Friday, April 26, 2024

Giro d’Italia 2016 – Stages 19, 20 and 21; Kruijswijk’s Crash, and Nibali’s Resurgence

-

HomeDiariesGiro d'Italia 2016 - Stages 19, 20 and 21; Kruijswijk's Crash, and...

Bassano del GrappaKruijswijk’s crash, would you have waited?

Wee Esteban says:

“I’m very sorry for the crash of Steven (Kruijswijk), unfortunately it’s a part of bike racing and he was unlucky today.”

Either way, it was a horrible crash – the Dutchman seemed paralysed with fear, it didn’t look like he even tried to steer round that bend.

My take?

If they’d waited, the result would have been the same – Kruijswijk was obviously banged up pretty badly – but Nibali and Chavez would have earned so much more respect from ‘old school fools’ like me.

And if I’d been Chaves’ management I’d have said to lay off with the Spumante spray as a wee mark of respect to a fallen rival.

But then I’m a dinosaur, I’ll be extinct soon.

We missed all the drama, having embedded on the Cima Coppi, the Giro’s highest point.

Kruijswijk
The bigs labour past. Photo©Ed Hood

Kruijswijk looked fine to us at about 1500 metres to go to the summit of the Agnello but it was difficult to get a really good look at anyone amid the snow and with visibility down to about 10 yards with the low cloud.

Kruijswijk
Hubert Dupont and Diego Ulissi. Photo©Ed Hood

Scarponi was first up to take the prime money, then his former breakaway companions in ones and twos.

Kruijswijk
Riccardo Zoidl and Manuele Mori. Photo©Ed Hood

Nibali lead Kruijswijk, Chaves and Majka – Zakarin had been dropped and therein lay the roots of his crash, over-cooking the descent in his desperation to get back.

Kruijswijk
Albert Timmer. Photo©Ed Hood
Kruijswijk
Pieter Serry. Photo©Ed Hood

It was plane crash stuff behind the leaders, men all over the mountain with Betancur stone last and destined to pack.

And it wasn’t just ‘also rans’ – hard guys like Timmer and Serry suffering like dogs.

We jumped in behind the convoy to get us off the hill and the irony was it was bright sunshine just off the summit.

We headed for our digs as Nibali headed for the stage win and Chaves the pink.

And last words on Vincenzo’s rebirth from a cynical friend of mine in Texas:

“I’m puzzled by everybody’s amazement by Nibali’s resurrection.

“It’s quite simple; if your blood is too thick, or you have too much of it, a versed eastern European Medicine man will set enough leeches to relieve you of the problem.

“The bad blood is gone, and you feel lighter and quite relieved.

“The following morning double the amount of Nutella on your baguette, and Presto!, you feel rejuvenated.

“Nothing negative so far regarding anybody being positive – perhaps we have to wait until a few weeks or month later.”

Saturday saw us back in the mountains, three big climbs, the middle one, the Bonette over 2,700 metres, again.

A truly savage day with the first climb – the Col du Vars – rearing straight out of the start town of Guillestre.

We holed up into the last kilometre of the day’s third monster, the Lombarda.

It was all to play for with Nibali’s tail up after his win the day before, Chaves visibly tired and Valverde desperate to make the podium and topple Kruijswijk.

Kruijswijk
Darwin Atapuma. Photo©Ed Hood
Kruijswijk
Alexander Foliforov. Photo©Ed Hood

Our spot was perfect, after winner Taaramae, Atapuma and the other breakaway survivors like TT winner Foliforov had dribbled past, Nibali’s team mate Kangert exploded like stage one of a booster rocket after doing his job for ‘The Shark’, just below where we were standing and it was all down to Vincenzo.

He ripped past us a picture of concentration.

We watched his decent off the Lombarda on TV, later – wild.

Chaves had looked tired to us on Friday but we didn’t expect him to run out of gas quite so spectacularly.

But second in a Grand Tour behind Astana, Vino, Vincenzo and his mighty Astana machine is a great result for the little Columbian.

The GreenEDGE team is full of big strong boys – too big for the mountains but Astana is full of tough, wiry climbers who give total commitment to their leader.

They killed off Dumoulin in the Vuelta last year and did the same to Chaves in this race – tactically, they’re brilliant.

Kruijswijk
Kanstantsin Siutsou. Photo©Ed Hood.
Kruijswijk
Prime Roglic. Photo©Ed Hood

It was a day when everyone suffered, even strong men like Siutsou and Roglic

A collapse which went largely unnoticed on this day was that of AG2R’s top ten GC rider, Pozzovivo who came in with the gruppetto @ 45:06 – ouch!

Another big loser was Cunego; Sky’s Nieve was in the break of the day and scooped up enough points to pinch the blue jersey from the little Italian.

Kruijswijk
Merhawi Kudus. Photo©Ed Hood

But nice to see the Kudus fan club in action!

Stone last when they passed us was stage winner, Trentin, but he must have rejoined on the descent to finish with the gruppetto.

Last man on the finish sheet was Grosu (Nippo & Romania) @ 47:50.

The last stage in Grand Tours can be a bit of a bore – this one wasn’t.

Kruijswijk
Chute! Photo©Ed Hood

Lotto Jumbo making a point with their escape – which was only caught very late – on the finish circuit; Chaves on the deck; Sutterlin and van Zyl crashing out and Nizzolo declassed.

The crowds were vast, it was actually scary at the death fighting through the throng.

Kruijswijk
Maarten Tjalingii and Jos Van Emden. Photo©Ed Hood

The two Jumbo boys – Tjalingii and Van Emden took a bit of catching and made sure the circuit was no promenade.

