'That's bizarre!' – Shock as Van der Poel fires Prosecco cork into his face on podium

There was an unbelievable moment on the podium after Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix) won Stage 1 of the Giro d’Italia as he fired a Prosecco cork into his face.

The 27-year-old produced a spectacular sprint as he stormed to victory ahead of Biniam Girmay (Intermarche–Wanty) in a breathless finale after the 195km route to Visegrad.
Caleb Ewan crashed out in the final dash to the finish line to make it all the more dramatic as Van der Poel underlined his status as a race favourite with a quite brilliant debut ride at the prestigious Grand Tour.

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia Stage 2 LIVE – Individual time trial with Van der Poel in pink

3 HOURS AGO

But he then marked the victory in a physical and very surprising way as he bent over a huge Prosecco bottle on the podium.

What followed appeared inevitable, yet every onlooker likely assumed he would move out of the way at the last moment. He didn’t.

Van der Poel inexplicably fired the cork straight into his neck and face, much to everyone’s shock.

The Breakaway team following the Eurosport live coverage reacted just as many fans would have done at home.

Orla Chennaoui said: “Oh dear! I’m sorry for laughing. Did he just pop himself in the face with the cork?

“I mean, that man should know how to pop a Champagne bottle by now, shouldn’t he?!

“He may be starting with a black eye in the morning! I don’t even know where that came from – that was bizarre!

“Hopefully, he won’t have done himself too much damage. You just never know what is going to happen in a Grand Tour, even when the racing is over.”

Adam Blythe added: “That was like us this morning – crikey! This is brilliant.”

‘Cavendish is here for the long haul’ – Analysis of Brit’s opening stage at Giro

The Giro will continue for Stage 2 on Saturday, although the race does not travel over to Italy until Tuesday, with Hungary hosting the early stages in this 2022 edition of the famous race.

Hungary has been welcoming the riders for the Grande Partenza at this, the opening Grand Tour of 2022. There are three stages in central Europe before the race heads to Sicily next week.

After what was a largely flat route on Stage 1 from the capital to Visegrad, Stage 2 sees the riders negotiate a very short and sharp 9.2km individual time trial around Budapest.

– – –

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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Giro d’Italia 2022 Stage 2 – Route map, how to watch as Grand Tour continues

3 HOURS AGO

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'That's bizarre!' – Shock as Van der Poel fires Prosecco cork into his face on podium

There was an unbelievable moment on the podium after Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix) won Stage 1 of the Giro d’Italia as he fired a Prosecco cork into his face.

The 27-year-old produced a spectacular sprint as he stormed to victory ahead of Biniam Girmay (Intermarche–Wanty) in a breathless finale after the 195km route to Visegrad.
Caleb Ewan crashed out in the final dash to the finish line to make it all the more dramatic as Van der Poel underlined his status as a race favourite with a quite brilliant debut ride at the prestigious Grand Tour.

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia Stage 2 LIVE – Individual time trial with Van der Poel in pink

7 HOURS AGO

But he then marked the victory in a physical and very surprising way as he bent over a huge Prosecco bottle on the podium.

What followed appeared inevitable, yet every onlooker likely assumed he would move out of the way at the last moment. He didn’t.

Van der Poel inexplicably fired the cork straight into his neck and face, much to everyone’s shock.

The Breakaway team following the Eurosport live coverage reacted just as many fans would have done at home.

Orla Chennaoui said: “Oh dear! I’m sorry for laughing. Did he just pop himself in the face with the cork?

“I mean, that man should know how to pop a Champagne bottle by now, shouldn’t he?!

“He may be starting with a black eye in the morning! I don’t even know where that came from – that was bizarre!

“Hopefully, he won’t have done himself too much damage. You just never know what is going to happen in a Grand Tour, even when the racing is over.”

Adam Blythe added: “That was like us this morning – crikey! This is brilliant.”

‘Cavendish is here for the long haul’ – Analysis of Brit’s opening stage at Giro

The Giro will continue for Stage 2 on Saturday, although the race does not travel over to Italy until Tuesday, with Hungary hosting the early stages in this 2022 edition of the famous race.

Hungary has been welcoming the riders for the Grande Partenza at this, the opening Grand Tour of 2022. There are three stages in central Europe before the race heads to Sicily next week.

After what was a largely flat route on Stage 1 from the capital to Visegrad, Stage 2 sees the riders negotiate a very short and sharp 9.2km individual time trial around Budapest.

