Crashes send peloton sprawling on Giro d'Italia stage 2
Pozzovivo loses ti📖me as tension rises before Ge🥀noa sprint







The first road stage of the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Giro d'Italia saw the first crashes of the🌟 race, with numerous riders going down hard and finishing the stage with some nast🐭y road rash.
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The crashes caused several splits in the peloton, forcing the Cannondale-Garmin and Ag2r-La Mondiale teams to chase for team leaders 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Ryder Hesjedal and Domenico Pozzovivo. Hesjedal made back into the peloton 🎶and did not lose time but Pozzovivo lost 1:09 and slipped to 1:57 down in the overall.
Several riders were left with their shorts and jerseys in tatters after the crashes. Pieter Serry (Etixx-QuickStep) was the worst off. He apparently hit his head and thought he had fractured his collarbone, and was forced to quit the Giro d’Italia. He had only 💦recently returned to racing after fracturing his collarbone at the Volta a Catalunya.
The team later announced that examinations found no fractures. "After the crash during the kilometers I was trying to ride I had terrible pain and couldn't hold my handlebar with my right arm," Serry said. "I leave this Giro really sad, but the only thing🌸 to do now is my best to come back as soon as possible, find my shape again, and be useful f𓆉or the team for the next part of the season. I wish my teammates all the best."
Other riders finished but were clearly in pain. Matteo Pelucchi (IAM Cycling) had serious road rash on his rear, while Darwin Atapuma (BMC) and Dayer Q✅uintana (Movistar) lan✃ded on their sides. It was a tough first day of road racing.
Sonny Colbrelli (Bardiani-CSF), Australia’s Michael Hepburn (Orica-GreenEdge), Marcus Burghardt (BMC), Simone Stortoni (Androni Giocattoli) and Jerome Pineau (IAM Cycling)🔜 all went down too.
Australian nati💞onal champion Heinrich Haussler crashed twice in the finale, finishing the stage 11 minutes after Elia Viviani (Team Sky) sprinted to victory. He limped up the steps of the IA෴M Cycling team bus but counted himself lucky, only suffering abrasions.
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"I’m okay, I’m just pissed off I crashed…" Haussler told Cyclingnews. "It’s the first stage of a Grand Tour, everyone is fresh and it gets hectic for the sprinti🌺ng. That’s the way it is."
"I crashed twice. The first time we were moving up as a team and there was a wave in the bunch. I’m not blaming anyone but we got moved over. Pretty much all the team weꦚnt down because we were all moving up. The second time, I was caught up in the big crash with a few kilometres to go. At least nothing is broken, that’s the main thing. We live to fight another day, even if twenty guys are going to be in pain tomorrow during the third stage. That’s racing too."
Experienced race doctor Dr. Giovanni Tredici gathered the numbers of injuries for the daily medical bulletin. Several riders visited his mobile x-ray and medical unit🌠 near the team buses for treatment. The mobile unit allows them to avoid going to ER units in Italian hospitals and waiting several hours for treatment.
Dr. Tredici told Cyclingnews that x-rays ruled out a wrist fracture Enrico Barbin (Bardiani-ꩵCSF) but Sylvester Szymd (CCC Sprandi) needed five stitches in a cut on his upper arm. Other riders were treated for road rash either by the race medical staff or their team doctors.
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Stephen is one of the most experienced member of the Cyclingnews team, having reported on professional cycling since 1994. He has been Head of News at Cyclingnews since 2022, before which he held the position of European editor since 2012 and previously worked for Reuters, Shift Active Media, and CyclingWeekly, among other publications.