before France’s Arnaud Demare (Groupama-FDJ) powered to victory in Messina.

Demare, who fought back into contention after being dropped on the same ascent, held off Fernando Gaviria (UAE Team Emirates) in a tight finish after the Colombian appeared to be hampered by a gearing issue on the home straight.

Italy’s Giacomo Nizzolo (Israel-Premier Tech) took third place ahead of compatriot Davide Ballerini, the only Quick-Step rider who had not dropped back to try and nurse Cavendish, the Stage 3 winner, back into the fold.

Giro d’Italia

Cavendish and Ewan dropped by ferocious peloton pace

3 HOURS AGO

Demare’s victory was the sixth of his career in the Giro and saw him move ahead Biniam Girmay (Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert) at the top of the maglia ciclamino standings after the Eritrean youngster was forced to settle for fifth place in the sprint having been boxed in by the barriers.

Spain’s Juan Pedro Lopez (Trek-Segafredo) finished safely in the main field to retain the maglia rosa before the race heads across the Strait of Messina and onto the Italian mainland ahead of Stage 6.

‘It was a bonus if we could sprint’ – Cavendish on Stage 5 disappointment

“What can you do? You’ve got to try,” Cavendish said after a frustrating day in the saddle. “In a different situation we would have probably come back. We were 30 seconds behind FDJ and Caleb [Ewan] was behind us. Ironically, if all of us were together, we’d probably have got back. It’s just how it is.

“The boys did everything and I’m so proud of them – but in the end, what can you do? We tried. You’re always disappointed but we knew that was going to happen today – it was a bonus if we could sprint today. We’ll try again.”

The day’s only climb provided the fireworks with just over 100 kilometres still left to ride when a handful of the fastmen found themselves distanced after some hefty tempo-setting from the Alpecin-Fenix team of maglia ciclamino Mathieu van der Poel and Girmay’s Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert.

‘Up for the chase!’ – Cavendish pulled up mountain by five team-mates

Prior to the Cat. 2 Portella Mandrazzi, the 174km stage from Catania had been low on drama as the riders hugged the scenic east coast of Sicily and a break of five riders opened up a maximum gap of four and a half minutes.

Two familiar faces featured in the move in the form of team-mates Mattia Bais and Filippo Tagliani, the Drone Hopper-Androni Giacattoli duo who also featured in breakaways in the two road stages in Hungary. They were joined by fellow Italians Alessandro Tonelli (Bardiani-CSF-Faizane) and Mirco Maestro (Eolo-Kometa) as well as Finland’s Jaakko Hanninen (Ag2R-Citroen).

Tagliani kicked clear to win the intermediate sprint at Francavilla to extend his run of wins to five from five ahead of the 20km climb where, two years previously, Demare’s Groupama-FDJ team piled on the pressure to distance sprint rival Gaviria in an almost carbon copy of Wednesday’s stage.

And it was a case of history repeating itself as a similar tactic was employed – but this time at Demare’s expense. Before the Frenchman was tailed off, the elastic snapped for both Australia’s Ewan and Britain’s Cavendish, who saw his hopes of a 17th stage win on the Giro slowly evaporate in the Sicilian heat.

‘Oh wow’ – Ewan dropped on Portella Mandrazzi climb

While Demare was within striking distance going over the summit with around 100km remaining, Cavendish found himself over two minutes behind while Ewan was almost four minutes in arrears. Both chase groups battled on before calling it a day with around 40km remaining.

At this point the breakaway had long since been consigned to the scrapheap – the upping of the tempo on the long descent off the back of the climb bringing the counter back to zero.

Sniffing out an opportunity, Nizzolo’s Israel-Premier Tech team helped with the pacing along with Van der Poel’s Alpecin Fenix and Gaviria’s UAE team – and they were soon joined by Demare’s Groupama-FDJ once the Frenchman rejoined the peloton ahead of the finale.

The absence of his regular lead-out man Jacopo Guarnieri was no deterrent to Demare, who surged clear in Vincenzo Nibali’s hometown of Messina to return to winning ways – thanks, in part, to Gaviria’s gearing issue.

“I’m really disappointed because I had good legs and I felt strong after the climb,” said Gaviria, who wouldn’t elaborate on the mechanical issue which held him back after he had lost the wheel of his leadout man Max Richeze.

Despite their heavy presence on the front of the pack during the stage, Alpecin-Fenix did not contest the bunch sprint with Van der Poel content to keep his power dry for future opportunities on mainland Italy. This despite the withdrawal on Tuesday of the team’s designated sprinter, Jakub Mareczko.

Thursday’s 192km Stage 6 from Palmi to Scalea will give the likes of Cavendish and Ewan an immediate opportunity to bounce back in what is expected to be another sprint finish.