– – –

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 2 – Route map, how to watch as Grand Tour continues

7 HOURS AGO

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Opinion: Van der Poel and Girmay extend stellar spring form into Giro

19 HOURS AGO

'That's bizarre!' – Shock as Van der Poel fires Prosecco cork into his face on podium

There was an unbelievable moment on the podium after Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix) won Stage 1 of the Giro d’Italia as he fired a Prosecco cork into his face.

The 27-year-old produced a spectacular sprint as he stormed to victory ahead of Biniam Girmay (Intermarche–Wanty) in a breathless finale after the 195km route to Visegrad.
Caleb Ewan crashed out in the final dash to the finish line to make it all the more dramatic as Van der Poel underlined his status as a race favourite with a quite brilliant debut ride at the prestigious Grand Tour.

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia Stage 2 LIVE – Individual time trial with Van der Poel in pink

2 HOURS AGO

But he then marked the victory in a physical and very surprising way as he bent over a huge Prosecco bottle on the podium.

What followed appeared inevitable, yet every onlooker likely assumed he would move out of the way at the last moment. He didn’t.

Van der Poel inexplicably fired the cork straight into his neck and face, much to everyone’s shock.

The Breakaway team following the Eurosport live coverage reacted just as many fans would have done at home.

Orla Chennaoui said: “Oh dear! I’m sorry for laughing. Did he just pop himself in the face with the cork?

“I mean, that man should know how to pop a Champagne bottle by now, shouldn’t he?!

“He may be starting with a black eye in the morning! I don’t even know where that came from – that was bizarre!

“Hopefully, he won’t have done himself too much damage. You just never know what is going to happen in a Grand Tour, even when the racing is over.”

Adam Blythe added: “That was like us this morning – crikey! This is brilliant.”

‘Cavendish is here for the long haul’ – Analysis of Brit’s opening stage at Giro

The Giro will continue for Stage 2 on Saturday, although the race does not travel over to Italy until Tuesday, with Hungary hosting the early stages in this 2022 edition of the famous race.

Hungary has been welcoming the riders for the Grande Partenza at this, the opening Grand Tour of 2022. There are three stages in central Europe before the race heads to Sicily next week.

After what was a largely flat route on Stage 1 from the capital to Visegrad, Stage 2 sees the riders negotiate a very short and sharp 9.2km individual time trial around Budapest.

– – –

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 2 – Route map, how to watch as Grand Tour continues

2 HOURS AGO

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Opinion: Van der Poel and Girmay extend stellar spring form into Giro

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Van der Poel grabs thrilling Stage 1 victory at Giro as Ewan crashes in final dash

If the whole world expected it, Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix) still had to deliver the goods. The 27-year-old Dutchman did just that – keeping his powder dry right to the bitter end of the deciding climb to surge past Eritrea’s Biniam Girmay of Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert in the 195km opening stage of the Giro from Budapest to Visegrad in Hungary.

As Caleb Ewan (Lotto Soudal) dug deep to stay in contact, the Australian sprinter touched wheels with Girmay and hit the deck just ahead of the line – allowing Spain’s Pello Bilbao (Bahrain Victorious) to take third place ahead of Denmark’s Magnus Cort (EF Education-EastPost).

Girmay, the Eritrean trailblazer who became the first African to win a cobbled classic earlier this spring, looked destined to write another glorious chapter in his remarkable rise. But the 22-year-old was just caught by Van der Poel, who timed his final kick to perfection to take the race’s first maglia rosa – on a ramped finish quite similar to that at Mur de Bretagne where he secured a maiden maillot jaune at last year’s Tour de France.

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia Stage 2 LIVE – Individual time trial with Van der Poel in pink

3 HOURS AGO

“I knew positioning was going to be the key to the win today,” Van der Poel said after his latest triumph of what is provinf to be another stellar season. “It was quite difficult at times and I found myself boxed in and I had to use up a lot of energy to catch up with the guys in front. My legs were full of lactic at the end and it really hurt – but it’s incredible after the yellow jersey to wear the pink.”

‘It is incredible!’ – Van der Poel overjoyed and exhausted after Stage 1 win at Giro

Ewan had done extremely well to stay in contention on the five-kilometre climb to the castle at Visegrad, where the maximum 8% gradient did for the chances of fellow fastmen Arnaud Dermare, Mark Cavendish and Fernando Gaviria.

But the Australian’s momentary lapse in concentration ended his chances and saw him fall badly on his left shoulder – a far from ideal start to a race he had admitted he aims to leave behind once he has secured a couple of wins.

