Mexican rider Del Toro stretches Giro lead beyond a minute with rivals slowed by crash in 14th stage
NOVA GORICA, Slovenia (AP) — Overall leader Isaac Del Toro gained big chunks of time on many of his biggest rivals who were slowed by a crash in the wet and slippery 14th stage of the Giro d'Italia on Saturday.
Kasper Asgreen of Denmark, who got into an early breakaway, won the mostly flat stage all on his own.
Del Toro, the first Mexican rider to wear the pink jersey, finished in the second group 16 seconds behind.
But Del Toro's UAE Team Emirates teammate Juan Ayuso, 2023 champion Primoz Roglic and top-placed Italian Antonio Tiberi all finished further behind.
Del Toro, who entered the stage with a 38-second lead over Ayuso, now leads Simon Yates by 1 minute, 20 seconds. Ayuso dropped to third, 1:26 behind; 2019 champion Richard Carapaz is fourth, 2:07 behind; and Roglic now trails by 2:23 in fifth.
Tiberi, who also hit the road, dropped from third to eighth, 3:02 behind.
Giulio Ciccone, who was seventh, appeared injured in the crash but got back on his bike and finished the stage several minutes behind the leaders.
The crash, which occurred about 22 kilometers (less than 15 miles) from the finish, occurred on a section of cobblestones where the road was narrowed by a raised sidewalk coming around a curve.
The 195-kilometer (121-mile) leg started in Treviso and finished over the border in Slovenia.
For Stage 15 on Sunday, there's a big climb up Monte Grappa at the midpoint of the 219-kilometer (136-mile) route from Fiume Veneto to Asiago.
Monday is the race's third and final rest day.
The Giro ends in Rome next weekend.
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AP cycling: https://apnews.com/hub/cycling
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New York Times
11 hours ago
- New York Times
Giro d'Italia key takeaways: Yates' patience, the beauty of gravel – and did UAE throw away the race?
An enthralling 2025 Giro d'Italia concluded on Sunday — one of the finest editions of the race for several years. In contrast to the 2024 contest, when Tadej Pogacar obliterated the opposition, winning six stages and the general classification by almost 10 minutes, this year's race was in the balance until the final weekend, with eventual winner Simon Yates ending up in the iconic pink jersey without taking a single stage in the process. Here, The Athletic's writers review a memorable three weeks on the roads of Italy (and Albania). Jacob Whitehead: Well, yes. But it's also worth going back to even earlier in the Giro — where they actually limited Del Toro's lead by pacing back the peloton in support of then-leader Juan Ayuso. Going into Saturday, they were correct to tell Del Toro to sit on Carapaz's wheel — but communication should have been better when Yates was going up the road and the gap was still salvageable. UAE have since said that they left the decision-making largely up to Del Toro on the road — whether they are covering their own backs is uncertain — but either way, a 21-year-old on his first decisive climb should have been given better advice and support. His legs were there. Chris Waugh: It's hard to argue otherwise, with this Grand Tour showing the pros and cons of having more than one theoretical leader (even if that may not have been the initial plan). UAE tried to protect Ayuso early in the race, which potentially affected Del Toro later on, and the mixed messaging cannot have helped a rider as green as the Mexican. Advertisement Despite that, the emergence of Del Toro only increases the aura around the stable UAE has built. He was seen as a theoretical Grand Tour winner before and, although he let things slip on the final (competitive) stage, Del Toro has confirmed his potential in Italy. That may not feel like a consolation for UAE, but perhaps it should. Tim Spiers: Everyone has had their say on Saturday's remarkable stage 20; Carapaz scolded Del Toro for not knowing what to do, Alberto Contador said he didn't understand what either of them were doing, and Geraint Thomas suggested that even his five-year-old son would have known to chase. What can't be disputed is that the pressure got to Del Toro and he was dealt a bad hand by his own team. You can't imagine he or they will make the same mistake again, but for the Giro it was already too late. It gave us one of the most incredible Grand Tour climaxes in recent memory, though. Duncan Alexander: This was Juan Ayuso's big chance to lead UAE in a Grand Tour and it simply didn't work out. He might now need to move on to fulfil his potential. The team were right to back Del Toro, and the Mexican clearly has the pedigree to win this level of race in the future, but his