– – –

Stream the Giro d’Italia live and on-demand on discovery+. You can also watch all the action live on eurosport.co.uk

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia Stage 5 as it happened – Cavendish and Ewan distanced as Demare takes win

8 HOURS AGO

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia 2022 Stage 5 – Route map, how to watch as Cavendish chases second win

11 HOURS AGO

Cavendish and Ewan dropped by ferocious peloton pace

Mark Cavendish (Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl) and Caleb Ewan (Lotto Soudal) were among the big names dropped on the only serious climb on Stage 5 at the Giro d’Italia – with the pair left with too much to do to get back in contention for the sprint.

An otherwise flat stage in Sicily was interrupted by the Cat. 2 Portella Mandrazzi climb, with pre-stage favourites Cavendish and Ewan among those distanced as the pace was ramped up by Alpecin-Fenix.

Alpecin-Fenix are all in for Mathieu van der Poel in the sprints after losing their main sprinter Jakub Mareczko on Tuesday. Given the Belgian’s all-round prowess, they tried to distance the fast men as the race went uphill.

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia Stage 5 LIVE – Cavendish, Ewan and Demare distanced on climb

5 HOURS AGO

The attack came halfway up the climb and although Cavendish quickly slipped off the peloton, five Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl team-mates immediately came to his aid and fanned across the road to protect him.

“That pace setting has had an immediate effect on Cavendish. But look how well surrounded he is,” said Rob McEwen, winner of 12 stages at the Giro, on Eurosport commentary.

“They knew this was going to be the case. They were probably surprised that it took this long on the climb for someone to take it up and try to get rid of him.

“I think they [Alpecin-Fenix] really did wait a long time – on a 19km climb, they waited until 10km of climbing.

“It would have already started to have an effect on the legs of Cavendish, but waiting this long to open a gap? He [Cavendish] has plenty of team-mates there and they are up for the chase.”

‘Oh wow’ – Ewan dropped on Portella Mandrazzi climb

Ewan cut a far more lonely figure as just one team-mate stayed with him, with the Australian leaking more time than Cavendish.

“Lotto do it a little bit differently to Quick-Step, who are happy to stay immediately with Cavendish,” continued McEwen.

“I think Caleb says to the guys ‘see you at the top of the climb, get there and we’ll get together’. So if they need to, they will even pause at the top, stop completely, clip out and wait until Caleb gets there. But he’s a very long way behind Mark Cavendish at this point, which is a surprise.”

The Cavendish group was around three minutes back at the summit, just shy of 100km from the finish, with the Ewan collective another two minutes adrift. And so the chase began.

With 60km remaining, fancied Frenchman Arnaud Demare returned to the main pack as his Groupama-FDJ colleagues immediately set about driving on the pace to prevent Cavendish and Ewan latching back on.

With Groupama continuing to drive on the pace, Cavendish and his crew gave up the chase with 50km to go. Ewan’s Lotto Soudal crew quickly followed.

– – –

Stream the Giro d’Italia live and on-demand on discovery+. You can also watch all the action live on eurosport.co.uk.

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia 2022 Stage 5 – Route map, how to watch as Cavendish chases second win

8 HOURS AGO

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia Stage 4 as it happened – Van der Poel loses pink after Kamna wins on Etna

YESTERDAY AT 07:58

Cavendish and Ewan dropped by ferocious peloton pace

Mark Cavendish (Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl) and Caleb Ewan (Lotto Soudal) were among the big names dropped on the only serious climb on Stage 5 at the Giro d’Italia – with the pair left with too much to do to get back in contention for the sprint.

An otherwise flat stage in Sicily was interrupted by the Cat. 2 Portella Mandrazzi climb, with pre-stage favourites Cavendish and Ewan among those distanced as the pace was ramped up by Alpecin-Fenix.

Alpecin-Fenix are all in for Mathieu van der Poel in the sprints after losing their main sprinter Jakub Mareczko on Tuesday. Given the Belgian’s all-round prowess, they tried to distance the fast men as the race went uphill.

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia Stage 5 as it happened – Cavendish and Ewan distanced as Demare takes win

6 HOURS AGO

The attack came halfway up the climb and although Cavendish quickly slipped off the peloton, five Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl team-mates immediately came to his aid and fanned across the road to protect him.

“That pace setting has had an immediate effect on Cavendish. But look how well surrounded he is,” said Rob McEwen, winner of 12 stages at the Giro, on Eurosport commentary.

“They knew this was going to be the case. They were probably surprised that it took this long on the climb for someone to take it up and try to get rid of him.

“I think they [Alpecin-Fenix] really did wait a long time – on a 19km climb, they waited until 10km of climbing.

“It would have already started to have an effect on the legs of Cavendish, but waiting this long to open a gap? He [Cavendish] has plenty of team-mates there and they are up for the chase.”

