
Juan Ayuso proud to be leading UAE Team Emirates attack at Giro d'Italia in absence of Tadej Pogacar
Juan Ayuso says he is excited to be leading the UAE Team Emirates-XRG attack at next week's Giro d'Italia in the absence of talismanic teammate Tadej Pogacar. The Spaniard, 22, is widely regarded as one of the leading contenders for the Giro in what will be his debut in the three-week Grand Tour race that runs from May 9 to June 1. Last year, Pogacar secured the Giro title in what was his debut in the race and would go on to complete a historic triple crown by also securing victory in the Tour de France and World Championship. UAE Emirates-XRG team principal Mauro Gianetti revealed in February that Pogacar would not be defending his Giro title this year, with the Slovenian superstar focusing retaining the Tour de France and possibly targeting his first Vuelta a Espana crown. The pre-race favourite in Italy this year will be Red Bull Bora Hansgrohe rider Primroz Roglic, 35, a four-time Vuelta winner, Giro champion and an eight-time GT podium finisher. Ayuso, though, is expected to challenge the experienced Roglic with the 22-year-old having twice finished in the top four of the Vuelta and has proved to be one of the best one-week racers in the peloton since joining the World Tour in 2022. Whether he can translate that into an elite three-week performance which can upset Roglic remains to be seen. Ayuso heads into the race on the back of a first victory in the Tirreno-Adriatico, as well as triumphing in the La Drome Classic, Trofeo Laiguelia and finishing second overall in the Volta a Catalunya this year. 'I'm really excited, and no, it cannot be any other way,' Ayuso said in a virtual media day Zoom meeting. 'It's the only Grand Tour I still haven't raced. I've raced many times the World Tour, last year I raced the Tour, and I still have to discover the Giro. 'When you go to a new race, and especially that new race being your whole objective, it is a boost of motivation. 'I mean, I'm just super excited. There's a lot of emotion going into it now, because as I say, it's a race I still have to discover. 'From what they've told me, it's one of the most beautiful races on the calendar. So, of course, when we finish the Giro and we have another interview, I could tell you how it went. 'But from now on, I'm just super motivated to get to next week and be there in Albany.' As far as preparation for the upcoming race, Ayuso is delighted with how things have gone. 'The training camp has been perfect with the support of the team,' he said. 'We have here a lot of awesome members of staff, we have nearly double the staff as riders here and it helps a lot and it helps you really to concentrate, to focus on what's important. 'Up to now, as I speak not only for myself but also for my teammates, we've had no issues and we've been training really well all together, so, I think yeah, we have a really, really strong team and every day we keep on motivating ourselves. 'At the same time you're training and you're getting better, you see also your teammates that are on a super good level and we're all really convinced that we have a really good chance of doing a great Giro d'Italia.' With Pogacar and two-time Tour de France winner Jonas Vingegaard both skipping the Giro, this year's race appears to have opened up for a host of contenders to challenge for the title. But while the likes of 2019 Tour de France winner Egan Bernal (Ineos Grenadiers), Michael Storer (Tudor), and Ayuso's teammate Adam Yates will provide stern opposition, Ayuso still believes Roglic is the man to beat. 'For me, he's the biggest favourite,' he said. 'He's the rider that has won many Grand Tours already. I've never won it, so I think the pressure's on him. And as I say, we as a team, we go with the motivation that we think it's possible, but there's not that extra pressure. 'My level has gone up and it's the year I have been closest to him. I've never beaten him until this year in Catalunya where I got him in the stage at the end. We lost the GC but it was down to a very thin margin and I think in three weeks I hope it's different.' Ayuso's boss Gianetti, meanwhile, hailed his rider's progress since joining the team in the summer of 2021. 'He's immensely talented and has shown improvement every passing year,' said the Swiss of Ayuso. 'We know the Giro is a very hard race, a lot of contentment, a lot of knowledge, but we know for Juan it is possible. 'This is why at the Giro we create a strong team to support him in any kind of stages, mountain stages, flood stages, the time trial will be a lot but we know he is a special. 'We believe strongly in the possibility to win the Giro but at the same time we will not charge the responsibility to be obligated to win. Being possible is better, like always we say, is a positive emotion and I hope and I wish Juan in the Giro will be filled with the opportunity to achieve success.' UAE Team Emirates-XRG have racked up 35 wins with 14 different riders this year so far, including Pogacar's third success in the UAE Tour in February. 'We know how much the team is important for the UAE, not just from a point of view of result but a point of view of motivation, like an example to follow, use the bike, do sport, be healthy,' Gianetti added. 'Every member of the team, riders, staff, they feel proud to represent the UAE, to wear their shirt all through the season around the world, the jersey that represents the country. 'We are very proud of the company and we are very proud of the goal of the season every year.'