The crash was a belter with Chaves on the deck and Uran looking hurt but not as badly as Sutterlin and van Zyl who both had to climb into the ambulance.

Kruijswijk
Getting untangled. Photo©Ed Hood

The crash contributed to the race exploding with groups all round the circuit making it difficult to tell what the heck was happening.

Kruijswijk
Damiano Cunego. Photo©Ed Hood

The last couple of laps were ‘warp speed’ with little climbers like Cunego just willing it to end.

We saw nothing wrong with Nizzolo’s sprint – it was the same scenario to us as when Greipel beat Ewan on Stage 12 – but we’re not on the jury…

Kruijswijk
Il vincitore. Photo©Ed Hood

Nibali wins his second Giro to go with his Vuelta and Tour wins – a wee bit of a ‘back from the dead job’ given that on Thursday there was talk of withdrawing him from the race because his form was so bad and medical tests were being done to assess his condition.

Good to see Valverde take his eighth Grand Tour podium – the Spanish record is Indurain’s nine – but we were sorry to see Cunego lose the blue climbers’ jersey on Stage 20.

And the final stats:

  • 3,463.1 kilometres in 86 hours, 32 minutes and 49 seconds – an average speed of 40.014 kph.
  • 198 starters, 156 finishers.
  • Last finisher, Jack Bobridge (Trek & Australia) @ 5:08:51.
  • Most stage wins for Germany: seven.
  • Most kilometres ‘up the road’ – Daniel Oss (BMC & Italia) 557 kilometres in the breakaway.

This Easyjet luxury flight will end soon and we’ll touch down at Turnhouse – no more nice ‘stampa’ sticker on the car, Gazzettas, T-shirts and shorts to work in – and good coffee can only be found at places you can number on the fingers of one hand.

It’ll be harder to believe that “tutto rosa della vita“.

Ed Hood
Ed Hood
Ed's been involved in cycling for over 50 years. In that time he's been a successful time triallist, a team manager and a sponsor of several teams and clubs. He's also a respected and successful coach and during the winter months was often working in the cabins at the Six Days for some of the world's top riders. Ed remains a massive fan of the sport and couples his extensive contacts with an inexhaustible enthusiasm for the minutiae and the history of our sport. In February 2023 however, our dear friend and beloved colleague Ed suffered a devastating stroke and faces an uncertain future; Ed has lost his ability to speak, to read, and has lost movement on the right side of his body. He's working with speech and physical therapists on rehabilitation, but all strokes are different and each patient responds differently, so unfortunately recovery is one day at a time. Ed ran his own business installing windows, and will probably not be able to work again. Please consider joining us to make a contribution to Ed's GoFundMe page to help stabilise and secure his future.

Related Articles

La Vuelta a España 2014 – Stage 9; Carbonera de Guadaza – Valdelinares, 181 km. Winner Wins and Chad Chats

Stage Nine to Valdelinares; a horrible day after the baking heat of Andalucía - but joy at last for Lampre with Anacona after the Ulissi and Horner debacles. But where the hell is Pippo? Perfect tactics from Movistar; "we’ve got a man in the break, why would we chase?..." And they keep the jersey – and despite the best efforts of the Media to rustle up a feud, Quintana and Valverde seem to us to be working a perfect ‘one – two.’

Rotterdam Six Day 2020 Finale

Ed parachuted in to the Rotterdam Six Day 2020 on Tuesday afternoon to help Kris break camp and load the camper in anticipation of driving up to Bremen and the Six Day which started there on Thursday evening. When you wander up the tunnel stairs and into the track centre at Rotterdam with the u23’s hurtling round, the lights blazing and the PA pumping it’s still damn cool...

Giro d’Italia 2010 – Day Four, Nae Middle

Ciao from il Giro d'Italia 2010, amici! I was saying to Martin that I'm a bit worried, I've been wakening up feeling great - always a bad sign. The trouble with my usual Giro partner in crime, Dave being back in Scotia and suffering from Giro withdrawal symptoms (he's coming to le Tour, though) is that everything we write and photograph is subject to close scrutiny.

Giro d’Italia – Day 6: Stage 5, Teano – Frascati

Thursday 08.30, Caserta, Frascati. We're in Italy's answer to that hotel where Jack Nicholson lost the plot in 'The Shining'. Huge, empty corridors, plumbing and electrics that have a mind of their own, plus the world's most disinterested and rude staff - maybe they are zombies? Still, we were glad to lay our heads down here late last night: it was a long day.

At Random

David Duggan – Scottish Road Champion 2021

David Duggan, I know that name, wasn’t he the guy that Dave and I watched win that Dunfermline ‘mud fest’ cyclo-cross the other year? That’s him – and now he’s gone and won the Scottish Road Race Championship on that tough old course up in the North East which included five ascents of Stuie Hill. We thought we better find out a little more about this ‘DD’ fellow…

Toby Watson – Today is the Big Day

Today is the big day. The culmination of the road cycling programme for the London Olympics. I can’t believe we’re already here!

Peter Sagan – a New Rockstar

A New Rockstar... Peter Sagan has now won three stages of the Tour this year: two uphill sprints, and a straight-up bunch kick. I’ve already mentioned it, but he’s still got more than ten Tours de France in his future (all things being well). How good is this kid going to be?

Joshua Berry – Not Just “some American”

Here at VeloVeritas we try to keep our eye out for young men who are ‘doing it’ – getting themselves over to Europe and trying to make the grade. Take 22 year-old American Joshua Berry, it’s a long way from his home town of Ketchum, Idaho to the French Mediterranean coast – but that’s where he’s riding, for La Pomme Marseille.