2017 Giro d'Italia

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2017 Giro d'Italia
2017 UCI World Tour, race 21 of 37
Giro d'Italia 100 logo.svg
Race details
Dates5–28 May 2017
Stages21
Distance3,609.1 km (2,243 mi)
Winning time90h 34' 54"
Results
Jersey pink.svg WinnerFlag of the Netherlands.svg  Tom Dumoulin  (NED) (Team Sunweb)
  SecondFlag of Colombia.svg  Nairo Quintana  (COL) (Movistar Team)
  ThirdFlag of Italy.svg  Vincenzo Nibali  (ITA) (Bahrain–Merida)

Jersey violet.svg PointsFlag of Colombia.svg  Fernando Gaviria  (COL) (Quick-Step Floors)
Jersey blue.svg MountainsFlag of Spain.svg  Mikel Landa  (ESP) (Team Sky)
Jersey white.svg YouthFlag of Luxembourg.svg  Bob Jungels  (LUX) (Quick-Step Floors)
  Team Movistar Team
  Team points Quick-Step Floors
  2016
2018  

The 2017 Giro d'Italia was the 100th edition of the Giro d'Italia, one of cycling's Grand Tour races. The race started on 5 May in Alghero on the island of Sardinia, [1] and ended on 28 May in Milan. The race was won by Tom Dumoulin, who became the first Dutch male winner of the Giro. [2] [3]

Contents

Teams

The team presentation took place in Alghero, Sardinia on 4 May. Palco giro 100.png
The team presentation took place in Alghero, Sardinia on 4 May.

All 18 UCI WorldTeams were automatically invited and were obliged to attend the race. Four wildcard UCI Professional Continental teams were also selected. [5] Each team is expected to start with nine riders apart from Astana, with eight riders, due to the death of 2011 winner Michele Scarponi, who died while training days before the start of the race. [6]

The teams entering the race were:

UCI WorldTeams

UCI Professional Continental teams

Pre-race favorites

The main pre-race favorites were Nairo Quintana (Movistar Team) and Vincenzo Nibali (Bahrain–Merida). Other general classification contenders were Geraint Thomas and Mikel Landa (Team Sky), Steven Kruijswijk (LottoNL–Jumbo), Thibaut Pinot (FDJ), Tom Dumoulin (Team Sunweb), Adam Yates (Orica–Scott), Bauke Mollema (Trek–Segafredo), Ilnur Zakarin (Team Katusha–Alpecin), Tejay van Garderen (BMC Racing Team), Bob Jungels (Quick-Step Floors) and Domenico Pozzovivo (AG2R La Mondiale). [7] [8] [9]

Sprinters at the Giro include Fernando Gaviria, Caleb Ewan, André Greipel, Jasper Stuyven, Sacha Modolo, Giacomo Nizzolo, Sam Bennett and Ryan Gibbons. [9]

Route and stages

Details about the first three stages of the race were unveiled at a press conference on 14 September 2016. The remainder of the route was unveiled by race director Mauro Vegni on 25 October 2016. [1] However, organizers RCS Sport leaked the route on their website the day before the official presentation. [10]

There were 21 stages in the race, covering a total distance of 3,609.1 km (2,243 mi), [11] 142 km (88.2 mi) longer than the 2016 Giro. The longest race stage was stage 12 at 229 km (142 mi), [11] and stage 14 the shortest at 131 km (81 mi). [11] The race featured a total of 69.1 km (43 mi) in individual time trials, [11] and five summit finishes: stage 4, to Mount Etna; stage 9, to Blockhaus; stage 14, to Oropa; stage 18, to Ortisei/St. Ulrich; and stage 19, to Piancavallo. The Cima Coppi (the race's highest elevation) was the Stelvio Pass, summited during stage 16. [12] The stages were categorised in four ways by race organisers; time trials, low, medium and high difficulty. [11]

