Giro d'Italia: Brandon McNulty wins from the break on Lombardia-style stage 15
Ameri𝄹can outsprints Healy, Frigo to claim first Grand Tour 💯victory






















The ‘mini Il Lombardia’ stage 15 of the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Giro d’Italia was another day for the breakaway in Bergamo, with 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Brandon McNulty (UAE Team Emirates) outsprinting Ben ꧋Healy (EF Education-EasyPost) and Marco Frigo (Israel-Premier Tech) after a dra🍰matic fight to the line.
The trio emerged at the head of a 17-man breakaway on the final climb at Roncola Alta, with Frigo battling back on the descent after dropping on the way u⛎p.
Healy and McNulty were the strongest on the late unclassified climb at Colle Aperto in Bergamo’s old town, but Frigo once again fought his way back in the closing kilo꧒metres to set up a three-man sprint.
Frigo, who made the catch 500 metres f❀rom the line, immediately launched the dash🐼 for the line, but Healy got back to his wheel as he and McNulty broke past in the closing metres. The Irishman may have looked the strongest on the day’s climbs, but it was McNulty who was the fastest finisher, nipping past at the death to secure the stage win.
“Indescribable. It was my goal coming here and then I got sick during the TT. I didn’t know what was going to happen. Today it came together and I’m so happy,” McNulty s🍒aid after the stage.
“On the last long climb I tried to go. I thought my race was done there because Ben was so strong. I clawed back and rested and then we playꦑed games on the flats. In thไe end, it came down to the last kick and the sprint.
“I knew [Frigo] was coming and he ended up🌜 coming just at the right moment because we could swing over. I caught the draft and then at 150-200 metres I just went for it.
“We came here for GC and also with the goal of me having a stage win and now that’s happened, so we can fully focus on João [Almei🍸da].”
McNulty and Frigo had launched the attacks on the 10km climb of Roncola Alta, 38km from the line, catching and passing Niccolò Bonifazio (Intermarcཧhé-Circus-Wanty), who was out front after going clear on the flat run to the climb.
Healy got across just over 2km later, setting up the grand finale that would play out on the run back to Bergamo. He made his bid for victory further up the climb, butꦛ McNulty bridged across shortly after the summit. Frigo, meanwhile, put in a stunning effort on t💧he descent and flat road afterwards to close a 40-second deficit and get back on with 10km to go.
The final hill at Colle Aperto saw Healy flying at the front once again, with Frigo agai♏n dropping back, while McNulty stuck to the EF rider’s wheel.
It looked like the stage would end with a two-man battle for victory, but Frigo was tenacious and once again managed to bridge just in time for the sprint. He was first to jump for the line, but his efforts in the chase proved too much to beat his♕ breakaway companions, and McNulty came through to score the sixth win of his career.
6:53 after the podium trio sprinted across the line, the GC contenders came home after the battle for the maglia rosa briefly lit up on the♉ last hill at Roncola Alta.
An eight-man group including Geraint Thomas (Ineos Grenadiers), Primož Roglič (Jumbo-Visma), and João Almeida (UAE Team Emirates) ended up taking two seconds on a group including Hugh Carthy (EF Education-EasyPost), Thibaut Pinot (Groupama-FDJ) and Lennard Kämna (Bora-Hansgsrohe).
However, the move didn’t change anything in the top 10 of the general classification. Further back, race leader Bruno Armirail (Groꦍupama-FDJ) was dropped 29 seconds down on Thomas and co, but he remains in pink by 1:08 heading into the second rest day.
How it unfolded
Following a long and wet day in the saddle on Saturday, stage 15 promised better weather, though four major climbs on the 195km road from Seregno to Bergamo would provide a different challenge on an ‘Il Lombardia-like&rs꧟quo; stage.
The first-category Valico di Valcava (11.6km at 8%) and second-category Selvino (11.1km at 5.6%) and Miragolo San Salvatore (5.2km at 7%) featured in the Monument back in 2016, while the final climb of th🌃e day, Roncola Alta (10km at 6.7%), was on the 2021 route.
With a maximum of 94 mountain points up for grabs and a possible stage win to boot, riders would clamour to get into the break of the d𝄹ay, though the battle was less intense than some might have expected.
Stage 8 winner Ben Healy was joined out front by Simone Velasco (Astana Qazaqstan), while more attacks flew behind and a chase group formed. The break of the day established itself inside the opening 15km as the peloton eased 𒊎up. Bauke Mollema (Trek-Segafredo) made the move, along with Brandon McNulty, Davide Ballerini (Soudal-QuickStep), Israel-Premier Tech duo Marco Frigo and Sebastian Berwick, and Niccolò Bonifazio (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty), among others.
Stage 13 winner Einer Rubio (Movistar) mounted a chase alongside Martin Marcellusi (Green Project-Bardiani CSF-Faizanè), though with 1:30 to bridge before the Valico di Valcava, making it across looked a taꦅll order.