inexperience (or perhaps his unwillingness to defy team orders) showed in the crucial moments of stage 20. He had to chase down Yates once the Briton had gone clear, even if that risked dragging Carapaz with him. The history of the sport is littered with riders who only realised they had let the biggest opportunity of their career slip through their fingers years later — you just have to hope Del Toro is not one of them. Jacob: This was such a strange Giro. Yates was only the best climber on the final day — where the numbers suggest he only trails Tadej Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard for climbing performance of the decade. He was absolutely a worthy winner in the sense that he risked it all, slayed his ghosts, and was at his career-best when it mattered. But I also think there's a strange irony in that had he not shipped 30 seconds on Stage 19, when he criticised his team in the aftermath, he likely would not have been allowed to go clear on the Finestre. That's the Yates lesson — our greatest success is born from our greatest failures. Chris: The question is not without merit — given Yates is the first Giro winner since Alberto Contador in 2015 to fail to take an individual stage and the Brit did not even move up to the podium positions until stage 14 — but Grand Tours reward performance over three weeks. It is not necessarily about being the best on multiple stages, even if more often than not that brings about overall success, but consistently placing well among the favourites. Advertisement Yates may have left his decisive move until (very) late, yet 'queen stages' are the ones which can provide significant, and potentially defining, time gains or losses. The 32-year-old discovered that to his detriment in 2018, when Chris Froome cruelly pipped him in the final throes of that Giro, and on this occasion Yates himself did the same to Del Toro. Tim: Absolutely. It may have been daylight robbery, but Yates' timing was absolutely impeccable. For him to only finish in the top three of one single stage during three weeks' of racing reflects what an unusual Giro it was – and also the quality of the field that remained by the time they got to Rome. Imagine how many minutes Tadej Pogacar would have cleared the GC pack by? But that's completely irrelevant and Yates' redemption arc is one that will be remembered for many years to come. He was also wildly underestimated, particularly by his closest rivals. Duncan: Anyone who sat through the equally-dramatic Finestre stage in 2018, where Yates shipped more than 30 minutes to Chris Froome and slipped from first to 17th(!) in the general classification, will appreciate the redemption arc here. In a sport that celebrates heroism and epic feats more than most, Yates' mental and physical indefatigability on one of Italy's hardest climbs was incredibly impressive. In 2018, he was very much the Del Toro figure, winning three stages in the middle of the race and enjoying the seemingly endless strength of his young legs. Seven years on, he is the (relatively) grizzled veteran who knows you just have to complete the route in the least time to win a Grand Tour. And that's what he did — with a little help from his friends. Jacob: Let's talk about Wout van Aert. Supposedly, this is a down year for him. That may be the case, based on his difficult spring. His first week at the Giro, meanwhile, was marred by illness and a failed leadout for Olav Kooij on stage six. And yet. By Rome, Van Aert had won the iconic gravel stage to Siena on stage nine, brilliantly paced Yates to GC glory at the end of stage 20, and provided a perfect leadout to Kooij as his nightcap. For any other rider, this would go down as one of the great protagonist performances. For Van Aert, it was an eight out of 10 week. A shoutout as well to the bosses at UAE and Visma who suggested Pogacar and Vingegaard gave this Giro a miss… we were spoiled by the open competition in their absence. Parabolica, but make it ✨ ciclismo ✨ #GirodItalia — Giro d'Italia (@giroditalia) May 30, 2025 Chris: I'd agree with Jacob that a refreshed Van Aert made the race thrilling, as he usually does, but to be different I'll go for Richard Carapaz. The Ecuadorian has never quite rediscovered the consistency over a full three weeks which delivered a Giro title in 2019, but he was the team leader who was repeatedly trying to ignite the GC race. Advertisement His victory on Stage 11 showed how explosive he can be and Carapaz ensured that, before Yates' late charge, it would not merely be a procession for Del Toro. You can question Carapaz's tactics on stage 20, when he seemed to accept a podium place rather than ride with Del Toro to try and hunt down Yates, but