Vingegaard in a league of his own with 10km solo attack to secure the Giro d'Italia

Cycling
Saturday, 30 May 2026 at 16:26
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Jonas Vingegaard showed once again in the final mountain stage of the Giro d'Italia that he, and no one else, is the best in the race. The Dane completed the final 10 kilometers of the Piancavallo solo. Thymen Arensman (Netcompany INEOS) was attacked by Derek Gee-West (Lidl-Trek), but retained his fourth place thanks to teammate Egan Bernal.
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The situation in the Giro general classification is, in many respects, all but decided. Vingegaard is firmly in the pink jersey and Felix Gall (Decathlon CMA CGM), as his closest challenger, has not shown himself strong enough to knock the Dane from Visma | Lease a Bike off his throne. In the battle for third place, Jai Hindley (Red Bull-BORA-hansgrohe) took the lead during stage 19.
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In stage 20, the Australian is defending a 29-second lead over Arensman, who has fallen off the podium for Netcompany INEOS and may come away from Italy empty handed. Can the Dutchman improve or hold onto his position? Or will he slip further down the rankings, with the strong Derek Gee-West (Lidl-Trek) in fifth place?
The points classification looks set to go to Paul Magnier (Soudal Quick-Step), whilst Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek) has now firmly secured the mountains jersey. The young rider classification is also shaping up to be interesting. Can Afonso Eulálio (Bahrain Victorious) defend a 1.03-minute lead over Davide Piganzoli? Or will Visma | Lease a Bike be taking home two jerseys? With those questions we started the 200 kilometer long stage.
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Visma | Lease a Bike makes no secret of its ambitions

From kilometer 0 it was clear that Vingegaard wanted to win the stage, because Visma | Lease a Bike controlled everything. The break consisted of seven riders: Jonas Geens (Alpecin-Premier Tech), Axel Huens (Groupama-FDJ United), Jack Haig (Netcompany INEOS), Andreas Leknessund (Uno-X Mobility), Guillermo Silva (XDS Astana), Manuele Tarozzi (Bardiani) and Larry Warbasse (Tudor).
Vismaallowed the lead to go out to more than five minutes. After the first climb of the day - the Clauzetto of 6.8 kilometers at 5.6 percent average - this stabilized around 4.30 minutes. And so we went in a status quo towards the best part of the day: the climb of Piancavallo... twice!
From the foot of that climb, Tim Rex took the lead, after Timo Kielich had done the vast majority on the flat. The first notable victim was Chris Harper (Pinarello-Q36.5), number twelve in the overall ranking. A little later, his compatriot Ben O'Connor (Jayco AlUla) again scored early.
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Ciccone secures mountain jersey

Next in trouble? That seemed to be white jersey Afonso Eulalio (Bahrain Victorious) — one of the reasons why Visma | Lease a Bike were pushing so hard. The Portuguese persisted, as he did on Friday. At the top of the climb, we were looking forward to the battle for the mountain points, where Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek) managed to secure his mountain jersey. Vingegaard did not compete for points.
And so everything would came down to the final climb of the Piancavallo, which was preceded by a valley. There, Igor Arrieta (UAE Emirates-XRG) and Ludovico Cresciovoli (Polti VisitMalta) crossed over from the peloton, with Arrieta able to win an additional prize by winning the Red Bull sprint classification. And so it happened.

Vingegaard has to go solo with 10 km to go

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They then started the final climb with a two-minute lead, where Visma | Lease a Bike came to the front and dropped the likes of Pellizzari, Poels, Ciccone and O'Connor. Sepp Kuss also had to skip his turn, yesterday's victory proving too much for the American. due to the work of Bart Lemmen in particular. Afterwards it was also up to Piganzoli himself, who was overtaken by Eulalio.
This was not surprising, because with 10 kilometers from the finish the expected attack from Vingegaard already came. Felix Gall (Decathlon CMA CGM) tried for a moment, but quickly saw the futility and opted for his own pace. Bernal took the lead again ahead of Arensman, with Hindley and Eulalio close behind.
Arensman had difficulty following his teammate's pace, which was seen 9 kilometers from the finish by Derek Gee-West: the man who was 58 seconds behind Arensman in fifth place at the start of the stage. He accelerated, with Hindley in his wake, to knock Arensman out of fourth place.
The Dutchman fought bravely with the help of Bernal, while Hindley and Gee-West connected with Gall. In the last two kilometers it became clear that Arensman would retain fourth place, a bit behind the last two kilometers of this Giro: Vingegaard.

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