The pﷺair did it, though, as Rubio ca💟me across with the help of teammate José Joaquín Rojas dropping back from the break at the bottom of the climb. Marcellusi reappeared midway up the climb, surprisingly getting up to the break having been dropped by Rubio some kilometres earlier.
The gap back to t♒he peloton stretched out to seven minutes on the steep slopes of the climb, while the first battle of the day unfolded at the summit as Rubio and Healy banged shoulders in the sprint to the line. Healy came out on top to grab the 40 points as Rubio settled for 18.
Back in the peloton, Groupama-FDJ set the pace on behalf of new race leader Bruno Armirail, with ꧋Ineos Grenadiers and Jumbo-Visma lined up behind the French squad. 6:30 up the road, Alberto Dainese’s (Team DSM) time in the bre♛ak ended on the climb of Selvino, while Marcellusi was also dropped before getting back on.
At the top, six minutes separated the break and peloton as Healy once again beat Rubio to the line for anot♚her 18 points. Shortly after the summit, Velasco, Berwick, and Frigo were caught in a crash, though all swiftly got back up and running to chase back on down the descent.
It was all back together up front on the Miragolo San Salvatore, which ho🐷sted another Rubio-Healy sprint at the top. This time, however, it was Rubio who edged out th🦋e Irishman to move within 32 points of maglia azzurra Davide Bais (Eolo-Kometa) with Healy 22 points further back.
15 men tackled the descent and the 30km run along the valley to the base of the final climb of the day, Marcellusi having dropped on the upper slopes of the climb. Healy led the tentative attacks early on the flat road following the descent, but the break stuck together, at least until they𝔍 hit Bergamo and the unclassified climb at Colle Aperto at 57km to go.
The break fights for victory
Velasco upped the pace on the short ascent, spitting Gavazzi out the back as the peloton followed six minutes later. Ballerini also dropped away before getting back on before the attacking started shortly after t🌞he first pass through the finish line.
Mollema k🎶icked off the moves but Bonifazio was the first man to get a gap, jumping at 47km to go on the run to Roncola Alta. There ♚was no immediate reaction in the chase, who left the Piemontese to go a minute clear as he hit the climb.
Bonifazio only increased his advantage on the early slopes, gaining 1:20 at one point before Rojas got to work on behalf of Rubio. The upping of the pace saw Vincenzo Albanese (Eolo-Kometa), Ballerini, Berwi🌊ck, and Pasqualon drop out the back wh♎ile in the peloton Jumbo-Visma massed at the front.
The 𓂃big attack came at 37km to go, with Frigo and then McNulty jumping from the chase and flying past Bonifazio on the way uphill. The Italian escapee wouldn’t see the front of the race again as the stronger climbers showed their talents on the 8% slopes.
Two kilometres later, Healy worked his way across to make it three up front, but McNulty was quick to launch an attack of his own. Healy countered powerfully, so much so that the A♑merican couldn’t muster a response.
He and Frigo dropped to 20 seconds behind Healy before McNulty pushed on alone in the chase as Rubio lingered further down the climb. At the top, Healy grabbed another 18 mountain pointౠs – Rubio took four – to make it a four-way fight for the blue jersey. He was, however, joined by McNulty shortly afterwards, with the pair taking much of the descent together.
The gap back to Frigo was 40 seconds but the young Italian flew down the descen🐠t to halve that. The largely flat run to the line &ndasꦍh; barring another short ascent at Colle Aperto – favoured the two leaders, but Frigo didn’t slow up there, amazingly bridging across with 10km to go.
After a𒀰 short calm period, the attacking began again at 7km to go as McNulty jumped. Healy, who looked the strongest of the three, led Frigo across, and at 6km the Italian gave it a nudge without success.
He🍃 led the way up the Colle Aperto, but onꦫce again it was Healy who came to the fore on the hill with another ferocious effort. Frigo couldn’t keep up, but McNulty was glued to the Irishman’s wheel.
Somehow, Frigo mustered up the strength to chase back, once flying down the descent and on to the flat finish in Bergamo. He rejoined the lead duo just in time to sprint, but Healy, and then McNulty, had t🌱oo much pace in the closing metres, with the 25-𝕴year-old American sprinting through to victory.
Almost seven minutes later the GC contenders fought a mini-battle on Colle Aperto, with a chase group led by seventh-placed man Lennard Kämna ceding two seconds at the finish, while maglia rosa Bruno Armirail shed 29 seconds to second-pl🎐aced Geraint Thomas.
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Dani Ostanek is Senior News Writer at Cyclingnews, having joined in 2017 as a freelance contributor and later being hired full-t𝐆ime. Before joining the team, she had written for numerous major publications in the cycling world, including CyclingWeekly and Rouleur. She writes and edits at Cyclingnews as well as running newsletter, social media, and how to watch campaigns.
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