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The National
a day ago
- The National
UAE Team Emirates rider Isaac del Toro 'proud and happy' despite Giro d'Italia disappointment
UAE Team Emirates-EXG rider Isaac del Toro insisted he is proud of his efforts at the Giro d'Italia despite being beaten to the title by British rider Simon Yates. The Mexican went into Saturday's penultimate Stage 20 in pole position to become UAE Team Emirates second consecutive winner of the Grand Tour race, following in the slipstream of Tadej Pogacar last year. But Briton's Simon Yates, who started the day third in the general classification 81 seconds behind the leader, produced a magnificent ride on the Colle delle Finestre – the highest point of this year's race – to overhaul second-place Richard Carapaz and Del Toro in the standings. The Visma-Lease A Bike rider finished the stage almost four minutes clear of Del Toro with the Giro crown all but in the bag going into Sunday's ceremonial finale around Rome. Del Toro had snatched the overall lead on Stage 9 when he took charge of the pink jersey which he kept a tight hold on for 10 more stages. But it was not to be for the 21-year-old who came agonisingly close to victory in what was only his second Grand Tour race after last year's Vuelta a Espagna. 'Obviously I am super happy to finish second, I need to be mature with this and, of course, a lot of people are surprised that I can be at this level now,' said Del Toro, whose victory on Stage 17 was his first on a Grand Tour. 'For my team, it's not a big surprise, it's just a question of time. I want to believe it, this is the main problem for me personally, but this week I show I can be a top rider and top contender and I cannot be more proud and happy, to be honest. 'For sure it's always disappointing to lose the leader's jersey, but actually as a team we cannot be more together and more happy about the performance that we did. We cannot manage a victory, but … it's cycling and that's why we love it. 'I was close, and this is a thing, but at the end I didn't win,' added Del Toro. 'I will just keep working and I will come back for sure. 'You need to be a great winner, you need to be a great loser, and I think I am a good loser, and chapeau for them. Congrats.' It was a story of redemption for Yates as he sobbed uncontrollably after crossing the finish lines in third place behind stage winner Chris Harper and second place Alessandro Verre. At the 2018 Giro, Yates was wearing the pink jersey on the penultimate mountain stage only to see his lead snuffed out by countryman Chris Froome on the Colle delle Finestre. Yates would end the day down in 18th place, nearly 36 minutes behind soon-to-be champion Froome with one competitive stage to go. 'When the route was released I always had in the back of my mind to try to do something here and close the chapter, let's say,' said Yates on Saturday. 'I maybe look relaxed but I also had doubts this morning, if I could really do something, but the guys they encouraged me and believed in me, so yeah, thanks to them.' As for Del Toro, he remained upbeat after what has been a breakthrough performance from a young rider. 'My disappointment is split 50-50, half for me and half for the team. They deserved the win,' he said. 'I'm happy in one sense becaus e I showed that I can compete in a Grand Tour and that I'm not lacking anything. Few people thought I could do what I've done before this Giro. I had the legs to win a Grand Tour, I went close to victory. 'I respect the big riders but if I look at all my performances in this Giro, I can start to think I can win a Grand Tour. 'I'll sleep well tonight because I've matured and I've realised that this is also cycling. I'm not smiling because I'm second. But it's still a great result.'


