Can anyone remember a Giro d’Italia where heavy snow or rain or freak withdrawals hasn’t played a part? It seems like RCS, the Giro’s organisers, are in a constant battle with finding a Cima Coppi – the highest point of the race – that avoids cancellation or neutralisation owing to bad weather. Soon Fausto’s memory will be only associated with climbs under 2,000m, just to be on the safe side.
The latest manifestation came this May during a sodden opening two weeks of the race, culminating in the 11th-hour omission of the Gran San Bernardo (at 2,469 metres, intended to be the loftiest climb of the Giro). Following a winter ski season hampered by a snow shortfall, there was, ironically, too much of the white stuff up top to let the race pass.
What was supposed to be a 206km slog featuring the Cima Coppi was reduced to a 75km blast starting at the foot of the lesser Croix de Coeur and concluding at Crans Montana. Admittedly, it was exciting to watch Thibaut Pinot and Jefferson Cepeda knocking seven shades out of each other only for Colombia’s Einer Rubio to exploit their spat and take a memorable win. But ‘exciting’ is not how the GC battle could be described. Waiting for one of the favourites to attack throughout the 106th edition was like, well, waiting for a Mark Cavendish sprint win: you needed to hang around right to the end.
This story is from the Summer 2023 - 141 edition of Cyclist UK.
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This story is from the Summer 2023 - 141 edition of Cyclist UK.
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