Stage characteristics and winners [11]
StageDateCourseDistanceTypeWinner
15 May Alghero to Olbia 206 km (128 mi)Hillystage.svgLow-difficulty stageFlag of Austria.svg  Lukas Pöstlberger  (AUT)
26 May Olbia to Tortolì 221 km (137 mi)Mediummountainstage.svgMedium-difficulty stageFlag of Germany.svg  André Greipel  (GER)
37 May Tortolì to Cagliari 148 km (92 mi)Plainstage.svgLow-difficulty stageFlag of Colombia.svg  Fernando Gaviria  (COL)
8 MayRest day
49 May Cefalù to Etna (Rifugio Sapienza)181 km (112 mi)Mountainstage.svgHigh-difficulty stageFlag of Slovenia.svg  Jan Polanc  (SLO)
510 May Pedara to Messina 159 km (99 mi)Plainstage.svgLow-difficulty stageFlag of Colombia.svg  Fernando Gaviria  (COL)
611 May Reggio Calabria to Terme Luigiane 217 km (135 mi)Mediummountainstage.svgMedium-difficulty stageFlag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg  Silvan Dillier  (SUI)
712 May Castrovillari to Alberobello 224 km (139 mi)Plainstage.svgLow-difficulty stageFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Caleb Ewan  (AUS)
813 May Molfetta to Peschici 189 km (117 mi)Mediummountainstage.svgMedium-difficulty stageFlag of Spain.svg  Gorka Izagirre  (ESP)
914 May Montenero di Bisaccia to Blockhaus 149 km (93 mi)Mediummountainstage.svgMedium-difficulty stageFlag of Colombia.svg  Nairo Quintana  (COL)
15 MayRest day
1016 May Foligno to Montefalco 39.8 km (25 mi)Time Trial.svg Individual time trial Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Tom Dumoulin  (NED)
1117 May Florence (Ponte a Ema) to Bagno di Romagna 161 km (100 mi)Mediummountainstage.svgMedium-difficulty stageFlag of Spain.svg  Omar Fraile  (ESP)
1218 May Forlì to Reggio Emilia 229 km (142 mi)Plainstage.svgLow-difficulty stageFlag of Colombia.svg  Fernando Gaviria  (COL)
1319 May Reggio Emilia to Tortona 167 km (104 mi)Plainstage.svgLow-difficulty stageFlag of Colombia.svg  Fernando Gaviria  (COL)
1420 May Castellania to Santuario di Oropa 131 km (81 mi)Mediummountainstage.svgMedium-difficulty stageFlag of the Netherlands.svg  Tom Dumoulin  (NED)
1521 May Valdengo to Bergamo 199 km (124 mi)Mediummountainstage.svgMedium-difficulty stageFlag of Luxembourg.svg  Bob Jungels  (LUX)
22 MayRest day
1623 May Rovetta to Bormio 222 km (138 mi)Mountainstage.svgHigh-difficulty stageFlag of Italy.svg  Vincenzo Nibali  (ITA)
1724 May Tirano to Canazei 219 km (136 mi)Mediummountainstage.svgMedium-difficulty stageFlag of France.svg  Pierre Rolland  (FRA)
1825 May Moena to Ortisei/St. Ulrich 137 km (85 mi)Mountainstage.svgHigh-difficulty stageFlag of the United States.svg  Tejay van Garderen  (USA)
1926 May Innichen/San Candido to Piancavallo 191 km (119 mi)Mountainstage.svgHigh-difficulty stageFlag of Spain.svg  Mikel Landa  (ESP)
2027 May Pordenone to Asiago 190 km (118 mi)Mountainstage.svgHigh-difficulty stageFlag of France.svg  Thibaut Pinot  (FRA)
2128 May Monza (Autodromo) to Milan 29.3 km (18 mi)Time Trial.svg Individual time trial Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Jos van Emden  (NED)

Race overview

Lukas Pöstlberger won the first stage, André Greipel claimed the second and Fernando Gaviria the third. From there Bob Jungels would wear the Pink jersey as Gaviria went on to win three more stages and lock up the points classification. As the race entered the mountains the leader's jersey swapped between Nairo Quintana and Tom Dumoulin going into the penultimate time trial where Quintana was in 1st and Dumoulin in 4th. Domenico Pozzovivo, Ilnur Zakarin, Vincenzo Nibali and Thibaut Pinot, who had just won the final mountain stage, were all within 90 seconds of Quintana. During the final time trial Dumoulin finished 2nd to fellow Dutchman Jos van Emden, but beat all of the GC contenders handily claiming the Giro victory thirty seconds ahead of Quintana as Nibali finalized the podium. This was the first grand tour victory by a Dutch rider in nearly four decades.

