
Isaac del Toro seals first Grand Tour stage win to cement overall lead at Giro d'Italia
Isaac del Toro won stage 17 of the Giro d'Italia to tighten his grip on the pink jersey in the face of more attacks from Richard Carapaz, who moved above Simon Yates into second overall.
A day after Carapaz took more than 90 seconds out of his lead to move within 31 seconds of pink, UAE Team Emirates' Del Toro responded with his first career Giro stage win, beating Carapaz to the line in Bormio by four seconds but also picking up another six in bonuses to extend his advantage.
It continued a historic Giro for del Toro, who became the first Mexican stage winner at the race in 23 years, and the youngest stage winner this century.
'It's incredible,' del Toro, also the first Mexican to wear pink, said. 'Everybody wants this [to win a stage in the leader's jersey] and today I realised that I will never give up and I will always try, I have nothing to lose. Today was not easier than yesterday but for sure I had a better mentality.'
EF Education-EasyPost's Carapaz, the 2019 Giro winner, had tried again to break the 21-year-old Mexican on the Mortirolo, the main climb of the 155km stage from San Michele all'Adige, with an attack near the summit.
The Ecuadorian opened up a lead of around 30 seconds on Del Toro and Yates, who started the day 26 seconds off pink in second place, but was caught again by the main favourites after the descent as they approached the short final climb of Le Motte before the descent to the finish.
And it was near the summit of Le Motte that Del Toro responded with his own attack, a move that only Carapaz could follow.
Riding together down the descent, they caught Romain Bardet - the last survivor of the day's breakaway - and would deny the Frenchman his dream of a Giro stage win to complete his Grand Tour set in his final season as a professional.
'I predicted something like this would happen, of course you don't want to let all the GC guys go,' del Toro said. 'I put a little bit of pressure on the others on the descent and then I tried to relax and recover to do the last kick on the last climb. We made this plan with the team and the team gave me the confidence to try full gas.'
With just under two kilometres to go, Del Toro was able to drop Carapaz and hold off the Ecuadorian and Bardet to answer his critics after Tuesday, with the Frenchman taking second place on the stage.
Visma-Lease a Bike's Yates finished fourth, 15 seconds down on Del Toro, to drop behind Carapaz in the general classification.
Del Toro leads overall by 41 seconds from Carapaz, who now has a 10-second advantage over Yates. Derek Gee is the only other rider within three minutes of pink, fourth at one minute and 57 seconds down.
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Cameras catch Julio Cesar Chavez Jr's bizarre pre-fight routine before Jake Paul clash
Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. warmed up for his much-anticipated fight with Jake Paul with the help of a mariachi band performance inside his locker room. The 39-year-old Mexican, whose father and namesake is one of the greatest fighters of all time, took on the YouTuber-turned-boxer in Anaheim on Saturday night. As Chavez Jr. went through his final preparations in California, cameras were allowed inside his locker room. And in the minutes before the first bell, a five-piece mariachi band began to perform while the boxer was put through his warm-up. The band then accompanied Chavez Jr. on his walk to the ring, where he was a picture of calm before facing the YouTuber-turned boxer. When asked before the fight why he was so relaxed, the 39-year-old said: 'Why not?' Vibes are good in the Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. locker room 🇲🇽🎶 🎟️ Buy Jake Paul vs Chavez Jr NOW - link in bio #PaulChavez x #RamirezDorticos | Live NOW Exclusively on DAZN | @MostVpromotions | @GoldenBoyBoxing — DAZN Boxing (@DAZNBoxing) June 29, 2025 'I'm here, it's what I want in my life and that's why I'm super happy. And I think it's better to stay relaxed than feel pressure. 'This is exactly what I've worked very hard for. I'm more prepared, my dad has been here before, my mom has been here before. So this is nothing new. 'I've worked hard. I'm very excited to be back. This is what I love to do. I'm very calm right now but once I step into the ring, he better hold on.' But Paul also showed few signs of nerves before the fight. He was spotted dancing alongside his brother Logan inside his locker room.


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
Vega's strike, Madu's own goal send Mexico to semis with 2-0 win over Saudi Arabia
June 28 (Reuters) - Alexis Vega's strike just after the break and an own goal by Abdullah Madu secured a 2-0 victory for Mexico over Saudi Arabia in the CONCACAF Gold Cup quarter-finals in Glendale, Arizona on Saturday, setting up a clash with Honduras in the last four. Fulham forward Raul Jimenez's quick through ball set up Vega's sprint into the box, and although keeper Nawaf Al-Aqidi blocked the first attempt, the Toluca striker found the target from the rebound, putting the 12-time champions ahead in the 49th minute. Tournament debutants Saudi Arabia had done well to stay even in the first half, with Ali Majrashi's overhead kick clearing Roberto Alvarado's dangerous ball and Vega shooting wide off a cross from Gilberto Mora, who became the youngest to play for Mexico at 16. But Matteo Chavez's cross from the left took a deflection off defender Madu and went into the net in the 81st minute, ending Saudi Arabia's hopes of making a comeback and ensuring Mexico's progress to Wednesday's semi-finals.


The Guardian
7 hours ago
- The Guardian
Richard Carapaz ruled out of Tour de France with stomach bug
Richard Carapaz, the reigning Tour de France king of the mountains, will miss this year's race after developing a gastrointestinal infection training at home in Ecuador. 'Last week, he began experiencing abdominal pain and a high fever,' his EF team said on their website. '[Doctors] have advised against long-haul travel and competition at this time. As a result, Richard will not take part in this year's Tour de France.' Carapaz finished third in the Giro d'Italia this month and would have led the EF Pro Cycling team on the Tour, which starts on 5 July. 'We're all gutted for Richard,' said Jonathan Vaughters, the EF chief executive. 'He came out of the Giro with amazing form. He sacrificed a lot to get to that level, so the timing really couldn't be worse. We know how much the Tour means to him, so to lose him this close to the race is a real blow.' Carapaz, the 2020 Olympic champion and 2019 Giro winner, won the climbing and combativity prizes in last year's Tour de France. The team said the 32-year-old 'will take a few weeks off to let his body fully recover' and then shift his focus to the least prestigious of the Grand Tours starting on 23 August. 'His goal? Win the Vuelta a España,' said the team.