TREVISO, Italy – Belgium’s Dries De Bondt won a final four-man sprint to clinch the final flat stage of the Giro d’Italia on Thursday, with the winner likely to be determined at the end of the last day of competition.
Richard Carapaz, winner of the ‘Giro’ in 2019 and gold medalist in the road race at the Tokyo Olympics, maintained his three-second lead at the top of the general classification ahead of Australian Jai Hindley, who finished second in the cumulative in 2020.
Hindley suffered a puncture three kilometers from the finish of the stage, which was neutralized, meaning he set the same time as the other leaders he was riding with at the time of his bad luck.
Mikel Landa is third overall, 1:05 behind Carapaz.
The last three stages of the “Giro” will serve to crown the champion: two very demanding tests in mountainous terrain on Friday and Saturday, followed by an individual time trial to end the debate in Verona on Sunday.
“I watched Landa and Hindley all the time because I knew a gap could develop,” Carapaz said. I want to keep the pink jersey until the end, and I have confidence in my legs. »
Joao Almeida, a Portuguese who is fourth in the overall standings, withdrew before the start of stage 18 after testing positive for COVID-19. Almeida was 1:54 behind Carapaz.
Vincenzo Nibali, who plans to retire at the end of the campaign, has therefore climbed to fourth place, although he is still nearly six minutes behind the Colombian.
The stage ended on the flat with a loop around Treviso, crowning a 156 km route from Borgo Valsugana which was punctuated by two category 4 passes.
De Bondt, who is part of the Alpecin-Fenix team, was part of an early four-man breakaway, and he sprinted to the finish line over Edoardo Affini and Magnus Cort Nielsen.
“We managed the breakaway well for the last few kilometers to keep the peloton behind us, then we had to keep an eye on Magnus because he’s very fast,” said De Bondt. This is my first victory in a major competition. It’s a dream come true. »
For his part, the Canadian Alexander Cataford (Israel-Premier Tech) finished 80th in the stage in a peloton 2:57 behind De Bondt. In the cumulative ranking, the Ottawa cyclist is 101st.
Classification of the 18th stage of the Tour of Italy, run Thursday from Borgo Valsugana to Treviso:
1. Dries De Bondt (BEL / Alpecin), the 156 km in 3 h 21:22.
(average: 46.486 km/h)
2. Edoardo Affini (ITA/JUM) mt
3. Magnus Cort Nielsen (DEN/EF1) mt
4. Davide Gabburo (ITA/BAR) mt
5. Alberto Dainese (ITA/DSM) at 14.
6. Arnaud Demare (FRA/GFJ) 14.
7. Davide Cimolai (ITA/COF) 14.
8. Mark Cavendish (GBR/QST) 14.
9. Fernando Gaviria (COL/UAE) 14.
10. Simone Consonni (ITA/COF) 14.
11. Vincenzo Albanese (ITA/EOK) 14.
12. Lawrence Naesen (BEL/AG2) 14.
13. Tobias Bayer (AUT/ALP) 14.
14. Andrea Vendrame (ITA/AG2) 14.
15. Maximiliano Richeze (ARG/UAE) 14.
…
19. Emanuel Buchmann (GER/BOR) 14.
20. Pello Bilbao (ESP/BAH) 14.
22. Richard Carapaz (ECU/INE) 14.
24. Mikel Landa (ESP/BAH) 14.
26. Domenico Pozzovivo (ITA/INT) 14.
27. Alejandro Valverde (ESP/MOV) 14.
28. Hugh Carthy (GBR/EF1) 14.
36. Vincenzo Nibali (ITA/AST) 14.
37. Santiago Buitrago (COL/BAH) 14.
38. Wilco Kelderman (NED/BOR) 14.
39. Mikaël Cherel (FRA / AG2) 14.
40. Pavel Sivakov (FRA/INE) 14.
42. Jai Hindley (AUS/BOR) 14.
60. Pierre-Luc Perichon (FRA/COF) 1:49.
61. Remy Rochas (FRA/COF) 1:52.
62. Guillaume Martin (FRA/COF) 1:52.
72. Juan Pedro Lopez (ESP/TRE) 2:57.
81. Romain Combaud (FRA/DSM) 2:57.
88. Nicolas Prodhomme (FRA/AG2) 2:57.
89. Lilian Calmejane (FRA/AG2) 2:57.
98. Richie Porte (AUS/INE) 2:57.
107. Giulio Ciccone (ITA/TRE) 3:24.
113. Nans Peters (FRA/AG2) 3:51.
119. Anthony Perez (FRA/COF) 4:12.
127. Ivan Sosa (COL/MOV) 4:57.
134. Mathieu van der Poel (NED/ALP) 5:31.
151. Clement Davy (FRA/GFJ) 10:52.
152 runners at the start, 152 classified.
Non-starter: Joao Almeida (POR / UAE)
General classification of the Tour of Italy after the 18th stage, Thursday in Treviso:
1. Richard Carapaz (ECU/INE) 76h 41:15.
2. Jai Hindley (AUS/BOR) at 03.
3. Mikel Landa (ESP/BAH) 1:05.
4. Vincenzo Nibali (ITA/AST) 5:48.
5. Pello Bilbao (ESP/BAH) 6:19.
6. Jan Hirt (CZE/INT) 7:12.
7. Emanuel Buchmann (GER/BOR) 7:13.
8. Domenico Pozzovivo (ITA/INT) 12:30.
9. Juan Pedro Lopez (ESP/TRE) 15:10.
10. Hugh Carthy (GBR/EF1) 17:03.
11. Alejandro Valverde (ESP/MOV) 17:46.
12. Santiago Buitrago (COL / BAH) 20:15.
13. Thymen Arensman (NED/DSM) 21:56.
14. Lucas Hamilton (AUS/BIK) 23:57.
15. Guillaume Martin (FRA/COF) 27:30.
…
17. Pavel Sivakov (FRA/INE) 30:52.
18. Wilco Kelderman (NED/BOR) 35:04.
23. Mikaël Chérel (FRA / AG2) 1 h 02:53.
24. Richie Porte (AUS/INE) 1:06:31 a.m.
27. Giulio Ciccone (ITA/TRE) 1:12:55 a.m.
35. Ivan Sosa (COL/MOV) 1:54:05.
57. Mathieu van der Poel (NED/ALP) 2:36:06.
60. Nans Peters (FRA/AG2) 2:43:45 a.m.
68. Nicolas Prodhomme (FRA / AG2) 2:55:44.
76. Remy Rochas (FRA / COF) 3 h 10:48.
83. Anthony Pérez (FRA/COF) 3:24:28.
85. Lilian Calmejane (FRA/AG2) 3:25:29.
95. Pierre-Luc Perichon (FRA/COF) 3:49:10.
100. Romain Combaud (FRA/DSM) 3:56:15.
106. Dries De Bondt (BEL / ALP) 4 h 10:46.
128. Arnaud Démare (FRA / GFJ) 4:42:13.
149. Clement Davy (FRA/GFJ) 5:34:58.