Dutchman Wilco Kelderman (Bora-Hansgrohe) completed the top five while Ecuador’s Richard Carapaz (Ineos Grenadiers) stole an early march in the general classification battle after taking sixth place on the right side of a split that saw the 2019 champion gain a four-second advantage over his rivals.

Four bonus seconds is the advantage pink jersey Van der Poel will take into Saturday’s 9.2km time trial in Budapest, while Girmay’s superb ride on his own debut was rewarded with the Eritrean taking the white jersey as best young rider.

‘Glorious chaos!’ – Van der Poel grabs stunning victory on Stage 1 of Giro

A largely uneventful opening day of the 105th edition of La Corsa rosa saw Drone Hopper-Androni Giacattoli teammates Filippo Tagliani and Mattia Bais go clear of the peloton right from the gun after a long neutral section spirited the riders out of the Hungarian capital.

The Italian duo managed to build up a maximum lead of almost 11 minutes but this had been halved by the time Giacomo Nizzolo (Israel-PremierTech) led his maglia ciclamino rivals through the intermediate sprint with around 118km remaining. With the Alpecin-Fenix, Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert and EF Education-EasyPost teams of Van der Poel, Girmay and Cort combining on the front of the pack, this advantage dropped well below the two-minute mark entering the final 50km of the day.

The escapees were eventually caught inside the final 14 kilometres ahead of a fierce jostling for positions ahead of the decisive climb to the line. It was a battle from which Britain’s Mark Cavendish checked out, the 36-year-old veteran wilfully slipping off the back despite an earlier bike change to a lighter climbing model.

‘Give it a go!’ – Cavendish switches bikes to suggest big sprint challenge at Giro

When the fireworks were lit on the climb, Cavendish’s Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl saw their man for the finish, the Italian Davide Ballerini, hit the deck in one of the two crashes which marred the stage climax.

Belgium’s Lawrence Naesen (Ag2R-Citroen) and Germany’s Lennard Kamna (Bora-Hansgrohe) both tried their luck with long-range attacks before the UAE Team Emirates duo of Davide Formolo and Diego Ulissi brought things back together inside the final kilometre.

Ewan was one of the few pure sprinters who had managed to avoid being tailed off by the gradient – but the 27-year-old Australian perhaps launched a bit too early and he was already well beaten by the time he tumbled while trying in vain to latch onto Girmay’s wheel.

Van der Poel had kept a low profile on the climb but pushed all the right buttons at the right moment – powering past the impressive Girmay to take a debut pink jersey at the earliest possible occasion. Despite almost taking his eye out with a Prosecco cork on the podium, the Dutchman should be able to retain the race lead in Saturday’s 9.2km time trial in Budapest, which concludes with a cobbled section and a steep kick up to the finish.

‘Bizarre’ moment Van der Poel fires Prosecco cork into his face after Giro victory

Stage 1 results and GC

  • Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix) 04:35:28
  • Biniam Girmay (Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert) + 00
  • Pello Bilbao (Bahrain Victorious) + 00
  • Magnus Cort (EF Education-EasyPost) + 00
  • Wilco Kelderman (Bora-Hansgrohe) + 00
  • Richard Carapaz (Ineos Grenadiers) + 00
  • Bauke Mollema (Trek-Segafredo) + 00
  • Diego Ulissi (UAE Team Emirates) + 00
  • Andrea Vendrame (AG2R Citroen Team) + 04
  • Mattias Skjelmose Jensen (Trek-Segafredo) + 04
For full standings for each jersey and classification check out our results page.

– – –

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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Van der Poel grabs thrilling Stage 1 victory at Giro as Ewan crashes in final dash

If the whole world expected it, Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix) still had to deliver the goods. The 27-year-old Dutchman did just that – keeping his powder dry right to the bitter end of the deciding climb to surge past Eritrea’s Biniam Girmay of Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert in the 195km opening stage of the Giro from Budapest to Visegrad in Hungary.

As Caleb Ewan (Lotto Soudal) dug deep to stay in contact, the Australian sprinter touched wheels with Girmay and hit the deck just ahead of the line – allowing Spain’s Pello Bilbao (Bahrain Victorious) to take third place ahead of Denmark’s Magnus Cort (EF Education-EastPost).

Girmay, the Eritrean trailblazer who became the first African to win a cobbled classic earlier this spring, looked destined to write another glorious chapter in his remarkable rise. But the 22-year-old was just caught by Van der Poel, who timed his final kick to perfection to take the race’s first maglia rosa – on a ramped finish quite similar to that at Mur de Bretagne where he secured a maiden maillot jaune at last year’s Tour de France.