The National
2 days ago
- The National
Simon Yates seals sensational Giro-d'Italia crown as UAE Team Emirates rider Isaac del Toro falls short
UAE Team Emirates-XRG's hopes of a second consecutive Giro-d'Italia title were ended by Simon Yates's sensational ride on the race's penultimate day. Mexican Isaac del Toro was 43 seconds ahead of Richard Carapaz – and 81 seconds clear of Yates – going into Saturday's Stage 20 and looked set to follow up Tadej Pogacar's unforgettable win last year with anther victory for UAE Team Emirates-XRG. But Visma-Lease a Bike's Yates had not read the script after overhauling Del Toro with a brave solo attack on the gruelling 20km Colle delle Finistre climb, finishing the stage third behind winner Chris Harper and second place Alessandro Verre. Yates now only has to cross the line intact in Rome to win his second Grand Tour – after the 2018 Vuelta a Espana – ahead of second-place Del Toro and Carapaz in third with the final stage largely a procession around the Italian capital and Vatican City. In 2018, Yates saw his dreams of winning the Giro crumble on the Colle delle Finestre climb when Chris Froome's attack left him far behind. But this time he redeemed himself on the same climb to take the lead and Del Toro did not respond even as the cavalry arrived in the form of Wout van Aert, who helped Yates power to the finish. Ultimately, Del Toro knew he had lost his chance and the 21-year-old eventually crossed the line more than five minutes behind Yates who was in tears after crossing the line. Yates had lost 30 seconds to Del Toro during Friday's stage but fought back in stunning fashion, and will become the third British rider to win the Giro, after Froome (2018) and Tao Geoghegan Hart (2020). It capped a tough few days for UAE Team Emirates who had seen young Spanish star Juan Ayuso quit the race after being stung in the eye by a bee. Del Toro, 21, had won Stage 17 and was bidding to become the youngest winner of the Giro since 1940. 'When the route was released I always had in the back of my mind to try to do something here and close the chapter, let's say,' said an emotional Yates, who leads Del Toro by three minutes 56 seconds. 'I'm still a bit speechless really. 'I maybe look relaxed but I also had doubts this morning, if I could really do something, but the guys they encouraged me and believed in me, so yeah, thanks to them. 'I'm not really an emotional person but I couldn't hold back the tears. It's something I've worked towards year after year and I've had a lot of setbacks but I've finally managed to pull if off.' Yates ended up finishing the stage just under two minutes behind Harper, who claimed the biggest win of his career at the age of 30 after attacking from the break on the Finestre. 'I don't know what I'm happier about, winning the stage or seeing Yates win pink,' said Harper, who rode with the likely Giro winner at Jayco-AlUla. 'He's an awesome guy and I had the pleasure of riding with him for a couple of seasons and doing a lot of racing with him. I don't think anyone deserves the pink jersey more than him.' Del Toro spent most of the Finestre ascent just staying on Carapaz's wheel and ended up unable to bridge the gap to Yates, handing over the pink jersey he had held since Stage 9. 'We might have been the strongest, but we weren't the cleverest,' said Carapaz, who was critical of Del Toro's passive performance in the decisive stage of his first Grand Tour. 'In the end, he's lost the Giro, he didn't know how to race well and the cleverest rider won.' The final stage will honour the late Pope Francis with an unprecedented ride through the Vatican, and new Pope Leo XIV will greet the cyclists as they pass through.


The National
4 days ago
- The National
UAE Team Emirates star Juan Ayuso quits Giro d'Italia after being stung in the eye by a bee
UAE Team Emirates star Juan Ayuso has been forced to quit the Giro d'Italia after being stung in the eye by a bee. Ayuso, who saw his bid for overall glory wilt in recent days, endured more rotten luck on Thursday when the bee crawled inside his glasses and stung him in the eye ahead of Stage 18. Ayuso's face quickly swelled up leaving him unable to see out of his right eye. 'Obviously this is not how I wanted my Giro to end but some things are out of my control,' said Ayuso. 'I wish the guys all the best and hope [teammate] Isaac [Del Toro] can keep pink all the way to Rome.' Despite advice from the UAE Team Emirates doctors to sit out Thursday's stage, he attempted to ride before being forced to retire on the side of the road. 'It's going to go viral but a bee went inside my helmet and I can't see in my right eye,' said Ayuso ahead of his aborted attempt to ride. 'I don't want people to make captions of it, because I know it is going to go viral, but it is what it is. 'And I will try to, you know … the team doctor said it's best for me not to start, but I really want to try and give my best to be here for the team. 'Yesterday, I was not useful at all because I am feeling really bad. But you know, I hope I can recover for the next days. I am going to try and get past today.' Ayuso had started the Giro with high hopes of overall victory in General Classification as he led the UAE Team Emirates challenge in the absence of star rider Tadej Pogacar. The Spaniard, 22, was widely regarded as one of the leading contenders in what was his debut in the three-week Grand Tour race that finishes this Sunday in Rome. That challenge has failed to materialise, however, with him suffering on the Giro's many punishing climbs. On Wednesday's Stage 17, he limped across the line in 141st place, more than 30 minutes behind, as teammate Isaac Del Toro soared to stage victory and solidified his grip on the maglia rosa.