
Mads Pedersen in pink despite crash on Giro d'Italia stage six
The Australian, of Alpecin-Deceuninck, unleashed an almighty sprint in Naples after twisting and turning through the cobbled streets to take his first win of the season ahead of Milan Fretin (Cofidis) and Paul Magnier (Soudal Quick-Step).
But even if we expected this 227km stage to be one for the sprinters, the Giro showed once again why it is perhaps the most unpredictable grand tour of the year due to its position in May often throwing up issues outside of the riders' or race director's control — think of Geraint Thomas in pink, riding through Verbier in the torrential rain in 2023.
And so it was on stage six when a mass crash caused havoc, forcing some riders to abandon the race, and later a protester ran out in front of the peloton within the final 3km.
The crash came with 71km to go on the way from Potenza to Naples as the rain came down and the roads became shiny and the white lines on the tarmac became slippery. As the breakaway's gap was falling to about 45 seconds, Jai Hindley (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) apparently slipped while braking in the centre of the peloton and hit the ground hard. Numerous riders came down behind him, including Pedersen and fellow general classifcation (GC) contender Richard Carapaz.
Adam Yates (UAE Team Emirates) also took a tumble among the masses of riders on the floor, but while most were able to get up and carry on, Hindley sat by the roadside, dazed (perhaps concussed) and making no efforts to stand.
Soon after Australian Hindley, the 2022 Giro d'Italia winner, was taken away by the medical team and had to abandon the race. It was a horrible loss for the Giro and as well as a disappointment for the Red Bull rider, it was a blow for Primoz Roglic, the favourite to win the Pink Jersey, who has lost his key lieutenant for the mountains to come.
The race was neutralised at this point and rolled on at 20km/h until it was halted completely. And so an argument we're used to having at the Giro d'Italia continued: are wet and slippery roads part and parcel of professional cycling, or are they a risk too far with the speeds of the modern day?
The GC teams would have been quite happy to neutralise the entire race but Mauro Vegni, the race director, faces other pressures, including a contract with Naples to bring the race there. The rain wasn't too hard, but the roads were treacherous. If there was enough danger to cause a crash on an innocuous flat, straight road, a sprint finish may well have been deemed too much.
A compromise was reached however. The race started again with 58km to go. There was a stage win up for grabs but that was it. All riders would receive the same time as the winner, meaning all GC riders were safe. There would be no points on offer for the points-classification Ciclamino Jersey and there would be no bonus seconds awarded on the finish line. Otherwise the race was back on and the breakaway was given its original gap back.
Meanwhile Pedersen, who appeared to be rubbing his right thigh in the peloton after the crash, sat up and dropped behind the leading group. It was clear he wasn't going to complete the sprint finish and wanted to take advantage of the GC neutralisation to avoid any danger. So for the other teams there was a chance for a victory.
Cue Visma–Lease a Bike heading to the front of the group chasing down the two-man breakaway of Taco van der Hoorn and Enzo Paleni in service of their sprinter Olav Kooij.
With 10km to go, the valiant breakaway, which had got away with 195km to go, still had 24 seconds on the reduced sprinters' peloton. For a moment, as they entered the twisting roads of Naples, it looked as if the breakaway may make it to the finish. But a protester ran out onto the road with 3km to go, disrupting their efforts, and soon the peloton behind had swallowed the breakaway up.
The sprint was as messy as the stage itself. Jensen Plowright, Groves's team-mate, went off the front, leaving behind his team in the last kilometre and forcing Wout van Aert to chase him down, only for the Belgian's team-mate, Kooij, to lose his wheel also. Van Aert appeared to make a half-hearted attempt for the line himself but ultimately ran out of steam.
Kooij was then in a bad position up against the advertising boards with Matteo Moschetti (who was later relegated from eighth to 176th for his dangerous sprint) and had nowhere to go so was forced to sit up.
Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager.
Meanwhile Groves had clear air to lay down the power we've been waiting to see since he returned from injury this year. 'Its a big relief,' Groves said after the race. 'The team always believes in me and its not been a great start to the season with the injury, I missed a lot of racing and I was arriving here without a win — so getting the first one of the year is a big relief.