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia Stage 2 LIVE – Individual time trial with Van der Poel in pink

7 HOURS AGO

“I knew positioning was going to be the key to the win today,” Van der Poel said after his latest triumph of what is provinf to be another stellar season. “It was quite difficult at times and I found myself boxed in and I had to use up a lot of energy to catch up with the guys in front. My legs were full of lactic at the end and it really hurt – but it’s incredible after the yellow jersey to wear the pink.”

‘It is incredible!’ – Van der Poel overjoyed and exhausted after Stage 1 win at Giro

Ewan had done extremely well to stay in contention on the five-kilometre climb to the castle at Visegrad, where the maximum 8% gradient did for the chances of fellow fastmen Arnaud Dermare, Mark Cavendish and Fernando Gaviria.

But the Australian’s momentary lapse in concentration ended his chances and saw him fall badly on his left shoulder – a far from ideal start to a race he had admitted he aims to leave behind once he has secured a couple of wins.

Dutchman Wilco Kelderman (Bora-Hansgrohe) completed the top five while Ecuador’s Richard Carapaz (Ineos Grenadiers) stole an early march in the general classification battle after taking sixth place on the right side of a split that saw the 2019 champion gain a four-second advantage over his rivals.

Four bonus seconds is the advantage pink jersey Van der Poel will take into Saturday’s 9.2km time trial in Budapest, while Girmay’s superb ride on his own debut was rewarded with the Eritrean taking the white jersey as best young rider.

‘Glorious chaos!’ – Van der Poel grabs stunning victory on Stage 1 of Giro

A largely uneventful opening day of the 105th edition of La Corsa rosa saw Drone Hopper-Androni Giacattoli teammates Filippo Tagliani and Mattia Bais go clear of the peloton right from the gun after a long neutral section spirited the riders out of the Hungarian capital.

The Italian duo managed to build up a maximum lead of almost 11 minutes but this had been halved by the time Giacomo Nizzolo (Israel-PremierTech) led his maglia ciclamino rivals through the intermediate sprint with around 118km remaining. With the Alpecin-Fenix, Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert and EF Education-EasyPost teams of Van der Poel, Girmay and Cort combining on the front of the pack, this advantage dropped well below the two-minute mark entering the final 50km of the day.

The escapees were eventually caught inside the final 14 kilometres ahead of a fierce jostling for positions ahead of the decisive climb to the line. It was a battle from which Britain’s Mark Cavendish checked out, the 36-year-old veteran wilfully slipping off the back despite an earlier bike change to a lighter climbing model.

‘Give it a go!’ – Cavendish switches bikes to suggest big sprint challenge at Giro

When the fireworks were lit on the climb, Cavendish’s Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl saw their man for the finish, the Italian Davide Ballerini, hit the deck in one of the two crashes which marred the stage climax.

Belgium’s Lawrence Naesen (Ag2R-Citroen) and Germany’s Lennard Kamna (Bora-Hansgrohe) both tried their luck with long-range attacks before the UAE Team Emirates duo of Davide Formolo and Diego Ulissi brought things back together inside the final kilometre.

Ewan was one of the few pure sprinters who had managed to avoid being tailed off by the gradient – but the 27-year-old Australian perhaps launched a bit too early and he was already well beaten by the time he tumbled while trying in vain to latch onto Girmay’s wheel.

Van der Poel had kept a low profile on the climb but pushed all the right buttons at the right moment – powering past the impressive Girmay to take a debut pink jersey at the earliest possible occasion. Despite almost taking his eye out with a Prosecco cork on the podium, the Dutchman should be able to retain the race lead in Saturday’s 9.2km time trial in Budapest, which concludes with a cobbled section and a steep kick up to the finish.

‘Bizarre’ moment Van der Poel fires Prosecco cork into his face after Giro victory

Stage 1 results and GC

  • Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix) 04:35:28
  • Biniam Girmay (Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert) + 00
  • Pello Bilbao (Bahrain Victorious) + 00
  • Magnus Cort (EF Education-EasyPost) + 00
  • Wilco Kelderman (Bora-Hansgrohe) + 00
  • Richard Carapaz (Ineos Grenadiers) + 00
  • Bauke Mollema (Trek-Segafredo) + 00
  • Diego Ulissi (UAE Team Emirates) + 00
  • Andrea Vendrame (AG2R Citroen Team) + 04
  • Mattias Skjelmose Jensen (Trek-Segafredo) + 04
For full standings for each jersey and classification check out our results page.

