Paul Magnier (Soudal Quick-Step) won his second stage of this year’s Giro d’Italia. with the Frenchman catching Italy’s Jonathan Milan (Lidl-Trek) on the line to take stage three in Sofia.
Milan hit the front on the final bend with 150 metres to race,. was unable to hold off Magnier, with the Dutchman Dylan Groenewegen (Unibet Rose Rockets) finishing third. Magnier briefly raised his hand in celebration after the line,. had to wait for the official photo-finish result before finding out he had indeed won two out of three in Bulgaria.
“I was not really sure that I won the stage to be honest,” said Magnier. “I celebrated and then I say: ‘Oh, I’m not sure.’”
The Giro’s final day in Bulgaria took the riders 175km from Plovdiv to the capital, with a mostly flat ride punctuated by the Borovets climb. ending with a downhill run into Sofia, perfect terrain for the sprinters to come to the fore. After two crash-marred stages. Sunday was a more relaxed affair, with Spain’s Diego Pablo Sevilla once again part of an early breakaway but, just as in the opening two stages, the Spaniard’s efforts came to nothing.
The peloton left it late to reel in the trio out in front. with the leaders holding out until inside the final kilometre. Milan went for broke, looking to outfox his rivals,. the 22-year-old Magnier proved that his opening-day win was no one-off. “I dreamed about it, and it was a goal to go for the stage again,” Magnier said. “The team did an amazing job again. we had to really be in a good position at one kilometre to go and this is what we did.”
There was no change in the general classification, with the stage two winner, Guillermo Thomas Silva of Uruguay, holding on to the leader’s jersey, four seconds ahead of Florian Stark. Egan Bernal. Britain’s Adam Yates, twin brother of last year’s winner, Simon, did not start stage three following a crash on Saturday that put the UAE-Team Emirates-XRG rider out of overall contention. left him with delayed concussive symptoms.
Yates. who hit a barrier at high speed, eventually finished almost 14 minutes behind the leading pack after he battled on in a blood-stained kit. His UAE Team Emirates teammates Jay Vine and Marc Soler were also injured. The Australian Vine sustained a concussion and an elbow fracture, while the Spaniard Soler has a pelvic fracture. All three riders are under medical observation and will travel home in the coming days to continue their recovery.
The Giro arrives in Italy on Tuesday, after Monday’s rest day, with stage four’s 138km ride from Catanzaro to Cosenza.
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