'We needed to use some guys early to close the breakaway and they did a super ride, and in the end I still had two team-mates, Plowright and [Edward] Planckaert, who did a super job.'
For Pedersen — who rolled in ten minutes behind — holding on to the Pink Jersey was something of a poisoned chalice. He had to complete the usual leader's press conference as well as attend a special reception with politicians and military representatives before one of the longest transfers of this year's Giro d'Italia, a two hour drive between Naples and Castel di Sangro. There, the race will enter the mountains on the route to Tagliacozzo, where Pedersen is expected to relinquish the jersey as the GC competition truly kicks off.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
21 minutes ago
- The Independent
Why the dominance of Tadej Pogacar and the ‘big four' will warp the 2025 Tour de France
The weird and wonderful Tour de France circus begins with the Grand Depart in Lille on Saturday, and this year's route is notable for its simplicity: the Tour will be held exclusively in France for the first time in five years, finishing in Paris on 27 July. It ends with a twist on stage 21 after organisers threw in a triple loop of the steep cobbles of Montmartre on the 50th anniversary of the race's first finish on the Champs-Elysees, once a wacky idea but now such an integral part of the canvas. The Tour loves an anniversary and you may notice tributes to Bernard Hinault sprinkled through the route, 40 years after his fifth and final yellow jersey in 1985, a nice touch even if it serves to underline the long, long French wait for another home winner. You can bet Hinault would not have predicted Slovenia would be the dominant nation in the Alps and Pyrenees 40 years on, not least because it didn't yet exist. Tadej Pogacar and his fellow Slovenian Primoz Roglic make up two of 'the big four', along with Belgium's Remco Evenepoel and the Dane Jonas Vingegaard, who all start the Tour de France for the second year in a row. Last year's mouthwatering four-way contest was scuppered by a crash in the opening week which killed off Roglic's challenge and harmed Evenepoel's, and much of the talk among them this week has been simply of survival. 'The first week of the Tour is one of the most intense, nervous weeks,' Pogacar said. 'You can quite easily lose the Tour de France in the first 10 days until the first rest day. I don't think my goal should be to aim to gain time for the first week, you just need to take care and not screw up the whole Tour.' It is a star-studded peloton, with daring one-day maestros Wout van Aert and Mathieu van der Poel, sprint kings Jasper Philipsen and Biniam Girmay, not to mention the grand tour champions playing support roles in Geraint Thomas and Simon Yates, the latter fresh (or not so fresh) off his triumph at the Giro d'Italia only five weeks ago. There are a few notable names missing such as Richard Carapaz, ruled out with a stomach bug, and those who focused on the Giro like Egan Bernal, Tom Pidcock and Mads Pedersen. But for the most part, the biggest draws in men's cycling will be on the start line in Lille. Yet any hopes of a compelling battle for the yellow jersey might be optimistic. Roglic is one of the greatest stage-racers of his generation, but he is a rung below Pogacar and Vingegaard in the mountains and his Giro exertions will surely have taken a toll, crashing out on stage 16. His goal is simply to finish the race. 'I just want to get to Paris and drink a glass of Champagne there,' he said. Evenepoel has spent the year recovering from his horrifying crash into a postal car's open door while training in December. The double Olympic champion suffered fractures to his ribs, shoulder blade and hand, contusions to his lungs and a dislocation of his right clavicle that left the surrounding ligaments torn. 'There's a part of the shoulder muscle that is not working at all for the moment,' he explained. 'If I were a tennis, a volleyball or basketball player, my career would have been over. Luckily I'm a cyclist.' Evenepoel's brilliance against the clock means he can target grabbing the yellow jersey at the first time trial on stage five, but his hopes of competing for the overall win are remote against the climbing power of multiple champions Pogacar and Vingegaard, and a repeat of last year's podium place would be a successful Tour. 'It's logical as they won together the last five editions, so it means they are top favourites for this year's edition again,' Evenepoel said. 