– – –

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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Van der Poel grabs thrilling Stage 1 victory at Giro as Ewan crashes in final dash

If the whole world expected it, Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix) still had to deliver the goods. The 27-year-old Dutchman did just that – keeping his powder dry right to the bitter end of the deciding climb to surge past Eritrea’s Biniam Girmay of Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert in the 195km opening stage of the Giro from Budapest to Visegrad in Hungary.

As Caleb Ewan (Lotto Soudal) dug deep to stay in contact, the Australian sprinter touched wheels with Girmay and hit the deck just ahead of the line – allowing Spain’s Pello Bilbao (Bahrain Victorious) to take third place ahead of Denmark’s Magnus Cort (EF Education-EastPost).

Girmay, the Eritrean trailblazer who became the first African to win a cobbled classic earlier this spring, looked destined to write another glorious chapter in his remarkable rise. But the 22-year-old was just caught by Van der Poel, who timed his final kick to perfection to take the race’s first maglia rosa – on a ramped finish quite similar to that at Mur de Bretagne where he secured a maiden maillot jaune at last year’s Tour de France.

Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia Stage 2 LIVE – Individual time trial with Van der Poel in pink

2 HOURS AGO

“I knew positioning was going to be the key to the win today,” Van der Poel said after his latest triumph of what is provinf to be another stellar season. “It was quite difficult at times and I found myself boxed in and I had to use up a lot of energy to catch up with the guys in front. My legs were full of lactic at the end and it really hurt – but it’s incredible after the yellow jersey to wear the pink.”

‘It is incredible!’ – Van der Poel overjoyed and exhausted after Stage 1 win at Giro

Ewan had done extremely well to stay in contention on the five-kilometre climb to the castle at Visegrad, where the maximum 8% gradient did for the chances of fellow fastmen Arnaud Dermare, Mark Cavendish and Fernando Gaviria.

But the Australian’s momentary lapse in concentration ended his chances and saw him fall badly on his left shoulder – a far from ideal start to a race he had admitted he aims to leave behind once he has secured a couple of wins.

Dutchman Wilco Kelderman (Bora-Hansgrohe) completed the top five while Ecuador’s Richard Carapaz (Ineos Grenadiers) stole an early march in the general classification battle after taking sixth place on the right side of a split that saw the 2019 champion gain a four-second advantage over his rivals.

Four bonus seconds is the advantage pink jersey Van der Poel will take into Saturday’s 9.2km time trial in Budapest, while Girmay’s superb ride on his own debut was rewarded with the Eritrean taking the white jersey as best young rider.

‘Glorious chaos!’ – Van der Poel grabs stunning victory on Stage 1 of Giro

A largely uneventful opening day of the 105th edition of La Corsa rosa saw Drone Hopper-Androni Giacattoli teammates Filippo Tagliani and Mattia Bais go clear of the peloton right from the gun after a long neutral section spirited the riders out of the Hungarian capital.

The Italian duo managed to build up a maximum lead of almost 11 minutes but this had been halved by the time Giacomo Nizzolo (Israel-PremierTech) led his maglia ciclamino rivals through the intermediate sprint with around 118km remaining. With the Alpecin-Fenix, Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert and EF Education-EasyPost teams of Van der Poel, Girmay and Cort combining on the front of the pack, this advantage dropped well below the two-minute mark entering the final 50km of the day.

The escapees were eventually caught inside the final 14 kilometres ahead of a fierce jostling for positions ahead of the decisive climb to the line. It was a battle from which Britain’s Mark Cavendish checked out, the 36-year-old veteran wilfully slipping off the back despite an earlier bike change to a lighter climbing model.

‘Give it a go!’ – Cavendish switches bikes to suggest big sprint challenge at Giro

When the fireworks were lit on the climb, Cavendish’s Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl saw their man for the finish, the Italian Davide Ballerini, hit the deck in one of the two crashes which marred the stage climax.

Belgium’s Lawrence Naesen (Ag2R-Citroen) and Germany’s Lennard Kamna (Bora-Hansgrohe) both tried their luck with long-range attacks before the UAE Team Emirates duo of Davide Formolo and Diego Ulissi brought things back together inside the final kilometre.