Doping

On the eve of the Giro d'Italia, the UCI announced that two Bardiani–CSF riders, Stefano Pirazzi and Nicola Ruffoni, [13] had tested positive for GH-Releasing Peptides (GHRPs) – defined as peptide hormones, growth factors, or mimetics  – in samples collected during out-of-competition doping tests conducted on 25 and 26 April 2017. [14] With the team incurring first and second AAFs within a twelve-month period, the UCI aimed to enforce article 7.12.1 of the UCI Anti-Doping Rules, allowing for suspension of the team from 15 to 45 days – casting doubt on their Giro appearance. [15] [16]

Classification leadership

In the Giro d'Italia, four different jerseys are awarded:

Points for the points classification
Position123456789101112131415
Stages 1–3, 5–7, 12–135035251814121087654321
Stages 8, 14–15, 1725181286543210
Other stages151297
Points for the mountains classification
Position123456789
Points for Cima Coppi 45302014106421
Points for Category 1351812964210
Points for Category 215864210
Points for Category 374210
Points for Category 43210

Several other minor classifications are awarded:

Classification leadership by stage
StageWinner General classification
Jersey pink.svg
Points classification
Jersey violet.svg
Mountains classification
Jersey blue.svg
Young rider classification
Jersey white.svg
Trofeo Fast Team Trofeo Super Team
1 Lukas Pöstlberger Lukas Pöstlberger Lukas Pöstlberger [N 1] Cesare Benedetti Lukas Pöstlberger [N 1] Bora–Hansgrohe Bora–Hansgrohe
2 André Greipel André Greipel André Greipel [N 2] Daniel Teklehaimanot Orica–Scott Lotto–Soudal
3 Fernando Gaviria Fernando Gaviria Fernando Gaviria [N 3] Quick-Step Floors Team Dimension Data
4 Jan Polanc Bob Jungels Jan Polanc Bob Jungels [N 4] Cannondale–Drapac UAE Team Emirates
5 Fernando Gaviria Fernando Gaviria Quick-Step Floors
6 Silvan Dillier
7 Caleb Ewan UAE Team Emirates
8 Gorka Izagirre
9 Nairo Quintana Nairo Quintana Davide Formolo Movistar Team
10 Tom Dumoulin Tom Dumoulin Bob Jungels
11 Omar Fraile
12 Fernando Gaviria Omar Fraile
13 Fernando Gaviria
14 Tom Dumoulin Tom Dumoulin [N 5]
15 Bob Jungels
16 Vincenzo Nibali Mikel Landa
17 Pierre Rolland
18 Tejay van Garderen Adam Yates
19 Mikel Landa Nairo Quintana
20 Thibaut Pinot
21 Jos van Emden Tom Dumoulin Bob Jungels
Final Tom Dumoulin Fernando Gaviria Mikel Landa Bob Jungels Movistar Team Quick-Step Floors

Final standings

Legend
Jersey pink.svgDenotes the leader of the general classification Jersey blue.svgDenotes the leader of the mountains classification
Jersey violet.svgDenotes the leader of the points classification Jersey white.svgDenotes the leader of the young rider classification

General classification

General classification (1–10)
RankRiderTeamTime
1Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Tom Dumoulin  (NED)Jersey pink.svg Team Sunweb 90h 34' 54"
2Flag of Colombia.svg  Nairo Quintana  (COL) Movistar Team + 31"
3Flag of Italy.svg  Vincenzo Nibali  (ITA) Bahrain–Merida + 40"
4Flag of France.svg  Thibaut Pinot  (FRA) FDJ + 1' 17"
5Flag of Russia.svg  Ilnur Zakarin  (RUS) Team Katusha–Alpecin + 1' 56"
6Flag of Italy.svg  Domenico Pozzovivo  (ITA) AG2R La Mondiale + 3' 11"
7Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Bauke Mollema  (NED) Trek–Segafredo + 3' 41"
8Flag of Luxembourg.svg  Bob Jungels  (LUX)Jersey white.svg Quick-Step Floors + 7' 04"
9Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  Adam Yates  (GBR) Orica–Scott + 8' 10"
10Flag of Italy.svg  Davide Formolo  (ITA) Cannondale–Drapac + 15' 57"