'It would be unfair towards myself, towards the team, to say that I'm not here to compete with them, so I'm just here to try to make it a bit harder. Last year I was the third guy and I think we're here to improve that a bit.' That leaves two of the big four. Vingegaard won the yellow jersey in 2022 and again in 2023, but last year's preparation was badly damaged by a crash and he could not cope with Pogacar in the final week. He arrives fully fit this time around, but his defeat by Pogacar at last month's Criterium du Dauphine – always a bellwether for Tour de France form – showed a clear gap between them. Stage six of the Dauphine was enthralling as Pogacar attacked on the steepest climb to first crack Evenepoel, before surging again to break Vingegaard and crest the mountain alone. The big four will all be in the peloton, but one is not like the others. Vingegaard insists he is here not just to compete with but to beat his rival, having beefed up over the winter. 'Last year I was on a very high level at the Tour de France but I was a lot lighter,' he said. 'I'm heavier now, but it's muscle, and we know that it gives a lot more power as well. I can say I'm on the highest level that I've ever been, and we'll see if it's enough or not.' Yet Pogacar has reached levels few thought possible over the past 18 months. Last season's Giro-Tour-World Championships treble was one of the greatest seasons ever put together on the road, after which Eddy Merckx said Pogacar had already surpassed him, even at only 26 and with so much to come. Only injury or misfortune can slow Pogacar down and unfortunately for his rivals, his season has thus far been immaculate. 'I'm lucky to have had close to the perfect preparation this year,' he said. 'Everything has gone really smoothly, especially coming off a great altitude camp with my teammates.' The warping effect of Pogacar's GC dominance and the big four's likely grip on the podium is that everyone else is scrabbling for stage wins. 'The flat stages are for Jasper [Philipsen], the hills are for me,' said Van der Poel this week, looking to add to his solitary Tour stage victory. Thomas said: 'A stage win would be amazing,' while his Ineos teammate Filippo Ganna is going 'all in' on the stage-five time trial. Ineos are well off the GC pace and so their entire Tour de France – like Lidl-Trek, Jayco-Alula, Israel-Premier Tech, Bahrain Victorious and so many other teams – will live and die by stage victories. The problem is that there are only 21 to go around, and far fewer once Pogacar has collected his inevitable haul. As ever, the road to Paris will be littered with broken bones and busted ambition. It is part of why Tour de France glory tastes so sweet.


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Gossip: Parma linked with Watford's Dele-Bashiru
Parma are interested in signing Watford midfielder Tom Town have also been linked with the 25-year-old. (Football League World), externalWant more transfer news from the EFL? Take a look at Wednesday's gossip column here.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Cameron Norrie is 5/2 to defeat Mattia Bellucci in straight sets today - as the Brit looks to book a place in the fourth round at Wimbledon
After Jack Draper fell in an upset loss to Marin Cilic in the second round, it is now Cameron Norrie who is Britain's biggest hope on the men's side of the draw at Wimbledon. Norrie has impressed en route to the third round - with a four-set victory over 12th seed and multiple-time major semi-finalist Frances Tiafoe last time out. Waiting for Norrie in the third round is Italy's Mattia Bellucci, who has dropped just one set in his opening two wins of the tournament. Norrie enters the match-up as the favourite according to Sky Bet at 8/15, while his opponent is a 6/4 underdog. There are also 5/2 odds for the Brit to win in straight sets. Meanwhile, there are prices of 10/3 and 4/1 for him to win 3-1 and 3-2 respectively. Conversely, Bellucci is 11/2 to win 3-0, 5/1 to win 3-1, and 11/2 to get the job done in a five-set thriller. Sky Bet odds for Mattia Bellucci vs Cameron Norrie: Cameron Norrie 8/15 Mattia Bellucci 6/4 Sky Bet odds in Set Betting for Mattia Bellucci vs Cameron Norrie: Cameron Norrie to win 3-0 - 5/2 Cameron Norrie to win 3-1 - 10/3 Cameron Norrie to win 3-2 - 4/1 Mattia Bellucci to win 3-0 - 11/2 Mattia Bellucci to win 3-0 - 5/1 Mattia Bellucci to win 3-2 - 11/2