Ewan was one of the few pure sprinters who had managed to avoid being tailed off by the gradient – but the 27-year-old Australian perhaps launched a bit too early and he was already well beaten by the time he tumbled while trying in vain to latch onto Girmay’s wheel.

Van der Poel had kept a low profile on the climb but pushed all the right buttons at the right moment – powering past the impressive Girmay to take a debut pink jersey at the earliest possible occasion. Despite almost taking his eye out with a Prosecco cork on the podium, the Dutchman should be able to retain the race lead in Saturday’s 9.2km time trial in Budapest, which concludes with a cobbled section and a steep kick up to the finish.

‘Bizarre’ moment Van der Poel fires Prosecco cork into his face after Giro victory

Stage 1 results and GC

  • Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix) 04:35:28
  • Biniam Girmay (Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert) + 00
  • Pello Bilbao (Bahrain Victorious) + 00
  • Magnus Cort (EF Education-EasyPost) + 00
  • Wilco Kelderman (Bora-Hansgrohe) + 00
  • Richard Carapaz (Ineos Grenadiers) + 00
  • Bauke Mollema (Trek-Segafredo) + 00
  • Diego Ulissi (UAE Team Emirates) + 00
  • Andrea Vendrame (AG2R Citroen Team) + 04
  • Mattias Skjelmose Jensen (Trek-Segafredo) + 04
For full standings for each jersey and classification check out our results page.

– – –

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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'It's not possible to finish' – Ewan blunt on controversial 'get out' Giro strategy

Caleb Ewan (Lotto-Soudal) has confirmed that he will quit the Giro d’Italia early to focus on the Tour de France, a strategy he has received criticism for in the past.

Ewan has been honest and upfront about his decision to save himself for the Tour by not completing the Giro, which he does not believe is possible for a sprinter in his position.

But the Australian has previously been slammed for adopting this strategy for the famous Italian race and his approach to not completing a Grand Tour after taking to the start line.

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“It is not possible to finish the Giro all the way if you also want to be in top form at the start of the Tour de France at the beginning of July,” Ewan told reporters, as quoted by Wielerflits. “When do I leave Italy? I didn’t put an exact date on it, but anyway, before the start of the tough last week.

“Otherwise, you have to dig too deep into your reserves. As soon as I feel that I am getting less, I get out.”

Only last year, Eddy Merckx criticised Ewan for a “lack of professionalism and lack of respect” after he withdrew from the Giro midway through Stage 8.

Cycling legend Merckx, who won both the Giro and the Tour de France five times, criticised the move by Ewan and said he should be punished.

‘If he hadn’t won, we would say that was stupid’ – Lloyd on Ewan win

“What Caleb Ewan did bothers me a lot,” he told Het Nieuwsblad.

I think his abandonment is a total lack of professionalism and a lack of respect for the Giro and cycling.

“He deserves a sanction, such as withdrawing all his bonuses.

“The former boss of the Tour de France, Felix Levitan, would have told him not to come next year after doing that.”

Merckx’s son, Axel, who works as a team manager for Hagens Berman Axeon, also said he believed Ewan was wrong to leave the race when he did.

“The simple fact of giving up without providing real evidence of knee pain is a complete lack of respect for the organisation,” he said.

‘I’ll have a go and see what happens’ – Ewan on sprint chances at Giro

McEwen defends Ewan

Speaking on Eurosport’s coverage, which you can watch on discovery+, former sprinter Robbie McEwen said Ewan’s strategy was totally justified, as he had used it himself on previous occasions.

McEwen won 12 stages at the Giro in his career, and 12 stages at the Tour de France as well.

“I completely agree,” said McEwan when Dan Lloyd said it “made no sense” for Ewan to try and get himself over the final mountains with the Tour de France on the horizon.

“Because I used to do exactly the same thing. I used to go to the Giro with no intention of ever finishing it.

“Just because the race is 21 stages doesn’t mean you have to ride them all or attempt to ride yourself into the ground to get through it, especially with something like the Tour de France on the horizon, which is extremely important to the team and the rider.

“And let’s face it, as big as any other race is, the Tour de France is the big one.”

Stage 1 of this year’s edition of the Giro is a gentle ride from Budapest to Visegrad before an enticing uphill finale.

The legendary race does not touch down in Italy until Tuesday, with Hungary handed the Grande Partenza honour in 2022.

– – –

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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'It's not possible to finish' – Ewan blunt on controversial 'get out' Giro strategy

Caleb Ewan (Lotto-Soudal) has confirmed that he will quit the Giro d’Italia early to focus on the Tour de France, a strategy he has received criticism for in the past.