Points classification

Points classification (1–10)
RankRiderTeamPoints
1Flag of Colombia.svg  Fernando Gaviria  (COL)Jersey violet.svg Quick-Step Floors 325
2Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Jasper Stuyven  (BEL) Trek–Segafredo 192
3Flag of Ireland.svg  Sam Bennett  (IRL) Bora–Hansgrohe 117
4Flag of Eritrea.svg  Daniel Teklehaimanot  (ERI) Team Dimension Data 100
5Flag of Austria.svg  Lukas Pöstlberger  (AUT) Bora–Hansgrohe 98
6Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Tom Dumoulin  (NED)Jersey pink.svg Team Sunweb 80
7Flag of Russia.svg  Pavel Brutt  (RUS) Gazprom–RusVelo 76
8Flag of Italy.svg  Kristian Sbaragli  (ITA) Team Dimension Data 76
9Flag of Albania.svg  Eugert Zhupa  (ALB) Wilier Triestina–Selle Italia 70
10Flag of Italy.svg  Roberto Ferrari  (ITA) UAE Team Emirates 70

Mountains classification

Mountains classification (1–10)
RankRiderTeamPoints
1Flag of Spain.svg  Mikel Landa  (ESP)Jersey blue.svg Team Sky 224
2Flag of Spain.svg  Luis León Sánchez  (ESP) Astana 118
3Flag of Spain.svg  Omar Fraile  (ESP) Team Dimension Data 104
4Flag of Colombia.svg  Nairo Quintana  (COL) Movistar Team 70
5Flag of France.svg  Pierre Rolland  (FRA) Cannondale–Drapac 70
6Flag of Russia.svg  Ilnur Zakarin  (RUS) Team Katusha–Alpecin 66
7Flag of Spain.svg  Igor Antón  (ESP) Team Dimension Data 56
8Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Tom Dumoulin  (NED)Jersey pink.svg Team Sunweb 55
9Flag of Italy.svg  Domenico Pozzovivo  (ITA) AG2R La Mondiale 54
10Flag of France.svg  Thibaut Pinot  (FRA) FDJ 53

Young rider classification

Young rider classification (1–10)
RankRiderTeamTime
1Flag of Luxembourg.svg  Bob Jungels  (LUX)Jersey white.svg Quick-Step Floors 90h 41' 58"
2Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  Adam Yates  (GBR) Orica–Scott + 1' 06"
3Flag of Italy.svg  Davide Formolo  (ITA) Cannondale–Drapac + 8' 13"
4Flag of Slovenia.svg  Jan Polanc  (SLO) UAE Team Emirates + 11' 02"
5Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Laurens De Plus  (BEL) Quick-Step Floors + 1h 12' 56"
6Flag of Italy.svg  Simone Petilli  (ITA) UAE Team Emirates + 1h 22' 30"
7Flag of Colombia.svg  Sebastián Henao  (COL) Team Sky + 1h 37' 00"
8Flag of France.svg  François Bidard  (FRA) AG2R La Mondiale + 2h 01' 59"
9Flag of Russia.svg  Alexander Foliforov  (RUS) Gazprom–RusVelo + 2h 02' 26"
10Flag of Austria.svg  Gregor Mühlberger  (AUT) Bora–Hansgrohe + 2h 05' 30"

Trofeo Fast Team

Trofeo Fast Team classification (1–10)
RankTeamTime
1 Movistar Team 270h 36' 48"
2 AG2R La Mondiale + 59' 46"
3 FDJ + 1h 19' 56"
4 Bahrain–Merida + 1h 24' 52"
5 Cannondale–Drapac + 1h 27' 19"
6 UAE Team Emirates + 1h 59' 31"
7 Team Sky + 1h 59' 41"
8 Astana + 2h 09' 05"
9 Trek–Segafredo + 2h 23' 12"
10 Team Sunweb + 2h 41' 45"