that was the only conservative move the 32-year-old really made all Giro. Tim: It has been a long, long road back to the upper echelons of the sport for Egan Bernal. Some had written off his chances of ever being a Grand Tour contender again, but three and a half years after his life-threatening crash, he finally registered his first top-10 finish since the 2022 Vuelta. The game has changed considerably since Bernal won the Tour de France way back in 2019 — and indeed the 2021 Giro — but just being where he is now represents a huge achievement for the 28-year-old, even if he did tail off slightly. He couldn't have put it any better when he posted on social media: 'The art of knowing how to suffer has guided me down many paths. And all roads lead to Rome.' Duncan: I'm going to go for the Giro's social media admin, who had an absolutely storming three weeks. The Giro used to be a hyper-traditional Italian race but in recent years they have embraced English-language #content that walks the fine line of being informative and entertaining. Oh, and plenty of good regional recipes too. Really wanted to livetweet during the #UCLfinal but apparently it's not « ciclismo » smh For those watching the game, enjoy it! ⚫️🔵 — Giro d'Italia (@giroditalia) May 31, 2025 Jacob: The answer is clearly Del Toro, but a word for two other riders. Mathias Vacek was brilliant for Lidl-Trek — the glue in their exceptional three weeks. His engine reminds me of a young Michal Kwiatkowski — it was a real shame he was not rewarded with a stage, but Pedersen's triumph on stage five was really the young Czech's doing. And the other I wanted to mention was Giulio Pellizzari, the 21-year-old Italian climber who was initially requisitioned in service of Primoz Roglic. It is not strictly accurate to call him the discovery of this Giro — he announced himself in different colours last year — but this was the year he announced himself as a GC contender. He finished sixth, but given the way he was climbing in the final week, I think he could have reached as high as fourth had he concentrated on the overall competition from the start. Chris: It has to be Del Toro. The comparisons with Pogacar feel both lazy and premature in some ways, yet the 21-year-old's style, maturity and general racecraft mean that it is not outlandish to contrast the Mexican with the all-time-great Slovenian. Tim: Del Toro took the limelight for differing reasons but, as Jacob said, another 21-year-old in Giulio Pellizzari also emerged as a star of the future with an exceptional final week. Advertisement Pellizzari emerged from Primoz Roglic's shadow to take the reins of Red Bull-BORA-hansgrohe in some style (with Jai Hindley having also departed early), jumping into the top 10 on the day Roglic went home, showing both the strength in depth of the team but also marking himself out as a potential future Grand Tour contender himself. Duncan: Max Poole was visibly upset to lose 13 minutes on stage 18 to Cesano Maderno, a result that ultimately cost the 22-year-old a top-10 finish. He performed admirably in the remaining stages, though, and was the last rider to finish before the Del Toro group on stage 20 to Sestriere. Poole has been in stellar form for his relegation-haunted Team Picnic PostNL team in 2025 and you suspect more successful teams have noticed his potential, even if he has a contract that runs to 2027. Poole deserves to be a World Tour rider next year. Jacob: I loved stage nine to Siena — it is always a treat to see the peloton go over the white roads of Tuscany, and the finish in the Piazza del Campo is probably the most beautiful view in cycling. There is a debate over whether gravel or cobbled stages belong in Grand Tours. For me, they have to stay in — this perfectly reshuffled the GC order without torpedoing it, and gave rise to Del Toro's magical two-week run in pink. And in terms of rewarding GC riders with a good engine… punctures be damned, I prefer it to a time trial. Chris: Stage 20 is the obvious answer because of the dramatic shake-up it caused and it made for a genuinely gripping spectacle. The 18.6km Colle delle Finestre, with an average gradient of 9.1 per cent, is a monster, hour-long climb and deserves to be on the route far more frequently going forward, given it had not featured since Yates cracked there seven years ago. Overall, the balance between time trials, as well as gravel, flat and mountainous terrain felt fair, although frontloading so many of the sprint stages, while keeping the GC battle alive until the end, did make for a few tedious days of racing. Tim: Overall, it wasn't the worst Grand Tour we've seen by any means but it took a while to get going, with the excitement spread