Ewan has been honest and upfront about his decision to save himself for the Tour by not completing the Giro, which he does not believe is possible for a sprinter in his position.

But the Australian has previously been slammed for adopting this strategy for the famous Italian race and his approach to not completing a Grand Tour after taking to the start line.

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“It is not possible to finish the Giro all the way if you also want to be in top form at the start of the Tour de France at the beginning of July,” Ewan told reporters, as quoted by Wielerflits. “When do I leave Italy? I didn’t put an exact date on it, but anyway, before the start of the tough last week.

“Otherwise, you have to dig too deep into your reserves. As soon as I feel that I am getting less, I get out.”

Only last year, Eddy Merckx criticised Ewan for a “lack of professionalism and lack of respect” after he withdrew from the Giro midway through Stage 8.

Cycling legend Merckx, who won both the Giro and the Tour de France five times, criticised the move by Ewan and said he should be punished.

‘If he hadn’t won, we would say that was stupid’ – Lloyd on Ewan win

“What Caleb Ewan did bothers me a lot,” he told Het Nieuwsblad.

I think his abandonment is a total lack of professionalism and a lack of respect for the Giro and cycling.

“He deserves a sanction, such as withdrawing all his bonuses.

“The former boss of the Tour de France, Felix Levitan, would have told him not to come next year after doing that.”

Merckx’s son, Axel, who works as a team manager for Hagens Berman Axeon, also said he believed Ewan was wrong to leave the race when he did.

“The simple fact of giving up without providing real evidence of knee pain is a complete lack of respect for the organisation,” he said.

‘I’ll have a go and see what happens’ – Ewan on sprint chances at Giro

McEwen defends Ewan

Speaking on Eurosport’s coverage, which you can watch on discovery+, former sprinter Robbie McEwen said Ewan’s strategy was totally justified, as he had used it himself on previous occasions.

McEwen won 12 stages at the Giro in his career, and 12 stages at the Tour de France as well.

“I completely agree,” said McEwan when Dan Lloyd said it “made no sense” for Ewan to try and get himself over the final mountains with the Tour de France on the horizon.

“Because I used to do exactly the same thing. I used to go to the Giro with no intention of ever finishing it.

“Just because the race is 21 stages doesn’t mean you have to ride them all or attempt to ride yourself into the ground to get through it, especially with something like the Tour de France on the horizon, which is extremely important to the team and the rider.

“And let’s face it, as big as any other race is, the Tour de France is the big one.”

Stage 1 of this year’s edition of the Giro is a gentle ride from Budapest to Visegrad before an enticing uphill finale.

The legendary race does not touch down in Italy until Tuesday, with Hungary handed the Grande Partenza honour in 2022.

– – –

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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'It's not possible to finish' – Ewan blunt on controversial 'get out' Giro strategy

Caleb Ewan (Lotto-Soudal) has confirmed that he will quit the Giro d’Italia early to focus on the Tour de France, a strategy he has received criticism for in the past.

Ewan has been honest and upfront about his decision to save himself for the Tour by not completing the Giro, which he does not believe is possible for a sprinter in his position.

But the Australian has previously been slammed for adopting this strategy for the famous Italian race and his approach to not completing a Grand Tour after taking to the start line.

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‘More pressure on the sprinters’ – Preview to Cavendish v Ewan at Giro

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“It is not possible to finish the Giro all the way if you also want to be in top form at the start of the Tour de France at the beginning of July,” Ewan told reporters, as quoted by Wielerflits. “When do I leave Italy? I didn’t put an exact date on it, but anyway, before the start of the tough last week.

“Otherwise, you have to dig too deep into your reserves. As soon as I feel that I am getting less, I get out.”

Only last year, Eddy Merckx criticised Ewan for a “lack of professionalism and lack of respect” after he withdrew from the Giro midway through Stage 8.

Cycling legend Merckx, who won both the Giro and the Tour de France five times, criticised the move by Ewan and said he should be punished.

‘If he hadn’t won, we would say that was stupid’ – Lloyd on Ewan win

“What Caleb Ewan did bothers me a lot,” he told Het Nieuwsblad.

I think his abandonment is a total lack of professionalism and a lack of respect for the Giro and cycling.

“He deserves a sanction, such as withdrawing all his bonuses.

“The former boss of the Tour de France, Felix Levitan, would have told him not to come next year after doing that.”

Merckx’s son, Axel, who works as a team manager for Hagens Berman Axeon, also said he believed Ewan was wrong to leave the race when he did.