Trofeo Super Team

Trofeo Super Team classification (1–10)
RankTeamPoints
1 Quick-Step Floors 516
2 UAE Team Emirates 355
3 Team Sky 323
4 Bora–Hansgrohe 308
5 Movistar Team 297
6 Team Dimension Data 289
7 Team Sunweb 286
8 Trek–Segafredo 277
9 FDJ 240
10 Bahrain–Merida 239

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References

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 In stage 2, Caleb Ewan, who was second in the points and young rider classifications, wore the cyclamen points jersey, because Lukas Pöstlberger (in first place) wore the pink jersey as leader of the general classification during that stage. Jasper Stuyven, who was third in the young rider classification, wore the white jersey as a result of this.
  2. In stage 3, Caleb Ewan, who was fourth in the points classification, wore the cyclamen jersey, because André Greipel (in first place) wore the pink jersey as leader of the general classification, Daniel Teklehaimanot (in second place) wore the blue jersey as leader of the mountains classification, and Lukas Pöstlberger (in third place) wore the white jersey as leader of the young rider classification during that stage.
  3. In stage 4, Lukas Pöstlberger, who was second in the young rider classification, wore the white jersey, because Fernando Gaviria (in first place) wore the pink jersey as leader of the general classification during that stage.
  4. In stages 5 to 9, Adam Yates, who was second in the young rider classification, wore the white jersey, because Bob Jungels (in first place) wore the pink jersey as leader of the general classification during that stage.
  5. In stages 15 and 16, Omar Fraile, who was second in the mountains classification, wore the blue jersey, because Tom Dumoulin (in first place) wore the pink jersey as leader of the general classification during that stage.

Citations

  1. 1 2 "Giro d'Italia 2017 route: Sardinia start for 100th edition". cyclingweekly.co.uk. 14 September 2016. Archived from the original on 19 September 2016. Retrieved 14 September 2016.
  2. "Tom Dumoulin overhauls Nairo Quintana to win Giro d'Italia in nail-biting final time trial – Cycling Weekly". Cycling Weekly. 28 May 2017. Retrieved 28 May 2017.
  3. "Tom Dumoulin wins 100th Giro d'Italia after pulsating time-trial finish". The Guardian. 28 May 2017. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
  4. "Giro d'Italia 100 team presentation – Gallery". Cyclingnews.com . 5 May 2017. Retrieved 8 May 2017.
  5. Garibaldi 2017, p. 12.
  6. "Astana decide not to replace Michele Scarponi in Giro d'Italia line-up". cyclingweekly.com. 30 April 2017. Retrieved 2 May 2017.
  7. "Endura – Nairo and the Giro". Exposure. Archived from the original on 30 April 2018. Retrieved 7 May 2017.
  8. "Why Steven Kruijswijk could be the rider to upset the big Giro d'Italia favourites – Cycling Weekly". 4 May 2017.
  9. 1 2 "GCN's 2017 Giro d'Italia Preview Show".
  10. redazione, La (24 October 2016). "In anteprima le altimetrie di tutte le tappe del Giro d'Italia 2017!". cicloweb.it. Retrieved 2 May 2017.
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Garibaldi 2017, p. 8.
  12. "Giro d'Italia 2017: The essential guide". Cycling News. 5 May 2017. Archived from the original on 10 September 2015. Retrieved 5 May 2017.
  13. "Two riders fail dope test on eve of 100th Giro d'Italia – Cycling Weekly". 4 May 2017.
  14. "Two Bardiani CSF riders positive in out-of-competition control". Cycling News. 4 May 2017. Retrieved 5 May 2017.
  15. "UCI statement on Nicola Ruffoni, Stefano Pirazzi and UCI Professional Continental Team Bardiani CSF". www.uci.ch.
  16. "Provisional suspension" (PDF). UCI.
  17. 1 2 3 Garibaldi 2017, p. 11.
  18. 1 2 3 Weislo, Laura (13 May 2008). "Giro d'Italia classifications demystified". Cyclingnews.com . Retrieved 27 August 2009.
  19. "Giro revamps time bonus and points systems for 2014 edition". VeloNews . 8 April 2014. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 16 October 2015.

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