pretty thin over the first couple of weeks partly owing to a dearth of mountain stages (three back-to-back sprint stages was a bit much). The route was geared towards a climactic finish, which is exactly what we got via the memorable stage 20. Duncan: I am enjoying how a stage into Naples is becoming a staple finish in the Giro. The roads are lumpy (and bumpy) and it always has the feel of a one-day classic. Talking of which, day three in Albania looked a bit like Milan-Sanremo, and that's no bad thing, is it? Jacob: Lidl-Trek. Six stage victories, a runaway triumph in the points classification for Mads Pedersen, and a breakout performance for Vacek. Daan Hoole and Carlos Verona's stage wins were nice bonuses. The only shame was that Giulio Ciccone had to withdraw after his stage 14 crash — he was well-positioned on GC and climbing well. I also appreciated how ProTeam Polti VisitMalta relentlessly attacked throughout. They show the value of participation for smaller, local teams — after Q36.5's disappointing Giro, it underscores why there will be many complaints about Kern Pharma's non-invitation to the Vuelta a Espana. Chris: Visma-Lease a Bike. Lidl-Trek did win more stages, but Visma claimed the GC victory, as well as second and third places in the points classification. More importantly, Yates has further increased the depth of potential Grand Tour leaders within Visma's ranks, while Van Aert is beginning to rediscover his best form and Olav Kooij is continuing to develop into a top-level sprinter. Kooij won two stages, including the final one into Rome, showing that he can perform under pressure. Advertisement Tim: It's not how you start, but it's how you finish. Visma-Lease A Bike somehow, one day after a public fall-out via Simon Yates saying their stage 19 plan was 'completely different' from what they actually did, got it all right to finish, getting Van Aert in the breakaway when others didn't bother and then getting the icing on their Giro cake with Kooij winning in Rome. As Van Aert said: 'It's like a ketchup bottle, you keep shaking (and) then suddenly everything comes out at once. That's what happened at our Giro.' Duncan: I mean, technically, UAE were the winners of the team classification, but it's really not them is it? Jayco–AlUla are an Australian team and had two Australian stage winners in the form of Luke Plapp and Chris Harper (the latter unfortunate to record his career-best performance in a stage where everyone was looking elsewhere). And their grey shorts are extremely aesthetically pleasing, too. Jacob: The number of crashes suffered by GC riders. Mikel Landa withdrew on the first stage after fracturing his back. Pre-race favourites Juan Ayuso and Primoz Roglic both abandoned after falls. Podium contender Ciccone was another. For key domestiques such as Jai Hindley and Jay Vine, the same. Antonio Tiberi, Egan Bernal, and Richard Carapaz all crashed more minorly, still completing the race. These crashes were not due to poor course design or dangerous riding — which means the apparent rise in incidents merits further investigation. Chris: Egan Bernal's inability to really challenge across the course of three weeks. The Colombian showed encouraging signs during the opening stages and looked like he may have made himself an outside contender for a podium position but, even though Ayuso, Landa and Roglic dropped out, Bernal still could only finish seventh. The 28-year-old has had a slow and painful journey back to Grand Tour leadership honours for INEOS Grenadiers since his crash in early 2022, but the Colombian still could not quite sustain a real tilt at top honours across the entire Giro. Tim: It was always a big ask for Tom Pidcock and the new Q36.5 to produce something special in their first Grand Tour together, but it was hard not to be slightly disappointed with Pidcock's lack of impact across the three weeks. He was the nearly man on three occasions, placing in the top five on three stages, but in GC he was 30 minutes off what would have been a difficult but achievable top-10 finish overall. Advertisement Duncan: I agree with Tim. Tom Pidcock came into the Giro saying he wasn't riding for general classification, then spent most of the race hovering in or around the top 10, seemingly hoping for… a decent position in the general classification. Yes, he was unlucky in the Siena stage, the one that suited him best, with a crash and a subsequent puncture but ahead of the Vuelta in August he surely needs to decide whether he is going for stages or an overall position — and which approach actually makes the most of his undoubted skill set. 💥 ROGLIC AND PIDCOCK GO DOWN! 