Ten telling minutes: the GC contenders make their first moves at the Giro d’Italia

Ten telling minutes: the GC contenders make their first moves at the Giro d’Italia

The tricky final climb of stage eight tempted the overall contenders into action for the first time

Photos: RCS Sport Words: Richard Windsor

By their very nature, Grand Tours are a waiting game. So much time is spent patiently anticipating the right moment to attack and choosing the right time to follow, as each of the general classification contenders contemplate their next move against their rivals.

Friday’s much awaited stage to Gran Sasso was meant to end this Giro d’Italia’s stalemate. To the chagrin of those watching, that did not materialise, but the following day provided the first 10 minutes of telling GC action we’ve had outside of time trials so far.

On the slopes of the steep I Cappuccini climb, far behind stage eight’s sensational solo winner Ben Healy (EF Education-EasyPost), Bora-Hansgrohe pulled hard to string out a dwindling peloton in the last 10km. It was one of the race’s two big favourites Primož Roglič (Jumbo-Visma) though, who made the most damaging move – as he did four years ago here at Tirreno-Adriatico.

Read more: Giro d'Italia 2023 stage nine preview - a flat time trial that should shake up the GC

It was our first chance to see Roglič in full flight so far this Giro, and his strength was initially clear simply by the riders who had immediately attempted to follow and were quickly dropped, including current race leader Andreas Leknessund (Team DSM). More tellingly however, it was the race’s former leader Remco Evenepoel (Soudal - Quick-Step) who led the pursuit of the escaping Roglič, but was unable to close the gap. Initially it looked like he would make the bridge, and for some time held the Slovenian within reach, but appeared not to have that last reserve of his usual power to finish the job, eventually being swamped and overtaken by riders behind. 

Remco Evenepoel Giro d'Italia

Battered and bruised from his crashes on Wednesday’s rain-soaked stage, it’s still a surprise to see Evenepoel come unstuck for the first time on a climb such as this. With still much to prove on long, high-altitude alpine climbs - the kind he’ll find in the Giro’s third week - the steep slopes of I Cappuccini are more akin to the climbs of Liège-Bastogne-Liège, where the 23-year-old has remained unbeatable. Even a week of Grand Tour racing takes its toll though, and yet Evenepoel’s eventual loss of 14 seconds to Roglič still leaves him in the strongest position, particularly ahead of the race’s second time trial.

One team that did play the final climb perfectly was the Ineos Grenadiers. Having looked like the strongest and most organised of the overall contenders’ teams so far in this Giro, their experience told as they coolly allowed Roglič to escape with much of the climb remaining.

Geraint Thomas initially leant on Evenepoel to pick up the chase, but eventually retreated amongst his teammates again. He and his co-leader Tao Geoghegan Hart only emerged into camera shot again as they approached 6km to go, catching world champion Evenepoel and quickly leaving him behind in the final kilometre to the summit. Geoghegan Hart in particular looked formidable on the explosive final section of the climb, linking up with Roglič over the summit with Thomas soon to join them. No words need be spoken from there, with Roglič doing almost all the pulling into the final kilometre while Evenepoel did the same in the desperate chase behind.

Giro d'Italia

Although the 14 seconds they gained is unlikely to be the most decisive factor in the final destination of the pink jersey, it’s the first glimpse of GC action the race has seen, and left the favourite immediately on the backfoot.

As the riders cross the rubicon into the second week after Sunday’s time trial (where Evenepoel could very well regain those 14 seconds and more), those telling 10 minutes of stage eight tease at the prospect of more thrilling, closely fought racing as we delve deeper into the Giro.

Photos: RCS Sport Words: Richard Windsor

READ MORE

'He also wants to chase his own ambitions': GC Kuss, on or off?

'He also wants to chase his own ambitions': GC Kuss, on or off?

Sepp Kuss stunned the cycling world with his Vuelta a España victory in 2023, but his 14th place finish in 2024 left fans wondering: Was...

Read more
My weight battle en route to a breakthrough Tour de France, by Jonas Abrahamsen

My weight battle en route to a breakthrough Tour de France, by Jonas Abrahamsen

Uno-X Mobility’s Jonas Abrahamsen had a summer he will never forget, leading the Tour de France’s polka-dot jersey for 10 days and catapulting himself into...

Read more
From triumph to turmoil: How the Women's WorldTour teams performed in 2024

From triumph to turmoil: How the Women's WorldTour teams performed in 2024

SD Worx-Protime continued to dominate the Women's WorldTour, however, it didn't always go the Dutch team's way

Read more
‘Everything is in the brain’ - Cédrine Kerbaol on daredevil descending, her breakthrough season and yellow jersey dreams

‘Everything is in the brain’ - Cédrine Kerbaol on daredevil descending, her breakthrough season and yellow jersey dreams

The Ceratizit-WNT rider talks to Rouleur about winning a stage of the Tour, shouldering pressure and keeping a level head when it matters most

Read more
Success, struggle and surprise: How did each men's WorldTour team fare in 2024?

Success, struggle and surprise: How did each men's WorldTour team fare in 2024?

For some teams, it has been an up and down season, but for others, the wins kept coming throughout 2024

Read more
Was Tadej Pogačar's 2024 racing season the greatest in cycling history?

Was Tadej Pogačar's 2024 racing season the greatest in cycling history?

After adding a fourth Il Lombardia title to round-off his stellar year, Rouleur looks at how the Slovenian's 2024 racing season stacks up against cycling's best

Read more

MEMBERSHIP

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Independent journalism, award winning content, exclusive perks.

Banner Image