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Giro Stage 7 Preview
The first of two time trial stages in the race and a crucial day to reshape the overall classification.Stage 6 Review: a non-stop stage and self-fulfilling action. This was the gravel stage but most of the action happened on the tarmac. The sterrato sections were needed through, just enough to raise the tension and spice up the stage.Anyone tuning in after two hours might have thought nothing had happened since the bunch was all together. Only there was raging battle to get in the breakaway that day and the fight went on so long that it was almost too late because any move would not have enough space to get away from UAE and Ineos.The climb to Volterra finally broke the proverbial elastic. Kaden Groves was instrumental and Julian Alaphilippe went again with Luke Plapp, Pelayo Sanchez, Filippo Fiorelli, Matteo Trentin and Andrea Vendrame. Groves was the surprise as a sprinter but Plapp was the curiosity as a GC rider on the move, riding himself into the virtual maglia rosa.On the Grotti sterrato section Plapp attacked and had Alaphilippe and Sanchez for company and the trio would stay away for the day. But only just with suspense to the end as to whether the peloton would get them, Ineoss work took a minute out of their lead on the last sterrato sector to leave it close.Heading to Rapolano and Sanchez was caught out by a roundabout, forgetting to the round part. Hed survived the dirt sectors and climbs and this would have been an ignominious ending as Plapp was untroubled and riding away. Alaphilippe was delayed by Sanchez here and as they chased he seemed to be turning into Thomas Voeckler with his vocal outbursts and exaggerated body language but this worked, it got Sanchez to help close down Plapp.On the final climb the trios fortunes kept changing, each looked in peril on the steep climb which once would have been Alaphilippes springboard to victory but he couldnt shake the others. He kept pulling though as the fine lead meant the trio had no time to play poker. In the finish Sanchez came around Alaphilippe to take his biggest in.With Sanchez, hes not a star name, having risen gradually up the ranks, a contract with BH Burgos at first his local pro team as hes from the Asturias and where he won a stage of the Vuelta Asturias and he had very solid Vuelta last year. Now with Movistar this year he sacked Julian Alaphilippe and Luke Plapp from the breakaway in a straight uphill sprint.Among the GC contenders no change except for Damiano Caruso who was already losing ground but conceded 15 minutes. The other point is trivial by comparison, but Tadej Pogaar looks increasingly tired by the post stage interviews, probably inevitable after the repeat questions from many media outlets but the boyish delight of the past is starting to have tones of the teenager told to tidy his room. Well see how he can regain the story today.The Route: the profile says plenty, theres not much more to add. The roads are flat and wide, there are few tricky corners. After the second time check at the crossing of the Tiber river, the climb to Casaglia begins including 1.5km at 10% and its often steeper, itll sting but riders have to keep something for the further climb up to Perugia.The Contenders: Tadej Pogaar (UAE) and Filippo Ganna (Ineos) are the obvious candidates. Pogaar is just riding that bit better than everyone but he hasnt taken a TT win outside of Slovenia since Laval in the 2021 Tour de France. Ganna is the specialist who can stop him but he hasnt won a time trial this season and hes not the certain pick of a few years ago when he seemed invincible against the clock.Can Geraint Thomas go better than Ganna? He has been climbing well so he should be time trialling well too, a year ago he was one second short of the win against Remco Evenepoel and itll be interesting to see his time splits on the way to the climb and then up.Any outside contenders? A third Ineos name in Magnus Sheffield but this could be on too long a course for him. Mikkel Bjerg (UAE) won the Dauphin stage last summer but like Sheffield its hard to seem him upstaging his leaders on the team.Josef ern (Soudal-Quickstep) can get results in time trials but his form doesnt look sparkling and thatll cost him on the climb at the end. Lorenzo Milesi (Movistar) is the U23 TT World Champion and so worth watching but the win looks elusive.Theres also the contest for GC so as much as the stage win its all about seeing who has a good day and viewing their performances both relative to the leader board but also to expectations. Luke Plapp (Jayco) has the TT background and should be high up but he might feel his efforts yesterday although nobody had it easy.Ganna, PogaarThomasWeather: 22C and sunshine with a 20km/h NNE wind which means a three-quarters headwind for much of the course.TV: Filippo Ganna starts at 2.37pm CEST and Tadej Pogaar off at 4.24pm and due in around 5.15pm CEST.Postcard from AssisiAfter a week with three sprint finishes, the Giro arrives in Umbria, a region famous for its famous hilltop towns like Perugia, Gubbio, Orvieto, Spoleto and Assisi. The list of places reads like a UNESCO heritage list. These are places both picturesque and big enough to host a Giro stage.Imagine the scene: the race storms uphill, thundering over the ancient flagstones to pass through the old portico before a finish in the medieval piazza. Only today we get a time trial.These uphill finishes though the castle walls ought to be part of the Giro, no? Yet they are probably as rare as mountain time trials. Defining such finishes is be more art than science but the last sharp uphill finish in the Giro by a castle? Visegrad in the Hungarian start but that was more a spiral road uphill, it certainly wasnt urban.How about 2018 and Stage 11 to Osimo won by Simon Yates. Before that? Maybe when Joaquim Purito Rodriguez won in Assisi in 2012. Either way these medieval finishes of the Giro are almost mythical whether in Umbria or beyond. When the race has visited Umbria theres often been a time trial instead.This feels a pity as given the Giro trades on images and even clichs of Italy and uphill finishes in these towns supply tourist appeal by the barrel-load and they offer great sport so theres something for everyone to enjoy. Its something that hasnt been missed by the Tour de France as Stage 2 will finish by the Basilica di San Luca in Bologna this July.The post Giro Stage 7 Preview first appeared on The Inner Ring.
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