🇦🇺 Lucas Hamilton slides from the lead of the peloton, and brings down with him the two riders, who both make it back on the road, but they trail behind @INEOSGrenadiers and @TeamEmiratesUAE #GirodItalia — Giro d'Italia (@giroditalia) May 18, 2025 Jacob: This Giro was a horrible experience for Roglic — whose bid to take on Pogacar and Vingegaard, always a massive ask, now looks even more difficult. He will need to go home and lick his wounds. Elsewhere, if Simon Yates rides in support of Vingegaard, Visma could have one of the strongest climbing squads in race history. If reports emerging from the Sierra Nevada are correct, claiming the Dane is producing his all-time highest numbers, we could have some race in store in July. Chris: If Van Aert was using the Giro to get himself into shape for the Tour, then Vingegaard will be delighted by the performances of his Belgian team-mate. If Vingegaard is to overhaul Pogacar, he will require Van Aert's unique abilities and engine to do so. For Pogacar, however, he may have earned himself a further super-domestique or two, if one or both of Ayuso or Del Toro end up featuring in France as well. There feels little risk of the leadership lines being blurred as far as Pogacar's status is concerned, but having either of those prodigies on his team will make UAE even greater pre-race favourites. Tim: Of all the big names in the Giro who might play a role in the Tour, Van Aert's warm-up act in Italy is excellent news for Jonas Vingegaard. Duncan: UAE have still only ever won a Grand Tour with Pogacar, whereas Visma have now won four of the last seven with four different riders. Clearly, Pogacar is still the man to beat this summer, but the Dutch squad are reenergised and have an increasingly strong hand to play. Superdomestique Yates versus superdomestique Yates on the roads of France is just another subplot to throw into a heady mix next month. (Header photo:)
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Documentary celebrates success of Welsh cycling hero Emma Finucane
A documentary has been made about the young life and meteoric rise of Welsh cyclist and Olympic hero Emma Finucane. The cycling star, 22, made history in Paris last summer when she became the first British woman in 60 years to win three medals at the same Olympic Games and the first Welsh athlete to ever achieve that feat. The Paris Olympics was not the Carmarthen cyclist's first taste of success by a long shot - in 2022 she came home from the Commonwealth Games having won two bronze medals for Wales, while in 2023 she won a gold medal at the World Championships in Glasgow, a feat she repeated last year at the 2024 championships in Denmark. It's all a far cry from when Finucane used to whizz around the historic velodrome at Carmarthen Park as a young girl with Towy Riders cycle club, a group which is still going strong today. Stay informed on Carms news by signing up to our newsletter here. READ MORE: Man dies in Cardiff city centre READ MORE: Two arrests after fatal quadbike crash on A465 Heads of the Valleys road Now, a Cardiff-based student has made a 'powerful short documentary' capturing Finucane's rise to the top of world cycling. The film - Pedal to Paris: The Emma Finucane Story - has been created by Cameron Hitt, who is studying a sports broadcast masters degree at Cardiff Metropolitan University. It will premiere at Nantgaredig Rugby Club, in partnership with Towy Riders, on Monday (June 2). The film will then be made publicly available the following day, on Tuesday, June 3. We caught up with Finucane at Carmarthen Park last year, just weeks after she returned home from Paris with three Olympic medals around her neck. 'I remember, when I was seven years old, coming here with my brother and sister,' she said. 'We lived just across the road. I would go round and round the track on my little pink bike with tassels on it. That was it - I was hooked.' On her success, she said: 'It has changed my life. I'm still the same old Emma, but you are kind of in a bubble at the Olympics so you don't really see what's going on around you. "But then you come back home and I've been asked for pictures in Tesco a couple of times and people say: 'Ooh, I've seen you on the telly!' 'I love it. I love being home and coming back to see everyone. I'm very honoured to be asked to attend events. I don't come home often and to be recognised for what I've done at the Olympics is amazing. 'As athletes we obviously have our own ambitions in terms of winning but I want people to watch us and get on their bikes. I want to inspire people to get out there and cycle - it's a healthy way of life. "Sport is amazing, it gives you energy, and I want to use my platform to help young girls and boys get into sprint cycling.'
