(Reggio Emilia) First Italian victory in the Giro 2022: Alberto Dainese beat the other sprinters in the 11and stage driven at high speed, Wednesday, under the heat of Reggio Emilia.
Romain Bardet, his DSM team leader who worked for him in the final, lifted him off the ground to congratulate him at the finish. “It will unlock him in the head, he will be one of the fastest,” predicted the Frenchman about the young Italian (24), who is participating in his first Giro.
Dainese, who took full advantage of the slipstream to outflank his opponents, beat a lot of people. Colombian Fernando Gaviria – captured at 74.6 km/h! – took second place, ahead of Italian Simone Consonni, Frenchman Arnaud Démare and Australian Caleb Ewan, fifth.
Dainese has also registered British Mark Cavendish, 6and of this stage completed at an average speed of more than 47 km/h. The course, ie 203 km completely flat from Romagna to Emilia, and the generally favorable wind contributed to a fast pace. Especially since the attempt in the last hour by Belgian Dries De Bondt, joined just 1300 meters from the line, kept the peloton under pressure.
“This morning, our plan was to sprint with Cees Bol (the other sprinter of the DSM team), but it didn’t work like that”, explained Dainese, very moved after the finish. On the podium, the Italian was treated to the traditional giant bottle of Prosecco, like his predecessors.
No cork for Prosecco
But, significant change, the magnum had been uncorked as a precaution to avoid the misadventure that had happened the day before to Biniam Girmay, injured in the left eye by the cork of his winner’s bottle.
The unfortunate Eritrean, the first black African rider to win a grand tour stage, had to abandon the Giro on Wednesday morning. “The examinations revealed lesions in the left eye which require the greatest precaution and rest”, specified the Belgian team which intends to protect its 22-year-old nugget, winner at the end of March from Ghent-Wevelgem.
During the stage, the Ecuadorian Richard Carapaz pocketed three bonus seconds in an intermediate sprint to reach second place in the standings, equal in time with the Portuguese Joao Almeida and 12 seconds behind the Spaniard Juan Pedro Lopez .
“I saw Carapaz gain time in an intermediate sprint, but I’m not as fast as him. There was nothing I could do,” commented Lopez, who has led the Giro since the 4and step. “Anyway, I’m very happy to keep the pink jersey for at least one more day.”
Thursday, the 12and stage, the longest of the Giro, crosses the chain of the Appennines, from Parma to Genoa over 204 kilometres. The course includes three listed climbs favorable to adventurers despite the relatively flat last 30 kilometers and a short passage on the motorway at the entrance to Genoa where the finish will be judged on a slight uphill false flat.
