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    Peter Sagan has won Giro d’Italia stage 10! Egan Bernal keeps the Maglia Rosa

    17/05/2021

    Peter Sagan has won Giro d'Italia stage 10! Egan Bernal keeps the Maglia Rosa

    Just like last year, Peter Sagan waited for Stage 10 to sign off a masterpiece at the Giro d’Italia, crossing the line in first place in Foligno after his Bora-Hansgrohe team ejected several sprinters from the peloton in a fast build up. The Slovakian star preceded Fernando Gaviria and Davide Cimolai at the finish after Remco Evenepoel and Egan Bernal gained 2 and 1 second time bonuses respectively in an intermediate sprint that was highly contested with 17.8km to go. The Colombian therefore extended his lead over all his other rivals before the rest day and the highly anticipated Wine Stage from Perugia to Montalcino that includes gravel sectors.

     

     

    STAGE RESULTS

    1 – Peter Sagan (Bora – Hansgrohe) – 139km in 3h10’56”, average speed 43.680 km/h

    2 – Fernando Gaviria (UAE Team Emirates) s.t.

    3 – Davide Cimolai (Israel Start-Up Nation) s.t.

     

    GENERAL CLASSIFICATION

    1 – Egan Bernal (Ineos Grenadiers)

    2 – Remco Evenepoel (Deceuninck – Quick-Step) at 14”

    3 – Aleksandr Vlasov (Astana – Premier Tech) at 22”

     

    JERSEYS

     

    Maglia Rosa (pink), general classification leader, sponsored by Enel – Egan Bernal (Ineos Grenadiers)

    Maglia Ciclamino (cyclamen), sprinter classification leader, sponsored by Segafredo Zanetti – Peter Sagan (Bora – Hansgrohe)

    Maglia Azzurra (blue), King of the Mountains classification leader, sponsored by Banca Mediolanum – Geoffrey Bouchard (AG2R Citroen Team)

    Maglia Bianca (white), young rider general classification leader, sponsored by Intimissimi Uomo – Egan Bernal (Ineos Grenadiers), worn by Remco Evenepoel (Deceuninck – Quick-Step)

     

    Quotes from Peter Sagan and Egan Bernal

    Second stage win for Peter Sagan at the Giro after Stage 10 to Tortoreto Lido last year.

    This is the 18th stage win for Sagan in a Grand Tour. Out of 15 Grand Tours he has taken part in so far, he has only missed out on winning a stage at the 2014 Tour de France.

    For Fernando Gaviria, it’s his 8th podium in a stage of the Giro (5 wins, 3 second places). For Davide Cimolai, it’s his third podium, with all three coming this year: 2nd at Canale and Termoli, 3rd at Foligno today.

     

     

    Speaking at the press conference, the stage winner Peter Sagan said: “I’m very happy and I’d like to  thank the whole team, they did some wonderful work on the last two climbs. They kept the race under control. Maciej Bodnar and Daniel Oss positioned me in the last curve so I could sprint for the win. With the stage victory, the Maglia Ciclamino arrived but it won’t be easy to keep it. We have only done half of the Giro and the hardest half awaits us. In any case, I’m happy to ride the Giro again. I feel like the last Giro was one month ago. I like racing in Italy.

     

    The Maglia Rosa Egan Bernal said: “It’s been special to wear this Maglia Rosa today. I want this jersey in Milan too but it’s still a long way to go and I’ll have to remain focused for every second of racing. Before the intermediate sprint, I heard the sporting director asking Gianni Moscon and Jhonathan Narvaez to go for it. I took the wheel of Pippo [Ganna] so it was easy to be at the front. I took one second but for sure the Giro will not be won or lost by one second, whereas we’ll talk minutes on the big climbs. I don’t see the Giro as a mental challenge between Remco [Evenepoel] and myself. All the riders who are within a minute on GC are still in contention for the overall victory.”

     

    Stage 11, Perugia - Montalcino (Brunello di Montalcino Wine Stage), 162 km

    With nearly 2,500 m altitude gain, and 4 unpaved road sectors totalling 35 km over the final 70 km of the route, this will be a very challenging stage. The first 90 km are raced on wide and sometimes rough roads. The first unpaved sector, which also includes a technical downhill stretch, begins in Torrenieri. The second dirt road sector, which also includes a level crossing, begins after Buonconvento and Bibbiano. The route passes over river Ombrone, and then the road starts to rise for approx. 6 km, with gradients nearing 16% midway. The route weaves through a brace of bends across the forest, on dirt roads, and then comes back on tarmac to negotiate a categorised climb up to Passo del Lume Spento. After descending into Montalcino, the route heads towards Castelnuovo dell’Abate and takes in the two final dirt road sectors, one after the other. Past Tavernelle, the road rises markedly, merges back onto the route (before the categorised climb) and then heads all the way to the finish.

     

    Final KMs

    Descending into Montalcino, a little after the red triangle, the race enters the urban area on narrow, stone-paved roads. Taking into the final left-hand bend, the route merges onto the home straight (200 m), on tarmac road.

     

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