“The simple fact of giving up without providing real evidence of knee pain is a complete lack of respect for the organisation,” he said.

‘I’ll have a go and see what happens’ – Ewan on sprint chances at Giro

McEwen defends Ewan

Speaking on Eurosport’s coverage, which you can watch on discovery+, former sprinter Robbie McEwen said Ewan’s strategy was totally justified, as he had used it himself on previous occasions.

McEwen won 12 stages at the Giro in his career, and 12 stages at the Tour de France as well.

“I completely agree,” said McEwan when Dan Lloyd said it “made no sense” for Ewan to try and get himself over the final mountains with the Tour de France on the horizon.

“Because I used to do exactly the same thing. I used to go to the Giro with no intention of ever finishing it.

“Just because the race is 21 stages doesn’t mean you have to ride them all or attempt to ride yourself into the ground to get through it, especially with something like the Tour de France on the horizon, which is extremely important to the team and the rider.

“And let’s face it, as big as any other race is, the Tour de France is the big one.”

Stage 1 of this year’s edition of the Giro is a gentle ride from Budapest to Visegrad before an enticing uphill finale.

The legendary race does not touch down in Italy until Tuesday, with Hungary handed the Grande Partenza honour in 2022.

– – –

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 team guide: Star riders, memorable moments, which Italian food are they?

03/05/2022 AT 17:31

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Blazin’ Saddles: The best riders and teams of the spring Classics – and biggest disappointments

25/04/2022 AT 14:30

'It's not possible to finish' – Ewan blunt on controversial 'get out' Giro strategy

Caleb Ewan (Lotto-Soudal) has confirmed that he will quit the Giro d’Italia early to focus on the Tour de France, a strategy he has received criticism for in the past.

Ewan has been honest and upfront about his decision to save himself for the Tour by not completing the Giro, which he does not believe is possible for a sprinter in his position.

But the Australian has previously been slammed for adopting this strategy for the famous Italian race and his approach to not completing a Grand Tour after taking to the start line.

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“It is not possible to finish the Giro all the way if you also want to be in top form at the start of the Tour de France at the beginning of July,” Ewan told reporters, as quoted by Wielerflits. “When do I leave Italy? I didn’t put an exact date on it, but anyway, before the start of the tough last week.

“Otherwise, you have to dig too deep into your reserves. As soon as I feel that I am getting less, I get out.”

Only last year, Eddy Merckx criticised Ewan for a “lack of professionalism and lack of respect” after he withdrew from the Giro midway through Stage 8.

Cycling legend Merckx, who won both the Giro and the Tour de France five times, criticised the move by Ewan and said he should be punished.

‘If he hadn’t won, we would say that was stupid’ – Lloyd on Ewan win

“What Caleb Ewan did bothers me a lot,” he told Het Nieuwsblad.

I think his abandonment is a total lack of professionalism and a lack of respect for the Giro and cycling.

“He deserves a sanction, such as withdrawing all his bonuses.

“The former boss of the Tour de France, Felix Levitan, would have told him not to come next year after doing that.”

Merckx’s son, Axel, who works as a team manager for Hagens Berman Axeon, also said he believed Ewan was wrong to leave the race when he did.

“The simple fact of giving up without providing real evidence of knee pain is a complete lack of respect for the organisation,” he said.

‘I’ll have a go and see what happens’ – Ewan on sprint chances at Giro

McEwen defends Ewan

Speaking on Eurosport’s coverage, which you can watch on discovery+, former sprinter Robbie McEwen said Ewan’s strategy was totally justified, as he had used it himself on previous occasions.

McEwen won 12 stages at the Giro in his career, and 12 stages at the Tour de France as well.

“I completely agree,” said McEwan when Dan Lloyd said it “made no sense” for Ewan to try and get himself over the final mountains with the Tour de France on the horizon.

“Because I used to do exactly the same thing. I used to go to the Giro with no intention of ever finishing it.

“Just because the race is 21 stages doesn’t mean you have to ride them all or attempt to ride yourself into the ground to get through it, especially with something like the Tour de France on the horizon, which is extremely important to the team and the rider.

“And let’s face it, as big as any other race is, the Tour de France is the big one.”

Stage 1 of this year’s edition of the Giro is a gentle ride from Budapest to Visegrad before an enticing uphill finale.

The legendary race does not touch down in Italy until Tuesday, with Hungary handed the Grande Partenza honour in 2022.

– – –

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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