CIVIDALE DEL FRIULI, Italy – The Giro will be played at high altitude in the Dolomites: the 19th stage won on Friday in Friuli by Dutchman Koen Bouwman left the positions unchanged between Ecuadorian Richard Carapaz and Australian Jai Hindley, separated by three seconds.
Neither Carapaz nor Hindley went for the knockout. in the climb to the Castelmonte sanctuary even though the Olympic champion started twice in the last two kilometers. The third man, the Spaniard Mikel Landa, also tried to grab a few seconds, without more success.
Compared to the final climb of 7.1 kilometers (at 7.8%) towards the sanctuary dedicated to the Black Madonna, the ascent of the Passo Fedaia on Saturday will be of a whole different dimension. This historic ascent of the Giro suddenly straightens at Malga Ciapela, 5400 meters from the summit (11.2% average gradient), to reach the altitude of 2057 meters.
After two other great passes, the San Pellegrino and the legendary Pordoi (2239 m), the Fedaia represents the ideal terrain to provoke differences. But, to what benefit? Between Carapaz, in theory favored by the high altitude since he is used to training beyond 3000 meters, Hindley, decided to play his all, and Landa, the games are all the more open as None of them has so far managed to take the lead in the mountains.
Bouwman’s second
Before this meeting, Bouwman seized the opportunity of a mid-mountain stage, passing through Slovenia, to pull off a masterstroke. The Dutchman (28) took his second success since the start, after the 7th stage won in Potenza (south), and secured his blue jersey for best climber, except abandonment before Verona where the Giro will end with a against-the- shows 17.4 kilometers.
But, to sign the 32nd Dutch victory in a stage of the Giro – tied with Colombia – the rider of the Jumbo team had to negotiate a delicate final against his four breakaway companions. To come out on top of the last corner, Bouwman followed his ideal trajectory, at the rope, even if it meant closing the door to the Swiss Mauro Schmid placed behind him. Schmid, forced to shift, forced Andrea Vendrame into a “straight” which condemned the Italian from the AG2R Citroën team, supposed to be the fastest of the quintet.
“I knew the last bend, I had been warned but I didn’t expect it to be so tight”, admitted the winner of the day. “I had to come out on top. I did not see what was happening behind me. »
Vendrame, the unlucky of the day, had the merit of coming back to the leading group after being left behind in the tough Kolovrat (10.3 km at 9.2%), an unprecedented climb in the Slovenian forests, very close to Caporetto which was the site of a historic and unforeseen defeat for the Italians during the First World War. So much so that Caporetto has become synonymous in Italian culture with unexpected discomfiture.
Classification of the 19th stage :
1. Koen Bouwman (NED / Jumbo), the 178 km in 4 h 32:55.
(average: 39.133 km/h)
2. Mauro Schmid (SUI/QST) mt
3. Alessandro Tonelli (ITA / BAR) at 03.
4. Attila Valter (HUN/GFJ) 06.
5. Andrea Vendrame (ITA/AG2) 10.
6. Tobias Bayer (AUT/ALP) 2:45.
7. Guillaume Martin (FRA/COF) 3:49.
8. Richard Carapaz (ECU/INE) 3:56.
9. Jai Hindley (AUS/BOR) 3:56.
10. Mikel Landa (ESP/BAH) 3:56.
11. Pello Bilbao (ESP/BAH) 3:59.
12. Jan Hirt (CZE/INT) 3:59.
13. Vincenzo Nibali (ITA/AST) 4:01.
14. Hugh Carthy (GBR/EF1) 4:03.
15. Alejandro Valverde (ESP/MOV) 4:21.
16. Juan Pedro Lopez (ESP/TRE) 4:21.
17. Domenico Pozzovivo (ITA/INT) 4:21.
18. Santiago Buitrago (COL / BAH) 4:21.
…
20. Emanuel Buchman (GER/BOR) 5:04.
23. Wilco Kelderman (NED/BOR) 5:38.
24. Pavel Sivakov (FRA/INE) 7:05.
27. Mikaël Cherel (FRA / AG2) 9:14.
51. Pierre-Luc Perichon (FRA/COF) 19:47.
52. Remy Rochas (FRA / COF) 19:47.
53. Nans Peters (FRA / AG2) 19:47.
55. Lilian Calmejane (FRA / AG2) 19:47.
59. Clement Davy (FRA / GFJ) 23:31.
61. Giulio Ciccone (ITA/TRE) 24:20.
82. Mathieu van der Poel (NED / ALP) 26:30.
98. Nicolas Prodhomme (FRA / AG2) 27:40.
105. Anthony Perez (FRA / COF) 28:30.
120. Romain Combaud (FRA/DSM) 35:32.
149. Arnaud Demare (FRA / GFJ) 35:57.
151 runners at the start, 150 classified.
Not leaving : Jefferson Cepeda (ECU/DRO)
Abandonment : Richie Porte (AUS/INE)
General classification after the 19th stage :
1. Richard Carapaz (ECU/INE) 81:18:12.
2. Jai Hindley (AUS/BOR) at 03.
3. Mikel Landa (ESP/BAH) 1:05.
4. Vincenzo Nibali (ITA/AST) 5:53.
5. Pello Bilbao (ESP/BAH) 6:22.
6. Jan Hirt (CZE/INT) 7:15.
7. Emanuel Buchmann (GER/BOR) 8:21.
8. Domenico Pozzovivo (ITA/INT) 12:55.
9. Juan Pedro Lopez (ESP/TRE) 15:29.
10. Hugh Carthy (GBR/EF1) 17:10.
11. Alejandro Valverde (ESP/MOV) 18:11.
12. Santiago Buitrago (COL / BAH) 20:40.
13. Lucas Hamilton (AUS/BIK) 25:26.
14. Guillaume Martin (FRA/COF) 25:45.
15. Lorenzo Fortunato (ITA/EOK) 30:29.
16. Pavel Sivakov (FRA/INE) 34:01.
17. Wilco Kelderman (NED/BOR) 36:46.
…
20. Koen Bouwman (NED/JUM) 57:48.
23. Mikaël Chérel (FRA / AG2) 1 h 08:11.
26. Giulio Ciccone (ITA / TRE) 1:33:13 a.m.
44. Ivan Sosa (COL/MOV) 2:25:39.
58. Mathieu van der Poel (NED/ALP) 2:58:34.
59. Nans Peters (FRA/AG2) 2:59:30 a.m.
70. Nicolas Prodhomme (FRA / AG2) 3 h 19:22.
75. Remy Rochas (FRA / COF) 3 h 26:33.
81. Lilian Calmejane (FRA/AG2) 3:41:14.
84. Anthony Pérez (FRA/COF) 3:48:56.
94. Pierre-Luc Perichon (FRA/COF) 4:04:55 a.m.
103. Romain Combaud (FRA/DSM) 4:27:45 a.m.
127. Arnaud Démare (FRA / GFJ) 5 h 14:08.
145. Clement Davy (FRA/GFJ) 5:54:27.
