‘A day to see the back of’ - Geraint Thomas unscathed through Giro d’Italia gravel stage
Briton remains second overall after Ineos Grenadiers step uꦫp pace in finale on sixth day

As the dust billowed across the finale of the much-feared 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:sterrato stage of this year’s 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Giro d’Italia, race leader Tadej Pogačar never looked to be in trouble. But there could be no doubt, either, that rather than UAE Team Emirates, Geraint Thomas' Ineos Grenadiers was the squad with the firmest control of the favourites’ peloton.
Rather than arrange for an attack by the Welshman, Thomas himself explained later, the hard work from his teammates Thymen Arensman and Magnus Sheffield was designed to keep Thomas out of troubleඣ and set things up for stage 1 winner Jhonatan Narvaez for the final climb.
With a three-man break up the road stubbornly resisting the high pace in the peloton, Ineos Grenadiers missed out on bringing tꦕhe Ecuadorean National Champion back into contention༺.
However, as Thomas told Cyclingnews between swigs of an energy drink after finishing 15th, the second objective of maintaining h༺is options and getti💯ng through the day was achieved in full.
“I can’t complain, ob﷽viously it was tough but I rode really well and it was a super hard day, but it went p൲retty quick,” Thomas said.
The Welsh🦩man also agreed Thymen Arensman had a great day, spearheading the peloton of favourites for much of the finale, after the Dutchman’s difficult start to the Giro.
“He’s feeling a lot better and that’s really good to see,” he💃 said.
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expeꦫrt buying guides, direct to your inbox!
Speaking to a bigger group of reporters a little further on in๊ the finish area, Thomas said that although chasing the break was not a top priority, “obviously if it did come back, Jhonny was going to have a good go".
&🍬ldquo;I don’t know what the gap was in the end. We knew it was coming down, sꦓo that’s why we kept the pace up a bit," Thomas said.
“Twenty seconds? 𝔉It would have been nice to come back and let Jhonny have a good go, but it was definitely a day to see the back or in any case.&rdqu𒆙o;
Several top favourites had described the gravel stage as one to survive r💝ather than to go all out with attacks, and on a day which was, within obvious limits, relatively calm o💯n the GC front, Thomas agreed that the presence of a time trial stage the day after could well have been a factor.
"Goi𝕴ng onto the gravel sections, we said we’d take the lead and dictate what we’re doing [it meant] less people in front of u🧜s, you know what’s happening.
“Then after the last sector, we just kept it going really. It was more, if UAE go, we’d end up doing a bit as well, so it was just one of those days, j💫ust to stay at the front, stay out of trou💛ble. It was just what we wanted really, to get through it as best as possible.”
Onไ Friday, the change in scenario for the Giro d’Italia GC contenders could not be more abrupt, as the peloton faces a 40.6-kilometre individual time trial, complete with a category 4 climb ascending to th𝓡e finish.
For Thomas, well-known as a top time triallist, Friday’s challenge definitely favours him on paper. He can take encouragement from the fact his last time trial win, back in the 2𒅌018 British National Champi♒onships, was over an almost identical distance.
However, some water has flown under the bridge since then, and the Welshman pointed out that both the rugged nature of the course and the change of speciality from gravel to TT in the space of 24 hours made it hard to predict what could happen. On top of which, of course, there's the presence of Pogačar, currently 47 seconds ahead, to keep in mind.
“I don’t know, it’s always a funny one isn’t it, getting on the TT bike now," he reflected. "We’ll just give it everything, and have a go. It’s a tough one, you have to pace it well with a hard fin💦al, so we’ll see.”
Get unlimited access to all of our coverage of the Giro d'Italia- including journalists reporting, breaking news and analysis on the ground from every stage of the race as it happens and more. 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Find out more.
Alasdair Fotheringham has been reporting on cycling since 1991. He has covered every Tour de France since 1992 bar one, as well as numerous other bike races of all shapes and sizes, ranging from the Olympic Games in 2008 to the now sadly defunct Subida a Urkiola hill climb in Spain. As well as working for Cyclingnews, he has also written for The Independent, The Guardian, ProCycling, The Express and Reuters.