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Simon Yates rides away with improbable prize of Giro d'Italia while rivals lose plot
The Mexican standoff is a much-loved cinematic device, but the stalemate beloved of western movie script writers has rarely, if ever, decided one of cycling's Grand Tours. The 2025 Giro d'Italia was the exception, appositely as the biggest loser was an actual Mexican, Isaac del Toro, with the unassuming Lancastrian Simon Yates the two-wheeled equivalent of the bandit who skips off with the loot, while two other bandits – in this case Richard Carapaz and Del Toro – stare each other down waiting for the other man to blink. Yates's second career Grand Tour win, forged on the Colle delle Finestre on Saturday afternoon in a peerless display of courage and cunning, and sealed 24 hours later in the streets of Rome, will go down in cycling's annals as one of the most improbable heists the sport has witnessed. Advertisement Related: Britain's Simon Yates seals Giro d'Italia in Rome for second grand tour title The endless joy of the Grand Tours – Spain, France, Italy – is that they throw up all kinds of delightful scenarios, but there have been few, if any, where the decisive plot line was a frozen stalemate between the cyclists in first and second places, each waiting for the other to move while a third man skipped away to victory. This was probably the most bizarre act of self-immolation in a Grand Tour since 1989, when Pedro Delgado wrecked his race on day one by getting lost en route to the start of the prologue time trial. To understand how this happened, the first key element is Yates himself. Now 32, his career has been marked by two qualities: patience and sang-froid. His ability to wait for the right moment, and to seize that moment, has been the hallmark of his best wins, going back to his earliest triumphs: his 2011 stage win in the Tour de l'Avenir, his 2013 world title in the points race on the velodrome in Minsk, and his Tour of Britain stage win later that year. When he threw caution to the winds, at the Giro in 2018, it backfired spectacularly at the end of the three weeks, in no less a place than the Colle delle Finestre; when he won the Vuelta a few months later, he had learned the lesson and bided his time. That it has taken so long for him to take a second Grand Tour can be largely summed up in one word: Slovenia. Seven years ago, no one would have predicted the rise and rise of Tadej Pogacar and Primoz Roglic. Yates first looked like a potential winner on the day that Del Toro took the race lead, the gravel‑road stage into Siena, and he had ridden the perfect race since then, never losing enough time to rule him out, never putting his cards on the table. Advertisement It took more than guts and patience; it needed the other pieces of the tactical jigsaw to slot into place. His team, Visma‑Lease-a-Bike, did what they had to do best: sending a satellite rider ahead in the day's main escape in case of need. Most days, the pawns had had limited impact; here, the strongest and most versatile, the Belgian Wout van Aert, was in the perfect position to help Yates to mess with Del Toro's and Carapaz's minds. Neither the Mexican nor the Ecuadorian had a teammate in place alongside Van Aert, an egregious blunder, because if either man had had an equipier to hand at the key moment – at the foot of the descent off the Finestre with 36km remaining when Yates was still just about within reach – it could well have tipped the balance. Related: Giro d'Italia winner Simon Yates hails 'huge moment in my career' Advertisement Unwittingly, Carapaz's EF Education team slotted in another piece at the foot of the Finestre, where the EF domestiques ensured that the peloton would hit the climb at warp speed, paving the way for Carapaz to attack Del Toro. In the event, the Ecuadorian was unable to dislodge the Mexican, but their violent acceleration achieved something more insidious: it burned off Del Toro's teammates, who had defended his lead impeccably for 11 stages. By the time they rejoined Del Toro, Yates was long gone. Once Yates had flown the coop at the foot of the Finestre, it was Del Toro's job, as the race leader, to pursue the Lancastrian, whether or not he had any teammates with him. But he knew that to do so would expose him to a late attack from Carapaz, who had started the day only 43sec behind. And Carapaz was equally aware that if he chased, Del Toro might be the beneficiary. It needed either to seize the initiative, or for one team manager to issue an ultimatum to his rider. Without that, the upshot was the absorbing but unedifying spectacle of the pair freewheeling as Yates forged ahead with Van Aert – unedifying that is, unless you were a Visma team member, a British cycling fan or a connoisseur of the bizarre twists that bike racing unfailingly produces.