‘Oh wow’ – Ewan dropped on Portella Mandrazzi climb

Ewan cut a far more lonely figure as just one team-mate stayed with him, with the Australian leaking more time than Cavendish.

“Lotto do it a little bit differently to Quick-Step, who are happy to stay immediately with Cavendish,” continued McEwen.

“I think Caleb says to the guys ‘see you at the top of the climb, get there and we’ll get together’. So if they need to, they will even pause at the top, stop completely, clip out and wait until Caleb gets there. But he’s a very long way behind Mark Cavendish at this point, which is a surprise.”

The Cavendish group was around three minutes back at the summit, just shy of 100km from the finish, with the Ewan collective another two minutes adrift. And so the chase began.

With 60km remaining, fancied Frenchman Arnaud Demare returned to the main pack as his Groupama-FDJ colleagues immediately set about driving on the pace to prevent Cavendish and Ewan latching back on.

With Groupama continuing to drive on the pace, Cavendish and his crew gave up the chase with 50km to go. Ewan’s Lotto Soudal crew quickly followed.

– – –

Stream the Giro d’Italia live and on-demand on discovery+. You can also watch all the action live on eurosport.co.uk.

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia 2022 Stage 5 – Route map, how to watch as Cavendish chases second win

8 HOURS AGO

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia Stage 4 as it happened – Van der Poel loses pink after Kamna wins on Etna

YESTERDAY AT 07:58

Cavendish and Ewan dropped by ferocious peloton pace

Mark Cavendish (Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl) and Caleb Ewan (Lotto Soudal) were among the big names dropped on the only serious climb on Stage 5 at the Giro d’Italia – with the pair left with too much to do to get back in contention for the sprint.

An otherwise flat stage in Sicily was interrupted by the Cat. 2 Portella Mandrazzi climb, with pre-stage favourites Cavendish and Ewan among those distanced as the pace was ramped up by Alpecin-Fenix.

Alpecin-Fenix are all in for Mathieu van der Poel in the sprints after losing their main sprinter Jakub Mareczko on Tuesday. Given the Belgian’s all-round prowess, they tried to distance the fast men as the race went uphill.

Giro d’Italia

Groupama-FDJ propel Demare to thrilling victory on Stage 5 as Cavendish dropped

3 HOURS AGO

The attack came halfway up the climb and although Cavendish quickly slipped off the peloton, five Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl team-mates immediately came to his aid and fanned across the road to protect him.

“That pace setting has had an immediate effect on Cavendish. But look how well surrounded he is,” said Rob McEwen, winner of 12 stages at the Giro, on Eurosport commentary.

“They knew this was going to be the case. They were probably surprised that it took this long on the climb for someone to take it up and try to get rid of him.

“I think they [Alpecin-Fenix] really did wait a long time – on a 19km climb, they waited until 10km of climbing.

“It would have already started to have an effect on the legs of Cavendish, but waiting this long to open a gap? He [Cavendish] has plenty of team-mates there and they are up for the chase.”

‘Oh wow’ – Ewan dropped on Portella Mandrazzi climb

Ewan cut a far more lonely figure as just one team-mate stayed with him, with the Australian leaking more time than Cavendish.

“Lotto do it a little bit differently to Quick-Step, who are happy to stay immediately with Cavendish,” continued McEwen.

“I think Caleb says to the guys ‘see you at the top of the climb, get there and we’ll get together’. So if they need to, they will even pause at the top, stop completely, clip out and wait until Caleb gets there. But he’s a very long way behind Mark Cavendish at this point, which is a surprise.”

The Cavendish group was around three minutes back at the summit, just shy of 100km from the finish, with the Ewan collective another two minutes adrift. And so the chase began.

With 60km remaining, fancied Frenchman Arnaud Demare returned to the main pack as his Groupama-FDJ colleagues immediately set about driving on the pace to prevent Cavendish and Ewan latching back on.

With Groupama continuing to drive on the pace, Cavendish and his crew gave up the chase with 50km to go. Ewan’s Lotto Soudal crew quickly followed.

– – –

Stream the Giro d’Italia live and on-demand on discovery+. You can also watch all the action live on eurosport.co.uk.

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia Stage 5 as it happened – Cavendish and Ewan distanced as Demare takes win

8 HOURS AGO

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia 2022 Stage 5 – Route map, how to watch as Cavendish chases second win

11 HOURS AGO

How many stages can Cavendish win at the Giro?

Mark Cavendish (Quick-Step – Alpha Vinyl) added a 16th stage win at the Giro d’Italia to his palmares after sprinting to success on Stage 3 of the Italian Grand Tour, but how many more could he win this year?

The Manx Missile held off Arnaud Demare (Groupama-FDJ) and Fernando Gaviria (UAE Team Emirates) – who finished second and third respectively – after a 201km ride from Kaposvar to Balatonfured.

