logo
Pedersen sprints back into Giro pink after mountain goat incident

Pedersen sprints back into Giro pink after mountain goat incident

France 2411-05-2025
This was a second stage win on the 2025 Giro following the Lidl-Trek rider's opening day win and left him 9sec clear of Slovenian veteran Primoz Roglic in the overall standings.
Despite a 10.7km climb with seven percent gradients 35km from the finish, an arrow-straight 1km home run on the Adriatic coast set up a very high speed finish where Pedersen went early and held off a late burst from Corbin Strong of IPT.
"That's exactly what we wanted today. We have two victories already," said a clearly ecstatic Pedersen, who finished in 3hr 49min 47sec.
Halfway through the race, a mountain goat hit straggling rider Dion Smith of Intermarche-Wanty in the hills outside Vlore.
Fortunately neither rider nor goat were hurt as a herd of goats and a large unaccompanied dog watched on, with Smith showing great reactions in staying upright as the goat ran across the road right into him.
Many of the pure sprinters were dropped 60km from the finish while Saturday's time trial winner Josh Tarling led a 120km break on Sunday, but was caught and dropped by the peloton on the last climb.
After three days in Albania, the Giro heads back across the Adriatic to Italy, with Monday a rest day for the riders.
Tuesday's fourth stage is a flat run to Lecce in the heel of Italy, where the pure sprinters such as Olav Kooij, Sam Bennett, Kaden Groves or Paul Magnier should be in the final mix.
The rest of next week is hills galore as the riders criss-cross Italy via Matera and Napoli and climbing as far as Siena by stage nine.
The final week of the Giro will be decisive with stage 16 featuring five Alpine mountains, and stage 20 ending with a gruelling climb up the Colle delle Finestre to the Sestriere ski resort -- the moment when the winner is likely to emerge.
© 2025 AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Squiban wins her second consecutive stage victory in the women's Tour de France
Squiban wins her second consecutive stage victory in the women's Tour de France

LeMonde

time01-08-2025

  • LeMonde

Squiban wins her second consecutive stage victory in the women's Tour de France

French rider Maëva Squiban claimed a back-to-back double in the women's Tour de France by winning stage 7 on Friday, August 1, a day after her first breakaway stage victory. Mauritian Kim Le Court-Pienaar held on to the overall lead as the nine-day race heads into Saturday's stage 8, the first of two Alpine runs taking in two ascents and finishing atop the Col de la Madeleine at 2000 meters. The 23-year-old Squiban attacked from distance on the hilly 159.7-kilometer stage from Bourg-en-Bresse to Chambéry in a carbon copy of her first stage win, while her compatriot Cedrine Kerbaol and American Ruth Edwards rounded out the podium. Squiban broke away two kilometers from the summit of the Col du Granier, later claiming she had been joking when she went. "I jokingly said I would attack at the start. In the end, it wasn't a joke," she said. In the overall standings on the eve of the queen stage, the penultimate of this 2025 edition, Le Court has a 26-second lead over Pauline Ferrand-Prevot and a 30-second margin over defending champion Katarzyna Niewiadoma.

Squiban doubles up at women's Tour de France
Squiban doubles up at women's Tour de France

France 24

time01-08-2025

  • France 24

Squiban doubles up at women's Tour de France

Mauritian Kim Le Court-Pienaar held on to the overall lead as the nine-day race heads into Saturday's stage 8, the first of two Alpine runs taking in two ascents and finishing atop the Col de la Madeleine at 2000m. The 23-year-old Squiban attacked from distance on the hilly 159.7km stage from Bourg-en-Bresse to Chambery in a carbon copy of her first stage win, while her compatriot Cedrine Kerbaol and American Ruth Edwards rounded out the podium. Squiban broke away two kilometres from the summit of the Col du Granier, later claiming she had been joking when she went. "I jokingly said I would attack at the start. In the end, it wasn't a joke," she said. In the overall standings on the eve of the queen stage, the penultimate of this 2025 edition, Le Court has a 26-second lead over Pauline Ferrand-Prevot and a 30sec margin over defending champion Katarzyna Niewiadoma.

Tadej Pogacar, a Tour de France champion weary of his own dominance
Tadej Pogacar, a Tour de France champion weary of his own dominance

LeMonde

time28-07-2025

  • LeMonde

Tadej Pogacar, a Tour de France champion weary of his own dominance

Tadej Pogacar ruled over the 2025 Tour de France unchallenged, to the point of letting boredom creep in. Supremacy, when it faces no opposition, quickly becomes routine. During the final stage of this 112 th edition, between Mantes-la-Ville and Paris on Sunday, July 27, one rival, Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease a Bike), finally managed to crack this undisputed reign. The Slovenian could have ended these three weeks of racing with another victory. He could have become the first yellow jersey since Bernard Hinault in 1982 to raise his arms in triumph on the Champs-Elysées. But the 30-year-old Belgian took a solo win, pulling away on the steepest gradients of Rue Lepic, under pouring rain and on slippery cobblestones. "He was incredibly strong," acknowledged the leader of UAE Team Emirates-XRG, who ultimately finished fourth, 19 seconds behind the day's winner. Sunday made clear that a champion only truly fulfills himself when threatened. All it took was a day with little at stake – in which the general classification times were frozen 50.3 kilometers from the finish due to rain – for something resembling a battle to finally emerge, after a week in which Pogacar seemed to have lost his appetite for victory.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store