Cavendish’s participation at the Giro has largely been seen as a signal that the 36-year-old will not be making a 14th appearance at the Tour de France. However, an impressive showing in Italy could see Cavendish emerge as Quick-Step’s pre-eminent sprinter and force team manager Patrick Lefevere to reassess his plan for the Tour, which – the consensus states – currently has Fabio Jakobsen as Quick-Step’s lead sprinter.

Giro d’Italia

Contador expects ‘irretrievable gaps’ on Etna as Giro GC battle hots up

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There are five stages left that present opportunities for the sprinters – and for Cavendish to apply further weight to the growing argument that he should be Tour-bound.

How many stages could Cavendish win at the 2022 Giro d’Italia?

Could and will are two different things.

However, there are – or were – seven stages at the 2022 Giro d’Italia that will more than likely culminate in sprint finishes. Two – the first and third – have already come and gone. Therefore, Cavendish has five opportunities to add to his haul.

How many sprint stages are left in this year’s Giro?

Stages 5, 6, 11, 13 and 18 represent opportunities – to varying degrees – for sprinters to add to their palmares. Here are the stage profiles:

Stage 5 | Catania – Messina (174km)

The second of the Giro’s two stages in Sicily could culminate in a sprint. The Portella Mandrazzi – situated 75km into the 174km ride – presents an opportunity for a breakaway win. However, should Cavendish, Caleb Ewan (Lotto–Soudal) et al get across with the main bunch then this stage will likely finish in a bunch sprint.

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Stage 6 | Palmi – Scalea (192km)

The official site terms this stage “undemanding”, adding that it finishes on “wide, straight and well-paved roads”. It looks likely to end with a bunch sprint for the fastest men – so, expect Cavendish, Ewan, Gaviria etc to battle this one out.
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Stage 11 | Santarcangelo di Romagna – Reggio Emilia (203km)

Pan-flat with just 480m of elevation over 203km and a 350m-long home straight on a seven-metre-wide tarmacked road. A nailed-on bunch sprint.

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Stage 13 | Sanremo – Cuneo (150km)

Ewan has already confirmed that he will quit the Giro d’Italia early to focus on the Tour de France. This, then, will likely be the last stage he contests after saying he would leave the race “before the start of the tough last week.” The Colle di Nava comes roughly a third of the way into the stage, and the sprinters will likely therefore be ready at the end of the day to contest the win.
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Stage 18 | Borgo Valsugana – Treviso (152km)

The final sprint opportunity of the 2022 race is reward for those sprinters who braved an arduous few days in the mountains that preceded it. But who will be left to contest it? More on that below.

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‘So controlled’ – A breakdown of Mark Cavendish’s breathtaking Stage 3 win

Who are Cavendish’s main contenders for sprint stages?

Now that the opportunities have been presented, who are the main threats to Cavendish’s hopes?

As detailed by Felix Lowe in the pre-race Giro d’Italia 2022 sprinters guide, Ewan, alongside Cavendish is, on paper at least, the favourite for the maglia ciclamino – and, thus, likely to offer the biggest threat to the Manx Missile’s hopes of adding further stage wins.

Ewan has five stage wins to his name at the Giro, and is the fastest man at the race. He finished eighth on Stage 3 and has won five stages previously at the Giro, in 2017, 2019 and 2021. The Australian is a notorious slow starter at Grand Tours, claiming just one of his 11 wins before the fifth stage. He has only finished two of his eight Grand Tours, though, and has never completed a Giro. Cavendish, for context, has finished three of his five Giros, and 11 of the 20 Grand Tours he has started. So, should he make it to Stage 18, Cavendish may count himself as out-right favourite for the win.

There, however, are other threats within the peloton to Cavendish’s hopes of adding to his 16 Giro stage wins. Demare – winner of the ciclamino in 2020 – and Gaviria (UAE Team Emirates), who won it in 2017, are the other ‘pure’ sprinters in the field. Demare and Gaviria both have five stage wins to their name, winning four of those at the 2020 and 2017 race respectively. Both Demare and Gaviria have finished two of their four trips to the Giro.

Israel Premier Tech’s Giacomo Nizzolo, who collected back-to-back red jerseys in the pre-ciclamino days of 2015 and 2016, was also on the start list, but has only ever won one Giro stage: Stage 13 of the 2021 race.

Other riders capable of stage wins at this year’s race include Magnus Cort (EF Education-EasyPost), Diego Ulissi (UAE Team Emirates), Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix), Biniam Girmay (Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert) and Cees Bol (Team DSM).

For a full breakdown of the Giro d’Italia 2022 sprinters guide click here.

So…

To find out the answer to how many stages Cavendish can win, stream the Giro d’Italia live and on-demand on discovery+. You can also watch all the action live on eurosport.co.uk.

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